Celtics Sign Jordan Mickey
The Celtics have signed No. 33 overall pick Jordan Mickey, the team announced. The sides had been in talks last week. The big man had been pushing for a short-term deal, but it appeared he had come around to the idea of a longer arrangement, as Steve Bulpett of the Boston Herald reported last week. It’s a four-year, $5MM deal, reports Michael Scotto of SheridanHoops, and two years are guaranteed, adds Shams Charania of RealGM (Twitter links). So, the Celtics use cap space for the transaction.
Mickey told Zach Links of Hoops Rumors that he heard from officials with a team picking in the late first round that their club would take him if he were available at that point in the draft, but instead he slipped into the early portion of the second round, where Boston, which worked him out for a second time on the eve of the draft, was waiting. He’s 6’8″ and figures to see most of his time at power forward, but he’s a shot blocker, having swatted 3.6 per game last season as a sophomore for LSU, so he figures to help fill Boston’s need for a rim protector. He was the 31st-best prospect in the draft as Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress rated them, while Chad Ford of ESPN.com had him at No. 45.
Optimism about the possibility of a deal surrounded the talks as they began last week, as Jay King of MassLive detailed, and Mickey was going to end up on Boston’s roster for this coming season one way or another, Bulpett wrote. The Matt Babcock client was prepared at one point in negotiations to sign the non-guaranteed one-year offer for the minimum-salary that the C’s were required to make to retain his draft rights, according to Bulpett, but that didn’t end up happening.
Pistons Sign Darrun Hilliard
MONDAY, 10:45am: The deal is official, the team announced via press release.
THURSDAY, 1:37pm: The Pistons and No. 38 pick Darrun Hilliard have reached agreement on a three-year deal, reports Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). Wojnarowski indicates that the 6’6″ swingman from Villanova has already put pen to paper, though the team hasn’t made any formal announcement, and Vince Ellis of the Detroit Free Press hears the deal will be formalized Monday (Twitter link). The first year of his contract will be fully guaranteed, the second year will carry a partial guarantee, and the third year will be a team option, Ellis adds (on Twitter).
Detroit will dedicate cap space to him rather than use an exception, since the length of the arrangement is greater than two years, though a three-year deal gives the Pistons greater flexibility going forward, as I examined in the past. The 22-year-old was a surprise selection, as Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress had him ranked only 62nd among the best prospects in this year’s draft, while Chad Ford of ESPN.com had him even lower, at No. 77.
Ford pointed to his lack of top-flight athleticism or standout skill in any one particular area as weaknesses, adding that he’s nonetheless strong on both sides of the floor. Hilliard averaged 14.3 points in 28.8 minutes per game with 38.7% three-point shooting this past season as a senior.
It’s unclear exactly how much he’s getting in the deal, but it’s likely for around the minimum salary, perhaps with a few extra thousand dollars tacked on in year one, since such deals are standard for second-rounders, and the Pistons are running out of cap room. Detroit’s other 2015 draft pick, No. 8 overall selection Stanley Johnson, is on track to sign next week, agent Nima Namakian tells Ellis (Twitter link).
And-Ones: Gallinari, Belinelli, Jazz, Harrellson
Danilo Gallinari confirmed to Italian media that he and the Nuggets are discussing an extension, as Dario Vismara of Rivista Ufficiale NBA tweets (translation via Sportando’s Orazio Cauchi). Christopher Dempsey of The Denver Post reported last week that the team intended to begin talks. The Nuggets can open about $6MM in cap room if they waive both Pablo Prigioni and Kostas Papanikolaou, whom they’re reportedly about to acquire in the deal for Ty Lawson, as former Nets executive Bobby Marks points out (on Twitter). They could use the cap room to give Gallinari a renegotiation and extension, as they did with Wilson Chandler, a maneuver that would be more lucrative for Gallinari than a simple extension. While we wait to see if that’s the route the Nuggets take, here’s more from around the NBA:
- The Pelicans, Knicks, Clippers, Lakers, Spurs and Warriors all made offers to Marco Belinelli, who instead signed with the Kings, as he said at the same gathering of Italian media, Vismara notes (Twitter link).
- The salary cap is set to surge next summer, but the 2016 free agent class doesn’t have much depth beyond Kevin Durant and LeBron James, leaving many teams with a conundrum as they face the prospect of a salary floor of some $81MM, as Marks examines for HoopsHype.
- A work stoppage in 2017 is a “virtual certainty,” an executive from a team recently told Kevin Arnovitz of ESPN.com, in spite of commissioner Adam Silver’s suggestion to the contrary. Teams are worried that the new TV revenue somehow won’t allow them to keep up with surging payrolls, and clubs that have traditionally relied on revenue sharing figure to take a hit with fewer teams in line to pay into the luxury tax in seasons to come, as Arnovitz details.
- The Jazz are drawing raves from coaches and GM around the league for their home-grown approach to rebuilding and hesitance to sign mid-tier free agents who’d only help the team make incremental gains, Arnovitz writes in the same piece.
- Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press tells the story of a handful of summer leaguers who carry divergent credentials, including three-year NBA veteran Josh Harrellson, who’s willing to be flexible as he tries to make it back to the NBA now that he’s recovered from a career-threatening back injury. “I think I’ll get a camp invite,” Harrellson said. “My main goal is to get a contract out of this. Even if it’s a partial [guarantee], just something.”
Southeast Notes: Heat, Smith, Magic, Anderson
The second part of summer league for No. 10 overall pick Justise Winslow was full of more challenges than he might have expected, but the performance of Josh Richardson, whom the Heat drafted with their other pick, at No. 40, was more impressive than it figured to be, as Ira Winderman of The Sun Sentinel examines. Winderman, in a broad look at what Miami accomplished during summer league, writes that he wouldn’t be surprised if the Heat invited undrafted center Josh Smith to camp. Smith, from Georgetown, is not to be confused with the more well-known Clippers signee of the same name. Here’s more from around the Southeast Division:
- Jason Smith‘s salary on his new one-year deal with the Magic is $4.3MM, Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders confirms (Twitter link). There had been conflicting reports about just how much the contract is worth.
- The Magic were technically over the cap when they made the Maurice Harkless trade, so they ended up with a trade exception worth $2,894,059, equivalent to the salary that Harkless will make this coming season, Pincus also reports (Twitter link).
- Alan Anderson‘s one-year, $4MM contract with the Wizards includes a 15% trade kicker, reports Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders (Twitter link). Washington facilitated the signing via the mid-level exception, and since it’s worth more than $3.376MM, the Wizards are hard-capped at $88.74MM this season, Pincus notes.
Rockets, Nuggets In Advanced Talks On Ty Lawson
SUNDAY, 8:13pm: The Rockets and Nuggets have reached advanced stages of trade talks regarding Ty Lawson, reports Marc Stein of ESPN.com (Twitter link).
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Spurs Sign Boban Marjanovic
FRIDAY, 7:08pm: The Spurs have issued a press release announcing the deal is official.
TUESDAY, 8:28am: The Spurs haven’t made an official announcement, but the signing has taken place, as the RealGM transactions log shows.
1:38pm: It’s a one-year deal, agent Misko Raznatovic tells Pick (Twitter link).
FRIDAY, 1:09pm: The Spurs and All-Euroleague First Team center Boban Marjanovic have a deal, reports David Pick of Eurobasket.com (Twitter links). The Serbian who turns 27 in August has blossomed overseas since going undrafted in 2010.
Marjanovic spent the past season with KK Crvena Zvezda in his home country, averaging 13.1 points and 8.6 rebounds in 22.4 minutes per game. His size is an asset, as he’s variously listed at either 7’3″ or 7’4″. Still, he posted only 0.9 blocks per contest this year, though that might be because few dare to challenge him at the rim.
Financial terms are unclear for the BeoBasket client, though San Antonio appears to have exhausted its cap room, and the room exception seems ticketed for Manu Ginobili. That would leave only the rookie minimum salary of $525,093 for Marjanovic unless the Spurs can make more cap-clearing moves.
Suns Ink Mirza Teletovic
JULY 17TH, 4:21pm: The Suns have officially announced the signing. “We have followed Mirza Teletovic’s career for a long time and we are excited to have him wear a Suns uniform,” said GM Ryan McDonough. “Mirza is one of the best shooting big men in the world and we think his skill set will be a great fit for our style of play.”
JULY 9TH, 5:42pm: The Suns will sign Mirza Teletovic to a one-year deal for $5.5MM, TNT’s David Aldridge reports (Twitter link). The move comes shortly after the Nets pulled their qualifying offer to the forward earlier today, making him an unrestricted free agent. Phoenix is likely using cap space to accommodate the transaction.
The client of Jeff Schwartz and Mike Lindeman ends up with a deal that’s about $1.3MM more lucrative than he’d have had if he’d simply signed the more than $4.21MM qualifyer while it was on the table. The agreement with Phoenix comes as somewhat of a surprise, as aside from a vague link to the Spurs, it didn’t seem as though any NBA team other than the Nets had much interest. Nets GM Billy King said this morning that the Nets and Teletovic were in talks and that he was hopeful of re-signing the three-year veteran, but Brooklyn never made Teletovic a priority this offseason, according to Mike Mazzeo of ESPN.com (Twitter link).
Teletovic, who turns 30 in September, was to have missed the rest of the season when doctors diagnosed him with blood clots in his lungs after a game in January, but he came back for the playoffs and appeared in three games during Brooklyn’s first-round series loss to the Hawks. He was a significant part of Brooklyn’s rotation prior to the ailment, averaging 22.3 minutes per game this past season.
Suns Sign Sonny Weems
JULY 17TH, 4:13pm: The signing is official, the Suns announced. “Sonny Weems has been one of the best players outside of the NBA over the past few years,” said GM Neil McDonough. “We’ve seen him dominate high-level competition at both ends of the floor and we think his versatility and experience help solidify our wing rotation.”
4:16pm: The second year of the deal is a team option, Paul Coro of The Arizona Republic reports (Twitter link).
JULY 8TH, 2:50pm: The Suns have agreed to a two-year, $5.8MM deal with Sonny Weems, reports Chris Broussard of ESPN.com (Twitter link). The former Nuggets and Raptors swingman who turns 29 today hasn’t played in the NBA since the 2010/11 season with Toronto. The Suns still have cap room to sign him, but this deal would appear to fit within the room exception.
Weems’ career NBA numbers through 140 contests are 7.7 points, 2.5 rebounds, and 1.5 assists in 20.3 minutes per game. His NBA shooting line is .474/.241/.717.
The swingman has spent the last three seasons with the Russian club CSKA Moscow. Weems appeared in 166 games split between the Euroleague and the VTB United League, averaging 12.1 points, 3.1 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game for CSKA.
Update On Restricted Free Agents
Typically, a few of the top restricted free agents linger on the market, as incumbent teams use the dual hammer of their right to match against dwindling cap space for would-be suitors. That was the case last year with Greg Monroe, who eventually pulled off a power play and signed his qualifying offer, and with Eric Bledsoe, who finally got the Suns to budge and wound up with a five-year, $70MM deal.
This year, only Tristan Thompson lingers among top-flight free agents, and a key deadline looms Thursday. That’s the last day teams can withdraw qualifying offers without the player’s consent. The Cavs almost certainly won’t pull their qualifying offer to Thompson either before or after the deadline, but that might happen for some of the other remaining restricted free agents. If a player gives his permission after the deadline passes, the team loses his Bird rights.
Here’s a look at where each remaining restricted free agent stands:
- Tristan Thompson — The Rich Paul client is by far the most intriguing name left in restricted free agency. His deal was supposed to get done before Cleveland re-signed LeBron James, but LeBron signed a week ago. Thompson and the Cavs were reportedly close to a deal for more than $80MM on the first day of free agency, but even as the sides seemingly maintain amicable relations, the talks have bogged down. Thompson reportedly asked for $85MM, pointing to the deal that Draymond Green received, but while initial reports indicated Green would get that much, he wound up with $82MM instead.
- Norris Cole — The Pelicans are only willing to go so far for their backup point guard, but they apparently remain interested. The Sixers, with max-level cap room to give, are also reportedly in the hunt, and while Philly surely won’t be offering him the max, the team has the power to float an offer sheet large enough to give New Orleans pause. Cole is a Rich Paul client, like Thompson, but while the Cavs were reportedly interested in trading for Cole at the deadline, they can’t pay him a starting salary of any better than $1.276MM, which is all they have left on their taxpayer’s mid-level after signing Mo Williams.
- Matthew Dellavedova — The Cavs and their own backup guard seemingly made progress early in free agency, but the movement seemed to stall, and while GM David Griffin recently reiterated his interest in keeping Dellavedova, the undrafted gem is apparently seeking $4MM annual salaries on a multiyear deal. That would entail a total bill of an estimated $18MM in combined salary and tax penalties, given Cleveland’s soaring payroll.
- K.J. McDaniels — Last year’s 32nd overall pick bet on himself when he signed the Sixers’ required minimum-salary tender instead of a four-year contract, and even though he didn’t see much action after a midseason trade to the Rockets, it sounds like he’s about to cash in. The Rockets are reportedly targeting him for the $5.464MM mid-level exception, though I wouldn’t be surprised if Houston is trying to get him to take only a portion of that. The Knicks, limited to their $2.814MM room exception at this point, reportedly expressed interest at the start of free agency.
- Ognjen Kuzmic — Judging by the mere presence of his qualifying offer, Golden State’s desire to keep its championship team intact extends even to Kuzmic, who’s played more D-League games than NBA games the past two seasons. Negotiations appear to be slow-going, at best, given the dearth of reports about him, and it wouldn’t be shocking to see Kuzmic, a native of Bosnia and Herzegovina, end up back overseas.
- Nando De Colo — Surprisingly, the Raptors made a qualifying offer to the guard even though he spent this past season playing overseas with CSKA Moscow. It doesn’t appear as though the sides have made any progress toward a deal, so the guess here is that Toronto will rescind the qualifying offer before Thursday’s deadline.
