Sixers Sign Ronald Roberts Jr., Waive Gutierrez
The Sixers have signed Ronald Roberts Jr. and waived Jorge Gutierrez, team spokesperson Michael Preston announced via Twitter. Philadelphia had acquired Gutierrez as part of the Andrei Kirilenko trade Thursday, though coach Brett Brown hinted today that the point guard’s situation with the team was “fluid.” Kirilenko nonetheless remains on the Sixers roster in spite of reports from prior to the trade indicating that Philadelphia intended to let him go, as the Sixers are apparently interested in keeping him as a potential trade chip for later this season. Gutierrez had a $25K partial guarantee on his contract, but he’d already earned more than that his season, so the portion of his minimum salary that he’d collected so far this season will remain on Philly’s books. It’s unclear what sort of contract Roberts is getting.
Roberts, 23, is well-known to the Sixers, having spent training camp with the team in October after going undrafted out of St. Joseph’s this past June. Philadelphia gave the Adam Pensack client a partial guarantee of $35K when it signed him for camp and retained his D-League rights after waiving him before opening night. The 6’8″ power forward has put up 17.5 points and 11.8 rebounds in 31.8 minutes per game for the D-League affiliate of the Sixers so far this season.
Gutierrez inked a pair of 10-day contracts late last season with the Nets before signing a contract that covered the rest of the season with a non-guaranteed salary for 2014/15 tacked on. Gutierrez earned his partial guarantee when the Nets declined to waive him before training camp, but he saw only 4.4 MPG in 10 appearances this season, much less playing time than the 16.3 MPG he saw in 15 games with Brooklyn last season.
Philly’s roster count remains at 15 players in the wake of today’s move. The team is as flexible as ever, with only nine fully guaranteed contracts.
Central Notes: Kidd, Hammond, Gasol, Pistons
Jason Kidd has just as much authority on player personnel for the Bucks as GM John Hammond does, co-owner Marc Lasry tells Chris Mannix of SI.com. If Hammond and Kidd disagree, the owners will cast the deciding vote, Lasry adds.
“I don’t want John to say we need to do something and Jason to say the opposite, and then there is a fight,” Lasry said. “If John wants to do something, Jason should be on board. If Jason wants to do something, John should be on board with it. That’s how we do it in our business, that’s how we want to do it here.”
Reports from before Milwaukee hired Kidd as coach this summer indicated that Kidd was seeking to become Bucks president of basketball operations. Hammond’s deal with Milwaukee runs through 2015/16, but the new owners were reluctant to commit to him for this season before ultimately deciding to do so. Here’s more from around the Central Division:
- The style of play the Bulls employ was key to their recruitment of Pau Gasol and to his early-season resurgence, as he told reporters, including Nick Friedell of ESPNChicago.com. “It’s just a really nice fit for me and something I evaluated before I made my decision,” Gasol said. “… The system, the way we run things, our principles, how we want the ball to touch the paint and get to the post and then operate from there.”
- Gasol’s performance so far this season has been impressive enough to create a compelling case that he was the most important free agent acquisition this summer outside of LeBron James, writes K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune. The ex-Laker is averaging 19.8 points and 12.2 rebounds per game.
- The Pistons figure to be active in trade talk this season, and MLive’s David Mayo, amid his latest mailbag column, identifies a few potential buyers and sellers with whom Detroit could partner.
Atlantic Notes: Sixers, Kirilenko, Nets, ‘Melo
Sixers coach Brett Brown referred today to a “fluid” situation, wouldn’t address questions regarding Andrei Kirilenko and Jorge Gutierrez, and said there’s “high probability” that the team will make a “subtle, small announcement” before tonight’s game, observes Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer. The Sixers on Thursday announced the acquisition of both Kirilenko and Gutierrez, and Philadelphia reportedly has held some interest in keeping as a potential asset for the trade deadline, even though reports prior to the trade indicated that Philly intended to waive him. While we wait to see what Philly’s plans are regarding Kirilenko, here’s more from the Atlantic Division:
- The amount of cash the Nets sent the Sixers in the Kirilenko trade is $1MM, tweets Robert Windrem of NetsDaily. That leaves the Nets with a total of $2.3MM they can send out in trades between now and the end of June, as the NetsDaily scribe points out.
- Carmelo Anthony was forceful in his insistence that he doesn’t want to leave the Knicks as he addressed an earlier report that he would be open to waiving his no-trade clause, one that both he and his agent denied. Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com has the details. “Come on, man. After all the work I did to get here and get back here? If I was to get up and want to leave now that would just make me weak, make me have a weak mind,” Anthony said. “I’ve never been a person to try to run from any adversity or anything like that so I’m not going to pick today to do that.”
- Luc Mbah a Moute and K.J. McDaniels, both free agents at season’s end, join Michael Carter-Williams and Robert Covington as the Sixers whom the team should prioritize keeping, opines Bob Cooney of the Philadelphia Daily News.
Jeanie, Jim Buss On Kobe, Trade, Tanking
The shine is off the NBA’s most glamorous franchise these days, as the Lakers failed to land a star in free agency last summer and bring up the rear in the Pacific Division this season with a 6-16 record so far. Atop the organization are Jeanie Buss and Jim Buss, the most notorious of the six Buss siblings who together own the team. Jeanie is the team’s controlling owner, while Jim oversees the team’s on-court matters as executive vice president of basketball operations. They failed to see eye-to-eye two years ago when the Lakers hired Mike D’Antoni to coach the team instead of Phil Jackson, Jeanie’s fiance. Jeanie tells Ramona Shelburne of ESPNLosAngeles.com that any conflict between them is in the past, though it seems clear that the feelings from that decision are still raw. Shelburne has much more from her interview with the brother-and-sister duo, and her entire transcript of the conversation is worth a read, especially for Lakers faithful. We’ll pass along a few highlights here:
Jeanie Buss on Kobe Bryant‘s two-year, $48.5MM extension, which runs through 2015/16:
“I think there’s maybe a handful of guys in the league that are worth as much as he is and we’re lucky to have him. I think he’s worth every penny.”
Jim Buss on what the extension represents:
“I think it does send a message. We’ve been sending that message for 30 years. We take care of our players. For me, I believed in Kobe’s ability to play at a high level. He deserves it.”
Jim Buss on whether there’s a chance the Lakers would trade Bryant:
“No. I love Kobe Bryant. I think L.A. loves Kobe Bryant. I don’t envision him going anywhere. I don’t see it.”
Jeanie Buss on the same topic:
“I don’t want to see Kobe Bryant leave. But we understand the realities of the sports world. Take [Shaquille O’Neal], for example. He was traded and played for several other teams. But once he retired, he asked us to retire his jersey. He wanted to be remembered as a Laker. So while I get attached, I know what the realities are in this business. It’s never going to change what we’ve accomplished together. But I don’t look forward to the day that Kobe Bryant’s not in purple and gold.”
Jeanie Buss on tanking:
“The teams that use tanking as a strategy are doing damage. If you’re in tanking mode, that means you’ve got young players who you’re teaching bad habits to. I think that’s unforgivable. If you’re tanking and you have young players or you keep a short roster, you’re playing guys out of their position or too many minutes, you’re risking injury. It’s irresponsible and I don’t think it belongs in any league.”
Thunder Ask Nuggets About Wilson Chandler
The Thunder have checked on Denver’s willingness to part with Wilson Chandler, as Chris Mannix of SI.com reports amid his weekly notebook column. Chandler is making almost $6.758MM this year in the next-to-last season of his contract, and only $2MM of his nearly $7.172MM salary for 2015/16 is guaranteed. It’s unclear what Oklahoma City would be willing to give up in return, but the Thunder would have to relinquish some salary to acquire Chandler, since they don’t have a trade exception large enough to accommodate him and they’re only about $1MM shy of the luxury tax threshold.
A report in July indicated that the Nuggets were thinking of trading either Chandler, JaVale McGee or both, and Denver apparently put Chandler in a pair of trade proposals to Minnesota for Kevin Love before Love wound up in Cleveland. Chandler, 27, is performing slightly above his career averages this season as he puts up 14.7 points and 6.3 rebounds in 30.3 minutes per game with 38.3% three-point shooting. He’s starting at small forward in front of Danilo Gallinari for a deep but mediocre Nuggets team that’s gone just 10-12 but is 8-5 after a 2-7 start. Denver is about $3MM shy of the tax line.
The Thunder are climbing out of an early-season hole that resulted from injuries to Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and a host of others. They’ve won six of their last seven games to improve to 9-13, a mark that’s just two games back in the loss column from the final playoff spot in the Western Conference.
‘Melo, Agent Affirm Commitment To Knicks
Carmelo Anthony and agent Leon Rose deny that his client wants to leave the Knicks in the wake of a report from Marc Berman of the New York Post citing sources who say that Anthony would be open to waiving his no-trade clause. Anthony said this morning that he won’t run from “adversity,” tweets Ian Begley of ESPN.com. Rose issued his statement to multiple reporters, including Frank Isola of the New York Daily News (Twitter links).
“Carmelo, as always, is committed to the Knicks,” Rose said. “There have never been discussions about trades or wanting to leave New York. Any story, rumor, report to the contrary is utter nonsense.”
Though Berman heard that Anthony would be receptive to a deal if the Knicks made one with a team he’d like to play for, ‘Melo nonetheless has no desire to be traded, Berman writes. Anthony can’t be traded until Monday, as Berman notes, since he signed a new deal in the offseason. That contract, worth $124,064,681 over five seasons, contains a 15% trade kicker in addition to the no-trade clause that the Knicks would have to pay if they were to trade him.
Berman suggested that the Bulls, Anthony’s second choice as a free agent destination this summer, would be a logical trading partner, though Isola casts doubt on that idea, given what the Bulls would have to give up to make salaries match and Anthony’s knee trouble of late (Twitter link). Anthony makes $22,458,401 this season, a difficult number to move given all of the assets another team would have to relinquish. Brooklyn’s willingness to trade its three most highly paid players would present a numerical match and a chance for Anthony to stay in New York, but there’s been no indication that Anthony would consider the Nets, having struggles of their own, more palatable than the Knicks.
A report earlier this week indicated that Anthony was a frequent source of criticism from his teammates, Tim Hardaway Jr. in particular, and that Anthony had threatened Hardaway during an on-court argument. Anthony and Hardaway later acknowledged the argument but denied any lasting tension between them, and Anthony said that he hadn’t noticed himself as a particular target of blame for the struggles of the Knicks, who are just 4-20 to begin the season.
Nets Sign Darius Morris
The Nets have signed Darius Morris, the team announced. The point guard had been a free agent since shortly after the Blazers waived him at the end of the preseason. Multiple reports had indicated that the Nets had a player they were ready to sign once the completion of today’s Andrei Kirilenko trade opened a roster spot, so it appears that was Morris. It’s a non-guaranteed deal for the minimum salary, reports Reed Wallach of NetsDaily (Twitter link). It’s not clear whether it runs only for this season or if it includes 2015/16 as well, but the Nets are limited to using only the minimum-salary exception to sign players, so the deal for Morris can’t cover more than two seasons.
The 23-year-old Morris has been on an NBA regular season roster every season since the Lakers drafted him 41st overall out of the University of Michigan in 2011. He started 17 games for the Lakers in 2012/13, but he averaged only 14.2 minutes per game over the course of that season, one in which the team sent him on multiple D-League assignments. The Brian Dyke client saw 16.1 MPG over a 12-game stretch with the Sixers last year, but Philadelphia let him go less than a month into the season, and he later surfaced on 10-day contracts with the Clippers and Grizzlies.
The addition of Morris restores Brooklyn to a full 15-man roster, though only 11 of the team’s contracts are fully guaranteed. Brandon Davies, acquired in the Kirilenko trade, is on a non-guaranteed pact, while Cory Jefferson and Jerome Jordan are on partially guaranteed arrangements that are de facto non-guaranteed deals, since they’ve already earned more than the amounts of their guarantees.
Sixers Waive Malcolm Lee
The Sixers have waived Malcolm Lee, the team announced in the same press release in which it confirmed its acquisition of Andrei Kirilenko. The move is a bit surprising, since reports indicated that Philadelphia would instead waive Kirilenko upon the completion of the trade. However, John Gonzalez of CSNPhilly.com reported late Wednesday that the Sixers had interest in keeping Kirilenko in hopes of using him in a subsequent trade near the deadline. Lee, whom the Sixers re-signed just last week, is instead the roster casualty as Philadelphia needed to cut a player to accommodate its trade with Brooklyn. The Sixers, who had been carrying the maximum 15 players prior to the trade, acquired two players and gave up one in that move, so the team had to let go of someone.
Lee was on a four-year non-guaranteed contract with a team option on the fourth year, according to Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders. The 24-year-old shooting guard appeared in just one game for a total of two minutes during his latest stint with the Sixers, missing his only shot attempt. He was with Philadelphia during the preseason and received a $50K partial guarantee on his initial contract, one the Sixers waived before opening night. Lee was the 43rd overall pick in the 2011 draft and spent the following two seasons in Minnesota, but he was without an NBA contract last season when he sat out following a series of injuries.
Philadelphia remains at 15 players after today’s moves. Nine have fully guaranteed deals, while another three are on partially guaranteed contracts, leaving plenty of flexibility for more in-season movement, one of the staples of GM Sam Hinkie‘s tenure.
Latest On Lance Stephenson
Four or five teams have let the Hornets know they have strong interest in acquiring Lance Stephenson, sources tell Shams Charania of RealGM. The shooting guard wouldn’t mind if he wound up on the Nets, who are talking about trades involving their three most highly paid players, but Stephenson has made it clear to Charlotte that he wants to be part of a turnaround after a 6-15 start to the season, Charania hears. Stephenson and the Hornets share a mutual belief their partnership can still work, Charania also hears.
There’s been “fluctuating trust” in the Charlotte locker room this season, Charania writes. The Hornets have been aggressive in trade talks of late, as Grantland’s Zach Lowe reported on the first of the month, adding that few would be surprised if the Hornets had brought up Stephenson’s name in those discussions. Charlotte can’t trade Stephenson until Monday, the date that most offseason signees become eligible for inclusion in swaps. The Alberto Ebanks client inked a three-year, $27.405MM contract in the offseason that was supposed to boost Charlotte another few notches in the Eastern Conference standings after the team grabbed the No. 7 seed last year.
That hasn’t been the case so far, as the 24-year-old’s scoring has dipped from 13.8 points per game last season to 10.5 PPG this year, and he’s followed his 35.2% rate of success from three-point territory in 2013/14 with a disconcerting 15.9% mark this season. The majority of Hoops Rumors readers who voted in a poll last week thought that Charlotte should trade Stephenson. Hornets coach Steve Clifford has sought to temper expectations, declaring last month that while Stephenson has the capacity to become a star, he’s yet to reach that level.
Stephenson is a native of Brooklyn and would like someday to play for the Nets, Charania writes, even if that doesn’t take place immediately. Still, his comfort level is growing in Charlotte, according to Charania, who notes that his play has been better in December.
Western Notes: Wolves, Brewer, Lakers, Pelicans
Corey Brewer, a trade candidate, admits that he’s not enamored with the idea of going through a youth-focused rebuild with the Timberwolves, as Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune writes. Brewer can become a free agent at season’s end if he turns down a $4.703MM player option, and the Cavs, Rockets, Clippers and Heat have reportedly held interest in trading for him this season.
“It’s tough for me, I’m not going to lie,” Brewer said. “When I came back here, I wasn’t expecting this, to rebuild again. It comes with the territory. It’s business. It’s basketball. It’s what I love to do. So I wake up every day and I come to work.”
Still, the Wolves are relying heavily on Brewer for now, as we detail amid the latest from around the Western Conference:
- The NBA has granted the Wolves a second 10-day period to keep a 16th roster spot via hardship, reports Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune. Minnesota is holding on to Jeff Adrien, whom it signed to fill that spot the first time around, even though the team has a need a point guard, too, where Brewer, a swingman, is playing as the backup. “Let’s face the facts: Corey’s not the ideal point guard,” coach/executive Flip Saunders said. “But if something, heaven forbid, happened to Gorgui [Dieng], we have no center on our roster at all.”
- The Lakers are still considering the addition of a wing player to the roster, and they’re still keeping a close eye on Roscoe Smith, according to Shams Charania of RealGM. Smith, who’s playing for the Lakers D-League affiliate, was one of several players whom the Lakers worked out last month.
- The Pelicans have once more assigned Russ Smith to the D-League, the team announced via press release. It’s the second time this season that the team has sent Smith to the Fort Wayne Mad Ants. His first assignment was a three-day stint that ended Monday.
