NBA Stars Line Team USA Minicamp Roster

Prominent NBA figures appear up and down the list of 34 players who will take part in a Team USA minicamp next month in Las Vegas, USA Basketball announced via press release. They’ll engage in light, no-contact workouts from August 11th-13th, as USA Basketball executive director Jerry Colangelo explained to Sean Deveney of The Sporting News, so the risk of injury will be minimal, and some of the players won’t do any on-court work at all, as Marc Stein of ESPN.com details.

The minicamp is an initial step in preparations for the Olympics next year. The final Olympic roster will include only 12 players, so the team will winnow down to that number between now and next August.

See the full list of participants here, along with the year that each can hit free agency:

Top Free Agent Assist Makers Still Available

John Lucas III is a journeyman, but he’s appeared in each of the past five NBA seasons, and the Pistons, Magic, Spurs, Mavericks and Clippers all had interest early last month, as Marc Stein of ESPN.com reported then. Still, nobody’s signed him yet, despite his position atop the list of remaining free agents who dished out the most assists per 36 minutes last season. Lucas didn’t play much in 2014/15, barely meeting our thresholds of at least 20 games played and at least 10 minutes per game, but when he did see the floor for the Pistons, his ball distribution led to points.

The same could be said of Ish Smith, who saw significantly more action with the Thunder and Sixers. He started 14 games for Philadelphia, but he’s no stranger to uncertainty about his NBA job security, having been waived by the Rockets and Pelicans within the past year without having played a single regular season game for either of them.

The market for free agent assist makers is not particularly strong at this point, though it is somewhat surprising to see Norris Cole, who has a qualifying offer of more than $3MM outstanding from New Orleans, down at No. 8. That’s a testament to the notion that point guards, particularly today, do more than just pass. Conversely, point guards aren’t the only ones who hand out assists, and even though swingman J.R. Smith isn’t known for his passing, he checks in at No. 9 below.

Here’s the full list, ranked by assists per 36 minutes from the 2014/15 season:

  1. John Lucas III (7.9)
  2. Ish Smith (7.8)
  3. Kendall Marshall (7.4)
  4. Donald Sloan (6.2)
  5. Nate Robinson (5.9)
  6. A.J. Price (5.1)
  7. Luke Ridnour (5.1)
  8. Norris Cole (5.0)
  9. J.R. Smith (3.4)
  10. Jason Terry (3.3)

Honorable mention:

Which player on the list would you most want your team to sign? Leave a comment to tell us.

Knicks Sign Kevin Seraphin

1:01pm: The deal is official, the team announced (Twitter link).

THURSDAY, 9:44am: Seraphin’s agency, Klutch Sports, tweeted a photo that shows the big man putting pen to paper as he sits next to Knicks GM Steve Mills, so evidently, the contract is signed, though the Knicks have yet to make a formal announcement.

TUESDAY, 10:11am: The Knicks and Kevin Seraphin have reached agreement on a one-year, $2.8MM deal, a league source tells Michael Scotto of SheridanHoops (Twitter link). It would appear New York is using its $2.814MM room exception on the free agent center and Rich Paul client who figures to become the primary backup for Robin Lopez, whom the Knicks signed in July.

The Wizards, for whom Seraphin has played all of his five NBA seasons, and Lakers were still in pursuit as of last week, as Scotto reported then. The Suns and Mavs appeared to be suitors in the early going, while the Spurs and Thunder reportedly saw him as a fallback option. The former 17th overall pick had seemingly been looking for an opportunity to start, but outside of the Mavs, none of the teams in the race for him appear to have openings in the middle. He played this past season as a backup to Marcin Gortat in Washington after signing his qualifying offer last summer.

New York has only been carrying 12 guaranteed deals, as our roster counts show, so there’s certainly room enough for Seraphin, who presumably becomes the 13th. Langston Galloway figures to stick on his partially guaranteed contract, and the team is reportedly expected to sign Thanasis Antetokounmpo, so the addition of Seraphin does make it especially difficult to envision Darion Atkins or Wesley Saunders making it to opening night on their camp deals.

Do you think Seraphin is the right guy for the Knicks to use their room exception on? Leave a comment to let us know.

Pacific Notes: Clarkson, Sterling, Thompson

Jordan Clarkson credits his D-League assignments during the first part of this past season for helping him emerge as a breakout performer at the NBA level as the season wore on, he tells Brian Kotloff of NBADLeague.com. The Lakers guaranteed the point guard’s minimum salary for the coming season when they kept him on the roster through this past Saturday.

“I’m focused on always working on my game,” Clarkson said to Kotloff. “Early in the year, I wasn’t getting much time with the Lakers. Sometimes I would ask Coach [Byron Scott] to just go let me play. I love to hoop and you can never get better just by sitting on the bench. Going to play in those [D-Fenders] games definitely helped me to work on stuff that I could transfer over when I got time in the [NBA]. The game is a little different between the levels, but it helped slow the game down for me and it sped up my process of becoming a good player in [the NBA].”

The Lakers have a geographic edge with their D-League affiliate, since the D-Fenders play their home games in the same facility where the Lakers practice. See more from around the Pacific Division:

  • Former Clippers owner Donald Sterling has filed for divorce from his wife, Shelly, and he’s also filed a petition for an accounting and distribution of the proceeds of the $2 billion new owner Steve Ballmer paid to purchase the team last year, reports Dan Woike of the Orange County Register. Half of that money is frozen in escrow pending Donald Sterling’s $1 billion lawsuit against the NBA, Woike notes. Shelly Sterling controls the family trust into which the other half of Ballmer’s payment went, so Donald Sterling, who’s estranged from his wife, hasn’t seen any money from the sale yet, notes Ramona Shelburne of ESPNLosAngeles.com (Twitter links). Shelly Sterling said she’s paid $600MM in taxes and fees on the sale proceeds so far, Shelburne adds.
  • Jason Thompson is a better fit with Warriors tempo, a proficient rebounder, and an upgrade defensively over David Lee, whose role he inherits, as SB Nation’s Tom Ziller argues in a look at Golden State’s trade with the Sixers. Thompson’s presence is particularly valuable for the Warriors given his success guarding LaMarcus Aldridge and, to a lesser degree, Blake Griffin, as Ziller examines.

Extension Candidate: Harrison Barnes

NBA: Golden State Warriors at Phoenix Suns
Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

The championship that the Warriors won this past season was in a way like a fancy dinner out. The meal could scarcely have been better, but now it’s time to pay the check. Golden State will still get off much more cheaply than it could have for this coming season and next, with MVP Stephen Curry tied to a discount contract through 2016/17. However, the fun of winning a title with starting forwards who combined to make less than $4MM is over. Draymond Green will cost $82MM over the next five years, and an extension during this offseason’s eligibility window for Harrison Barnes stands to be even pricier. Grantland’s Zach Lowe estimates that the Warriors and Barnes will negotiate within the space between DeMarre Carroll‘s new four-year, $58MM deal with the Raptors, an average annual value of $14.5MM, and the maximum, which for Barnes is projected to hit $20.4MM.

That’s a fairly wide range, and it epitomizes the back-and-forth career that Barnes has had. He was the top recruit coming out of high school in the 2010 Recruiting Services Consensus Index, but he slipped to the No. 7 overall pick after two years at North Carolina. He started as a rookie, but when the Warriors acquired Andre Iguodala the following summer, Barnes became a reserve, and his game stagnated. He was the subject of trade rumors in the middle of his second season, and his name surfaced in Golden State’s Kevin Love talks last summer, when it appeared that the Timberwolves weren’t as high on Barnes as the Warriors were. Enter new coach Steve Kerr, who made the tricky decision to start Barnes over Iguodala this past season. The gamble paid off and then some, with Barnes showing improved play and Iguodala performing so well as a sixth man that he became just the second bench player ever to win Finals MVP.

Of course, it’s not as if Barnes became a 20-point scorer or the sort of all-court force that traditionally commands eye-popping salaries. He barely managed to become a double-figure scorer for the first time in his career, averaging 10.1 points per game, and though he became more efficient, his 13.4 PER is still below the 15.0 mark of an average player. However, at age 22 for most of this past season, he was a plus defender, registering a positive Basketball-Reference Defensive Box Plus Minus, a victory for any wing player. The 6’7″ specimen with a 6’11” wingspan came in 12th among small forwards in ESPN’s Defensive Real Plus Minus, and he would have been ranked more highly if Green, rated No. 1, were listed as a power forward.

Kerr’s offense featured different shot selection for Barnes, giving him fewer mid-range looks and more from behind the three-point line and at the basket, as Basketball-Reference shows. The modernized distribution resulted in a sizable year-over-year leap in shooting percentage, from 39.9% to 48.2%. His 40.5% three-point shooting was the league’s 12th-most accurate mark in that category.

The Warriors, in a vacuum, would surely prefer to see if Barnes can keep it up rather than tethering themselves to a deal that would make him the latest Warrior to make more than Curry. Golden State does have the power to control the small forward’s destination beyond this coming season, but restricted free agency can be unpredictable, particularly if the Warriors have interest in limiting his cost. The prospect of unleashing Barnes into a market that yielded Carroll’s deal and $70MM over five years for Khris Middleton must surely be intriguing for agent Jeff Wechsler, particularly given the relative dearth of star free agents in next year’s class outside of Kevin Durant, Mike Conley, Al Horford and Joakim Noah.

Rookie scale extensions, particularly those that aren’t agreed upon in early July, tend to involve team-friendly terms and fall short of the max. So, even though the Warriors haven’t given out their Designated Player title to anyone yet, allowing them to sign Barnes to an extension of five years instead of four, it’s unlikely that weapon comes into play, since five-year extensions have to start at the maximum salary.

Golden State, under reigning Executive of the Year Bob Myers, has shown a preference for signing extensions rather than allowing key players to hit free agency, making preemptive strikes with Curry, Klay Thompson and Andrew Bogut. The Warriors used the timing of the extension to their advantage with Thompson, convincing him to agree to take a starting salary that was his projected maximum salary at the time, but no more. It was, in essence, a plausible max extension, but the max turned out to be about $900K greater than the October projection, a savings of more than $4MM over the life of the deal for Golden State.

The Warriors seem unlikely to dance so closely with the max for Barnes, but what happened with Thompson demonstrates the team’s willingness to get creative to forge a deal. Barnes has motivation to come to a deal while his improvements and contribution to a championship are still fresh in the team’s mind, and to hedge against any regression, be it in his own game or the team’s performance. He’d be betting against himself if he did so, of course.

Jimmy Butler is the archetype for a defensive-minded wing player who turned down an extension, blossomed as an offensive player in his fourth year, and wound up with handsome rewards. Golden State will have to be aggressive in its offer, but I suspect the team will be. I don’t think the Warriors want to approach $20MM a year, but a proposal of between $16-18MM per season that would make Barnes the highest-paid member of his team would probably be enough to convince him to jump on it. Such a number would also be far enough from the projected max to give the Warriors hope that they’ll once more see a bargain when they look back on the deal and take comfort in knowing the youngest starter from a 67-win championship team is committed for the long term.

How do you see extension talks between the Warriors and Barnes playing out? Leave a comment to share your thoughts.

Kings Interested In Re-Signing Eric Moreland

The Kings would like to re-sign the recently waived Eric Moreland, as vice president of basketball and franchise operations Vlade Divac said Wednesday in an appearance on The Grant Napear Show on CBS Sports 1140 in Sacramento, notes Aaron Bruski of NBCSports.com (Twitter link). The Kings released the one-year veteran last week, shortly before his minimum salary for the season ahead would have become fully guaranteed. Thus, it seems that Divac and company have wanted the chance to evaluate Moreland in camp, and perhaps beyond, before committing to paying him for the entire season.

Teams and players can renegotiate guarantee dates, as happened recently with the Heat and James Ennis and the Timberwolves and Lorenzo Brown, and perhaps such an adjustment could have forestalled Moreland’s release. However, since Moreland cleared waivers, he’s free to negotiate with other teams to see if anyone else is at least willing to give him a partial commitment. Nuggets executive Pete D’Alessandro was GM of the Kings when they signed Moreland last year, and Denver coach Michael Malone was Moreland’s first NBA boss, though the early word was that Moreland wouldn’t be heading to the Mile High City.

The 23-year-old big man hasn’t had much of an opportunity to showcase his skills at the NBA level, since a labral tear in his left shoulder ended his rookie year prematurely after he’d made it into only three games this past season. His calling card is rebounding, as he averaged double-figures in boards during his final two college seasons and pulled down 12.7 rebounds in 28.7 minutes per game in seven contests for Sacramento’s D-League affiliate before his injury.

The Kings have 14 guaranteed contracts, plus David Stockton, whose salary is non-guaranteed. They also reportedly have Hedo Turkoglu on their radar.

Cavaliers Sign Richard Jefferson

AUGUST 5TH, 5:15pm: The signing is official, the team announced.

2:56pm: Stein’s full story includes Cuban’s response.

“He called and talked to me,” Cuban said. “RJ said he had an opportunity with an Eastern Conference team. He said he would honor what he [originally agreed to with the Mavs] but thought the other was a better fit. I told him I was OK with it and understood.”

2:43pm: Jefferson called Mavs owner Mark Cuban prior to choosing Cleveland over Dallas, so the Dallas organization was aware of this before it happened, as Cuban tells Marc Stein of ESPN.com (Twitter link).

Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

JULY 21ST, 2:01pm: Richard Jefferson is breaking off his deal with the Mavericks to sign with the Cavaliers instead, reports Marc Stein of ESPN.com (Twitter link). Jefferson was to sign a one-year deal for the minimum with Dallas, as Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports reported earlier this month. It’s the second time this summer that the Mavs have had a free agent commit to them and later back out, as DeAndre Jordan notoriously did earlier this month. Jefferson won’t see any more money with the Cavs than he would have if he’d stayed on his deal in Dallas, as the Cleveland pact is also for the minimum salary, reports Chris Haynes of the Northeast Ohio Media Group (Twitter link). The Cavs deal is for one year, a league source told Jason Lloyd of the Akron Beacon Journal.

It appears Dallas was at least somewhat on board with Jefferson’s change of heart, as opposed to Jordan’s, as a source told Lloyd that the Mavs gave the free agents who committed to them the chance to back out in the wake of Jordan’s flip-flop (Twitter link). Wesley Matthews said earlier that Dallas afforded him the same luxury, but he instead recommitted for about $13MM more. The Mavs also bumped the value of J.J. Barea‘s deal significantly higher. It’s unclear if Dallas offered a better deal to Jefferson than the one he originally agreed to.

The minimum for Jefferson, a veteran of 14 NBA seasons, is worth $1,499,187, but, since the deal is only for one season, the Cavs only owe him $947,276, the equivalent of the two-year veteran’s minimum. That’s key, since Cleveland is poised to go deep into the tax. Still, the Jefferson deal will cost Cleveland about $3.6MM in tax penalties on top of his salary, as former Nets executive Bobby Marks points out on Twitter.

It’s the second consecutive summer in which the Cavs are signing a veteran forward who spent the previous season with Dallas. Cleveland did so last year with Shawn Marion, who retired after this past season.

Jefferson ends up with the same salary as he would have made in Dallas, but his switch is not without consequence. He’ll have to pay state income tax for Ohio, as he wouldn’t have had to do in Texas, and his Mavs deal would have given him the power to block trades afforded by rule to players who return to their teams on one-year contracts. Jefferson will also be eligible only for Non-Bird rights with the Cavs next summer, instead of the Early Bird rights the Mavs would have held with him.

Hoops Rumors Chat Transcript

4:03pm: We hosted the weekly live chat.

3:00pm: Last year, Rich Paul client LeBron James more or less delayed the annual July free agent frenzy for 11 days as teams and players waited to find out which team the four-time MVP would play for. Eric Bledsoe‘s free agency dragged on the rest of that summer, as the fellow Paul client didn’t re-sign with the Suns until September 24th. Paul is once more at the center of holding patterns, with Tristan Thompson and Norris Cole still unsigned long after comparable talents struck deals. Still, we’ll eventually have resolution with those two, and Paul client Kevin Seraphin agreed Tuesday to sign with the Knicks.

We can discuss the lingering free agents, this week’s deals and much more in today’s chat. Click here to join!

Largest Expiring Contracts For 2015/16

Expiring contracts aren’t what they used to be. The shorter contracts that have come about in the past few years thanks to new rules imposed in the 2011 collective bargaining agreement have meant more teams have the opportunity to open cap space each year, and thus the utility of trading for a player in the last year of his contract has decreased. That’s even more so now, with the salary cap expected to skyrocket each of the next two summers. Most teams are poised to start next summer under the cap, and many are set for the amount of cap space necessary to sign a maximum-salary free agent. Still, expiring contracts can be assets.

The Celtics acquired a pair of talented big men this summer in David Lee and Amir Johnson. Neither is a superstar, but they can help Boston remain competitive this season and come off the books in a year to allow the Celtics more flexibility to chase free agents who do fit the franchise player mold. Johnson’s is a de facto expiring contract of sorts, since his 2016/17 salary is non-guaranteed.

No team has two expiring deals quite like the Lakers do. Kobe Bryant and Roy Hibbert will combine to make more than $40MM this season, but they aren’t promised any salary for 2016/17, positioning L.A. to strike in free agency next July. The trade for Hibbert was much like the moves Boston made. The Lakers acquired a productive player on an expiring contract who can help prop up the team for a year without tying themselves to any long-term commitment to a non-star.

See each player who has an expiring contract with a salary of greater than $10MM for this season in the list below:

  1. *Kobe Bryant, Lakers — $25MM (contract contains no-trade clause)
  2. Joe Johnson, Nets — $24,894,863
  3. Kevin Durant, Thunder — $20,158,622
  4. *Dwyane Wade, Heat — $20MM (de facto no-trade clause)
  5. Roy Hibbert, Lakers — $15,592,216
  6. Eric Gordon, Pelicans — $15,514,031
  7. David Lee, Celtics — $15,493,680
  8. Al Jefferson, Hornets — $13.5MM
  9. Joakim Noah, Bulls — $13.4MM
  10. Nicolas Batum, Hornets — $13,125,306
  11. Nene, Wizards — $13MM
  12. ^Ty Lawson, Rockets — $12,404,495
  13. Al Horford, Hawks — $12MM
  14. ^Amir Johnson, Celtics — $12MM
  15. Luol Deng, Heat — $10,151,612
  16. Gerald Wallace, Sixers — $10,105,855

* — Bryant and Wade possess no-trade clauses in their contracts. In Wade’s case, it’s a de facto no-trade clause, since all players who re-sign with their teams on one-year contracts can block trades.
^ — Lawson and Johnson are on de facto expiring contracts, since their salaries for 2016/17 are non-guaranteed.

The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.

Aside from Kevin Durant’s, for obvious reasons, which of these contracts would you most want your team to possess? Leave a comment to let us know.

Kings Notes: Cousins, Karl, Divac, Turkoglu

The Kings have had an active offseason, striking deals with nine free agents and swinging a pair of trades that helped clear cap space. They signed another free agent, Luc Mbah a Moute, but voided his contract after a failed physical, a move that’s reportedly poised to draw a grievance from the players union. All of it pales in comparison to the tempest surrounding DeMarcus Cousins this summer, and we have more on that amid the latest from Sacramento:

  • Cousins is no stranger to communicating visually, as witnessed by the snake and grass emojis he posted via Twitter amid reports that George Karl wanted to trade him. The center seemingly conveyed different feelings Tuesday via Instagram, posting a photo that depicts him standing arm-in-arm with Karl and Kings vice president of basketball and franchise operations Vlade Divac. Karl and Cousins apparently didn’t have any interaction for months before a brief meeting at summer league, when USA Today’s Sam Amick reported the existence of plans for a more extensive meeting. It would appear, by the looks of the photo, that the meeting has taken place, but a simple photo hardly means the tension that reportedly had Cousins wanting out has disappeared, writes Matt Moore of CBSSports.com.
  • Hedo Turkoglu isn’t thinking about playing overseas for now and would prefer to remain in the NBA, tweets Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports. The Kings have emerged as a possibility for the Jim Tanner client, as Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports reported last week, citing the presence of Divac, a former teammate and friend.
  • The Kings brought in noteworthy talent via free agency and Ben McLemore has the potential to take a leap forward, but the mix remains combustible, tempering all the reasons for optimism in Sacramento, SB Nation’s Tom Ziller opines.
  • What’s your take on the Kings offseason? Leave a comment to share your thoughts.