Offseason In Review: Cleveland Cavaliers
Hoops Rumors is in the process of looking back at each team’s offseason, from the end of the playoffs in June right up until opening night. Trades, free agent signings, draft picks, contract extensions, option decisions, camp invitees, and more will be covered, as we examine the moves each franchise made over the last several months.
Signings
- LeBron James: Two years, $42.218MM. Signed via cap room. Second year is player option. Includes 15% trade kicker.
- Mike Miller: Two years, $5.587MM. Signed via room exception.
- James Jones: One year, $1.448MM. Signed via minimum-salary exception.
- Shawn Marion: One year, $1.448MM. Signed via minimum-salary exception.
- Alex Kirk: Two years, $1.352MM. Signed via minimum-salary exception. First year is partially guaranteed for $65K. Second year is non-guaranteed.
- Lou Amundson: One year, $1.31MM. Signed via minimum-salary exception. Non-guaranteed.
- A.J. Price: One year, $1.063MM. Signed via minimum-salary exception. Non-guaranteed. Waived after opening night.
Extensions
- Kyrie Irving: Five years, maximum salary. Fifth year is player option. Includes 15% trade kicker.
- Anderson Varejao: Three years, $30MM. Second year is partially guaranteed for $9.36MM. Third year is non-guaranteed.
Trades
- Acquired Boston’s 2015 second-round pick (top-55 protected) and the rights to Ilkan Karaman and Edin Bavcic in a three-team trade with the Celtics and Nets in exchange for Jarrett Jack, Sergey Karasev, Tyler Zeller and Cleveland’s 2016 first-round pick (top-10 protected).
- Acquired the Clippers’ 2016 second-round pick (top-55 protected) from the Pelicans in exchange for Alonzo Gee.
- Acquired Brendan Haywood and the rights to Dwight Powell from the Hornets in exchange for Scotty Hopson and cash.
- Acquired John Lucas III, Malcolm Thomas and Erik Murphy from the Jazz in exchange for Carrick Felix, Cleveland’s 2015 second-round pick, and $1.3MM cash.
- Acquired Kevin Love in a three-team trade with the Timberwolves and Sixers in exchange for Andrew Wiggins, Anthony Bennett and Miami’s 2015 first-round pick (top-10 protected).
- Acquired Keith Bogans, Sacramento’s 2015 second-round pick (top-55 protected) and Sacramento’s 2017 second-round pick (top-55 protected) from the Celtics in exchange for Dwight Powell, Erik Murphy, Malcolm Thomas, John Lucas III, Cleveland’s 2016 second-round pick and Cleveland’s 2017 second-round pick.
- Acquired Philadelphia’s 2015 second-round pick (if it falls from pick No. 51 through No. 55, as long as the Sixers don’t have to send it to the Celtics to satisfy an obligation from previous trades) from the Sixers in exchange for Keith Bogans and Cleveland’s 2018 second-round pick.
Waiver Claims
- None
Draft Picks
- Andrew Wiggins (Round 1, 1st overall). Signed via rookie exception to rookie scale contract. Subsequently traded.
- Joe Harris (Round 2, 33rd overall). Signed via cap room for three years, $2.710MM. Third year is non-guaranteed.
- Dwight Powell (Round 2, 45th overall). Signed via minimum-salary exception for two years. Subsequently traded.
Camp Invitees
- Chris Crawford
- Shane Edwards
- Stephen Holt
Departing Players
- Anthony Bennett
- Luol Deng
- Carrick Felix
- Alonzo Gee
- Spencer Hawes
- Scotty Hopson
- Jarrett Jack
- Sergey Karasev
- C.J. Miles
- Tyler Zeller
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- Dion Waiters (fourth year, $5,138,430) — Exercised
Cleveland has endured countless tough breaks over the years, but ever since the Cavs lucked out and grabbed the No. 1 overall pick in the lottery this year, fortune has shined on northeast Ohio. LeBron James reversed course from four years ago and returned home from Miami, and three of his former Heat teammates joined him in flocking to Cleveland. The four-time MVP’s magnetism was most impactful in swaying Kevin Love, the best player available on the trade market, to accept a deal that sent him to Cleveland, a prospect Love reportedly otherwise wouldn’t have considered. We may never know if LeBron would still have chosen to sign with the Cavs if they hadn’t emerged from the lottery with the top pick, but it was clear that possessing Andrew Wiggins, whom the Cavs took with that No. 1 overall selection, was crucial to the Love trade.
The presence of Wiggins allowed GM David Griffin to beat out a field that included nearly half the league in a heated derby to win over Timberwolves president of basketball operations Flip Saunders, who held out on the Cavs until they were willing to surrender the former Kansas swingman. It was an early test of mettle for Griffin, who took over the GM duties on an interim basis shortly before the trade deadline last season and saw the team remove the interim tag a few months later. Regardless of whether James intentionally left Wiggins’ name out when he discussed his teammates in the public letter announcing his return, any trade involving a first overall pick is fraught with historical consequences. That’s doubly so when a team trades not one but two former No. 1 picks, as was the case with Anthony Bennett heading to Minnesota along with Wiggins. Bennett certainly didn’t live up to having been the top pick as a rookie, but he nonetheless has plenty of potential, and the addition of a future draft choice in the deal made it clear that priorities have shifted in Cleveland. The Cavs aren’t going to waste precious years of LeBron’s prime slowly building toward a championship. They want to make it happen this year.
Still, it’s not as if Griffin cleaned out all of his team’s young talent. The Cavs have taken five players within the top four picks in the last four drafts, and three of them remain. None is as prominent as Kyrie Irving, who quickly shushed rumors that he was looking to escape Cleveland, signing a five-year max extension that makes him the team’s Designated Player. Irving didn’t receive all of what he might have wanted in the extension, since he agreed to take approximately 27.5% of the salary cap as a starting salary, rather than the roughly 30% to which he’d be entitled if he triggers the Derrick Rose Rule this year. There’s a decent chance he’ll do so, since the Rose Rule would kick in for him if he repeats his selection as an All-Star starter from a year ago. Those extra millions of dollars will matter in seasons to come as Cleveland strains to carry three maximum-salary players, but in the context of this past summer, the extension was one of many hallmarks of the changing fortunes surrounding the Cavs. Irving committed to the extension before LeBron decided to return, hitching himself to a franchise that still dealt with more questions than answers. Few players would ever turn down a five-year max deal, but securing Irving’s agreement on the first day of free agency surely didn’t hurt the Cavs’ case as LeBron weighed his choices in July.
The dynamics surrounding the team’s negotiations with its other player eligible for a rookie scale extension were much different. Tristan Thompson‘s alliance with Klutch Sports, the same agency that counts LeBron as its founding client, seemingly gave the former No. 4 overall pick an inside track to a lucrative deal with the Cavs. Thompson reportedly sought salaries of around $12MM a year, and the Cavs apparently exceeded that figure in their final offer, but the sides fell short of a deal in talks that went right up until the final hour before the 11:00pm Central deadline on October 31st. That negotiations carried on nearly as long as they possibly could seems to indicate that there’s common ground that they could revisit when Thompson hits restricted free agency in the summer. Still, Cleveland’s veteran extension for Anderson Varejao creates complications.
Varejao has close ties to LeBron, too, as he’s the only member of the Cavs who remains from the four-time MVP’s first go-around in wine-and-gold, and the two have remained close friends. Still, there’s significant risk involved in committing $30MM over three years to a 32-year-old so beset by injuries that he’s averaged fewer than 37 games played over the last four seasons. The Brazilian is healthy now, and he beat out Thompson for a starting spot on opening night, but even when he’s in the lineup, there are issues. Neither Thompson, Varejao nor Love, the three most prominent big men on the Cavs roster, is a strong rim-protector. Even if one of them were, the Cavs would be hard-pressed to start all three of them, and if Cleveland re-signs Love at a sum anywhere close to market value and gives a new deal to Thompson at the terms he’s seeking, all three will be making eight figures apiece annually. That would be a steep price to pay for a talented but flawed frontcourt, even with the salary cap poised to rise dramatically.
The lack of an extension for Thompson leaves the Cavs with flexibility for the future, which Griffin has strived to maintain even as he makes a hard push to ready the team to win now. A three-for-one trade with the Jazz that he pulled off in late July turned out to provide the fuel for the acquisition and subsequent flipping of Keith Bogans, a set of maneuvers that netted the Cavs a $5,285,816 trade exception that they can use anytime between now and the end of next September. That trio of swaps, seemingly a precursor to a fourth trade, is demonstrative of Griffin’s dexterity at swinging deals. He had already put that on display over the summer when he engineered a three-team trade with the Nets and Celtics to unload Jarrett Jack‘s $6.3MM salary and open cap room necessary to sign LeBron to a max deal.
Still, for all the superstar acquisitions and intricate trades that took place for the Cavs this past offseason, the team’s boldest move came when it hired David Blatt as head coach. It’s the first time an NBA team has ever hired a head coach whose prior experience came exclusively overseas, and while Blatt left a trail of success at his many stops around the globe, there’s no league like the NBA. Lead assistant Tyronn Lue, upon whom the team bestowed a record four-year, $6.5MM deal, is entering only his sixth season as a coach following the end of his playing career in 2009. Granted, that’s a wealth of experience compared to the wave of neophytes who’ve taken over head coaching jobs in the NBA, like Derek Fisher, Steve Kerr and Jason Kidd, but Blatt and Lue are under immediate pressure to succeed. There’s little to suggest whether they will or they won’t, casting perhaps the most significant cloud of uncertainty over a team that returns a league-low five players from last season.
The victories piled up for Cleveland in the offseason, from LeBron to Love to Irving to Shawn Marion, who could have commanded higher salaries and more minutes elsewhere as he lingered into August as perhaps the most significant unsigned free agent. Miller, too, was a sought-after commodity after he showed off his health with the Grizzlies last season, when he appeared in all 82 games. There’s still a chance that Ray Allen, still undecided on retirement, will choose not only to play but to do so with a few of his old Heat teammates in Cleveland. None of it will matter unless all of the new faces in Cleveland can quickly coalesce and live up to the lofty expectations surrounding them. It took LeBron two years to win a championship in Miami, but the noise and pressure surrounding the team didn’t stop until he did. That will likely be the case in Cleveland, too.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images. The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.
Atlantic Notes: J.R. Smith, Knicks, Rondo
The Pacers do have at least some level of interest in J.R. Smith, according to Marc Berman of the New York Post, who reported earlier this month that Indiana discussed Smith in conversations with the Knicks about a potential deal involving Chris Copeland. The Knicks are confident about the market for the former Sixth Man of the Year and aren’t merely looking to swap him for an expiring contract, a source tells Berman. While we wait to see how the Knicks proceed, there’s more from New York amid the latest from the Atlantic Division:
- Derek Fisher isn’t sure about the timetable that Phil Jackson has suggested for making judgments about the players on the Knicks roster, as Berman relays in the same piece. “I don’t know if it’s a fair assessment or not,’’ Fisher said. “[Phil] obviously knows a lot about his offense, but I think it’s more than just a guy is going to get it. Each player and person has different learning curves. I don’t know if there’s a date. It’s more where our team is from a management standpoint. For me, I don’t have a date on when I would assume a guy should or shouldn’t have it. I’m going to coach him until he’s here or isn’t here. Those won’t be my decisions.’’
- Rajon Rondo told reporters that he didn’t disagree with Kendrick Perkins, who said earlier Wednesday that Rondo, set for free agency at season’s end, would like to remain with the Celtics, observes Steve Bulpett of the Boston Herald. “It’s about accurate,” Rondo said. “I mean, from media day in the beginning, that’s what I said initially. So regardless of what’s going on in the season, my perspective hasn’t changed. I love being a Celtic.”
- Perkins, who’s also poised to become a free agent in the summer, is open to returning to the Celtics, saying it would be up to Boston’s brass to bring him back if they want him, Bulpett notes. The 30-year-old Thunder center sees Boston as increasingly attractive for free agents, as he told reporters, including Bulpett.
- The Sixers are a long way from respectability, but tonight’s season debut for Michael Carter-Williams, who’s back from shoulder surgery, will pair him with Nerlens Noel for the first time. Having two building blocks on the floor at once will represent a landmark moment in Philly’s rebuilding, opines John Smallwood of the Philadelphia Daily News.
2014/15 D-League Assignments, Recalls
The relationship between the NBA and the D-League continues to deepen, and this year, it will take on an unprecedented dynamic. A record 17 NBA teams have one-to-one D-League affiliates, but there are only 18 D-League teams. That means 13 NBA teams will share a single D-League club, the Fort Wayne Mad Ants. There are new rules in place to allow that baker’s dozen of NBA teams to make D-League assignments as they have in the past, but the franchises with one-to-one affiliates will almost certainly make greater use of the NBA’s minor league.
Players assigned to and recalled from the D-League differ from those who receive D-League “call-ups.” A “call-up” happens when a player on a D-League contract signs a new contract with an NBA team. Those whom NBA teams assign and recall are already under contract with NBA teams, and they remain on NBA rosters even while they toil on the farm team. I outlined the rules governing D-League assignments earlier this week, and last year teams took advantage of those guidelines to make several dozen moves. Chances are that this season we’ll see just as many, if not more, given the continued rise of one-to-one affiliates.
NBA teams have already begun to assign and recall players to the D-League even though the D-League’s regular season has yet to begin. We’ll use this space to track all of this year’s assignments and recalls, team by team, throughout the season. You can find this page, which we’ll update throughout the season, anytime on the right sidebar under “Hoops Rumors Features.”
Here are the NBA’s D-League assignments and recalls for 2014/15:
Atlanta Hawks
- November 20th: Assigned Adreian Payne (Recalled November 23rd)
- November 28th: Assigned John Jenkins (Recalled December 8th)
- November 28th: Assigned Adreian Payne (Recalled December 6th)
- December 6th: Assigned Mike Muscala (Recalled December 8th)
- December 8th: Assigned Adreian Payne (Recalled December 22nd)
- December 19th: Assigned Mike Muscala (Recalled December 20th)
- December 28th: Assigned Mike Muscala (Recalled December 29th)
- December 30th: Assigned John Jenkins (Recalled January 20th)
- December 30th: Assigned Adreian Payne (Recalled January 12th)
- February 7th: Assigned Mike Muscala (Recalled February 8th)
- March 1st: Assigned Mike Muscala (Recalled March 2nd)
Boston Celtics
- November 9th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled November 10th)
- November 15th: Assigned James Young (Recalled November 17th)
- November 15th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled November 17th)
- November 23rd: Assigned James Young (Recalled November 24th)
- December 4th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled December 5th)
- December 4th: Assigned James Young (Recalled December 5th)
- December 4th: Assigned Marcus Smart (Recalled December 5th)
- December 6th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled December 7th)
- December 6th: Assigned James Young (Recalled December 7th)
- December 9th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled December 11th)
- December 9th: Assigned James Young (Recalled December 11th)
- December 28th: Assigned James Young (Recalled December 29th)
- December 31st: Assigned James Young (Recalled January 1st)
- January 3rd: Assigned James Young (Recalled January 5th)
- January 23rd: Assigned Andre Dawkins* (Recalled January 29th)
- January 30th: Assigned Andre Dawkins (Recalled February 1st)
- January 31st: Assigned James Young (Recalled February 1st)
- February 5th: Assigned Andre Dawkins (Recalled February 10th)
- February 5th: Assigned Phil Pressey (Recalled February 6th)
- March 17th: Assigned James Young (Recalled March 21st)
- March 24th: Assigned James Young (Recalled April 12th)
- April 6th: Assigned Chris Babb (Recalled April 12th)
*Note: Dawkins had one previous assignment as a member of the Heat.
Brooklyn Nets
- January 1st: Assigned Markel Brown (Recalled January 8th)
- January 1st: Assigned Cory Jefferson (Recalled January 8th)
Charlotte Hornets
- December 28th: Assigned Noah Vonleh (Recalled December 31st)
- December 28th: Assigned Jeffery Taylor (Recalled January 9th)
Cleveland Cavaliers
- November 14th: Assigned Alex Kirk (Recalled November 17th)
- November 19th: Assigned Alex Kirk (Recalled November 24th)
- November 30th: Assigned Alex Kirk (Recalled December 1st)
- December 4th: Assigned Alex Kirk (Recalled December 21st)
- January 20th: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled January 21st)
- January 24th: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled January 25th)
- January 27th: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled January 28th)
- January 29th: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled February 2nd)
- February 5th: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled February 8th)
- February 12th: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled February 18th)
- March 20th: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled March 23rd)
- March 31st: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled April 1st)
- April 3rd: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled April 10th)
- April 13th: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled April 15th)
- April 18th: Assigned Joe Harris (Recalled April 20th)
Dallas Mavericks
- November 20th: Assigned Ricky Ledo (Recalled November 24th)
- November 27th: Assigned Ricky Ledo (Recalled December 4th)
- December 5th: Assigned Ricky Ledo (Recalled December 6th)
- December 8th: Assigned Ricky Ledo (Recalled December 12th)
- December 18th: Assigned Ricky Ledo (Recalled December 20th)
- December 27th: Assigned Ricky Ledo (Recalled December 28th)
- December 27th: Assigned Dwight Powell* (Recalled December 28th)
- January 3rd: Assigned Ricky Ledo (Recalled January 6th)
- January 9th: Assigned Ricky Ledo (Recalled February 2nd)
- March 7th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled March 8th)
- March 11th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled March 12th)
- March 12th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled March 13th)
- March 14th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled March 15th)
- March 21st: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled March 23rd)
- March 25th: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled March 26th)
- April 3rd: Assigned Dwight Powell (Recalled April 4th)
*Note: Powell had five previous assignments as a member of the Celtics.
Denver Nuggets
- January 20th: Assigned Erick Green (Recalled January 25th)
Detroit Pistons
- November 26th: Assigned Tony Mitchell (Recalled November 28th)
- November 29th: Assigned Tony Mitchell (Recalled November 30th)
- December 5th: Assigned Tony Mitchell (Recalled December 7th)
- December 12th: Assigned Tony Mitchell (Traded to the Suns on December 24th)
- December 31st: Assigned Spencer Dinwiddie (Recalled January 8th)
- January 14th: Assigned Gigi Datome (Recalled January 20th)
- January 14th: Assigned Spencer Dinwiddie (Recalled January 20th)
- February 27th: Assigned Quincy Miller (Recalled March 2nd)
- March 25th: Assigned Quincy Miller (Recalled March 26th)
Golden State Warriors
- November 14th: Assigned Justin Holiday (Recalled November 15th)
- November 14th: Assigned Ognjen Kuzmic (Recalled November 15th)
- December 17th: Assigned Ognjen Kuzmic (Recalled December 18th)
- January 3rd: Assigned Ognjen Kuzmic (Recalled January 4th)
- January 8th: Assigned Ognjen Kuzmic (Recalled January 14th)
- January 15th: Assigned Ognjen Kuzmic (Recalled January 28th)
- January 28th: Assigned Festus Ezeli (Recalled February 2nd)
- February 4th: Assigned Ognjen Kuzmic (Recalled February 14th)
- February 20th: Assigned James Michael McAdoo (Recalled March 12th)
- March 14th: Assigned James Michael McAdoo (Recalled March 16th)
- March 18th: Assigned Ognjen Kuzmic (Recalled April 27th)
- April 10th: Assigned James Michael McAdoo (Recalled April 11th)
- April 26th: Assigned James Michael McAdoo (Recalled April 27th)
Houston Rockets
- November 10th: Assigned Clint Capela (Recalled December 2nd)
- November 18th: Assigned Nick Johnson (Recalled November 24th)
- December 16th: Assigned Clint Capela (Recalled December 25th)
- December 27th: Assigned Clint Capela (Recalled January 25th)
- January 3rd: Assigned Nick Johnson (Recalled February 1st)
- January 11th: Assigned Isaiah Canaan (Recalled January 26th)
- January 29th: Assigned Clint Capela (Recalled February 9th)
- February 4th: Assigned Nick Johnson (Recalled February 9th)
- February 19th: Assigned Nick Johnson (Recalled February 23rd)
- February 19th: Assigned Clint Capela (Recalled March 27th)
- March 6th: Assigned Nick Johnson (Recalled March 8th)
Indiana Pacers
- January 27th: Assigned Shayne Whittington (Recalled January 30th)
- April 8th: Assigned Shayne Whittington
Los Angeles Clippers
- January 8th: Assigned C.J. Wilcox (Recalled January 21st)
Los Angeles Lakers
- November 15th: Assigned Jordan Clarkson (Recalled November 16th)
- November 15th: Assigned Xavier Henry (Recalled November 16th)
- Novermber 22nd: Assigned Jordan Clarkson (Recalled November 23rd)
- November 22nd: Assigned Xavier Henry (Recalled November 23rd)
- December 6th: Assigned Jordan Clarkson (Recalled December 7th)
- December 18th: Assigned Jordan Clarkson (Recalled December 19th)
- January 3rd: Assigned Jordan Clarkson (Recalled January 4th)
- January 3rd: Assigned Tarik Black (Recalled January 4th)
- January 30th: Assigned Ryan Kelly (Recalled January 31st)
Memphis Grizzlies
- November 8th: Assigned Jordan Adams (Recalled November 10th)
- November 8th: Assigned Jarnell Stokes (Recalled November 10th)
- November 25th: Assigned Jordan Adams (Recalled December 8th)
- December 1st: Assigned Jarnell Stokes (Recalled December 3rd)
- December 12th: Assigned Jordan Adams (Recalled December 21st)
- December 19th: Assigned Jarnell Stokes (Recalled December 21st)
- January 14th: Recalled Russ Smith (Originally assigned by Pelicans prior to being traded)
- January 20th: Assigned Jordan Adams (Recalled January 26th)
- January 20th: Assigned Jarnell Stokes (Recalled February 10th)
- January 20th: Assigned Russ Smith (Recalled February 10th)
- February 7th: Assigned Jordan Adams (Recalled February 8th)
- February 22nd: Assigned Jarnell Stokes (Recalled March 12th)
- February 22nd: Assigned Russ Smith (Recalled March 12th)
- March 17th: Assigned Jarnell Stokes (Recalled March 30th)
- March 24th: Assigned Russ Smith (Recalled March 30th)
Miami Heat
- December 4th: Assigned Andre Dawkins (Recalled December 21st)
- December 13th: Assigned Hassan Whiteside (Recalled December 15th)
- December 13th: Assigned Shabazz Napier (Recalled December 15th)
- December 30th: Assigned Shabazz Napier (Recalled January 6th)
- March 4th: Assigned Zoran Dragic (Recalled March 15th)
New Orleans Pelicans
- December 5th: Assigned Russ Smith (Recalled December 8th)
- December 11th: Assigned Russ Smith (Recalled December 20th)
- January 9th: Assigned Russ Smith (Traded to the Grizzlies on January 12th)
New York Knicks
- January 30th: Assigned Cleanthony Early (Recalled February 1st)
- February 5th: Assigned Cleanthony Early (Recalled February 7th)
Oklahoma City Thunder
- November 15th: Assigned Grant Jerrett (Recalled November 15th)
- November 18th: Assigned Grant Jerrett (Recalled November 20th)
- November 30th: Assigned Grant Jerrett (Recalled December 2nd)
- November 30th: Assigned Mitch McGary (Recalled December 2nd)
- December 4th: Assigned Mitch McGary (Recalled December 7th)
- December 10th: Assigned Grant Jerrett (Recalled December 13th)
- December 10th: Assigned Mitch McGary (Recalled December 13th)
- December 20th: Assigned Grant Jerrett (Recalled December 21st)
- January 9th: Assigned Grant Jerrett (Recalled January 11th)
- January 13th: Assigned Grant Jerrett (Recalled January 14th)
- January 23rd: Assigned Grant Jerrett (Recalled January 26th)
- February 3rd: Assigned Mitch McGary (Recalled February 8th)
Orlando Magic
- December 26th: Assigned Devyn Marble (Recalled January 1st)
- February 2nd: Assigned Devyn Marble (Recalled February 7th)
- February 17th: Assigned Devyn Marble (Recalled February 21st)
Philadelphia 76ers
- November 21st: Assigned JaKarr Sampson (Recalled November 24th)
Phoenix Suns
- November 13th: Assigned Tyler Ennis (Recalled November 17th)
- November 13th: Assigned T.J. Warren (Recalled November 17th)
- December 25th: Assigned Tyler Ennis (Recalled December 31st)
- December 25th: Assigned T.J. Warren (Recalled December 31st)
- December 25th: Assigned Archie Goodwin (Recalled December 31st)
- January 14th: Assigned Archie Goodwin (Recalled January 20th)
- January 22nd: Assigned Tyler Ennis (Recalled January 25th)
- January 22nd: Assigned T.J. Warren (Recalled January 25th)
- January 29th: Assigned Archie Goodwin (Recalled February 1st)
- January 29th: Assigned Reggie Bullock (Recalled February 1st)
- February 4th: Assigned Tyler Ennis (Recalled February 7th)
- February 4th: Assigned T.J. Warren (Recalled February 7th)
- February 7th: Assigned Archie Goodwin (Recalled February 11th)
- February 7th: Assigned Reggie Bullock (Recalled February 11th)
Sacramento Kings
- November 4th: Assigned Eric Moreland (Recalled November 17th)
- November 21st: Assigned Eric Moreland (Recalled November 25th)
- November 28th: Assigned Eric Moreland (Recalled November 30th)
- December 12th: Assigned Eric Moreland (Recalled December 13th)
- December 14th: Assigned Eric Moreland (Recalled December 16th)
San Antonio Spurs
- November 23rd: Assigned Kyle Anderson (Recalled November 24th)
- January 20th: Assigned Kyle Anderson (Recalled February 20th)
- February 21st: Assigned Kyle Anderson (Recalled March 9th)
- March 12th: Assigned Kyle Anderson (Recalled March 16th)
- March 26th: Assigned Kyle Anderson (Recalled April 8th)
- April 11th: Assigned Kyle Anderson (Recalled April 12th)
- April 17th: Assigned Kyle Anderson (Recalled April 22nd)
Toronto Raptors
- December 25th: Assigned Bruno Caboclo (Recalled January 1st)
- February 18th: Assigned Bruno Caboclo (Recalled March 8th)
- March 12th: Assigned Lucas Nogueira (Recalled March 16th)
- March 17th: Assigned Lucas Nogueira (Recalled March 26th)
Utah Jazz
- November 13th: Assigned Toure’ Murry (Recalled December 2nd)
- December 31st: Assigned Toure’ Murry (Recalled January 3rd)
- February 24th: Assigned Ian Clark (Recalled March 17th)
- March 10th: Assigned Grant Jerrett* (Recalled March 19th)
- March 26th: Assigned Grant Jerrett (Recalled April 6th)
*Note: Jerrett had eight previous assignments as a member of the Thunder.
Washington Wizards
- November 20th: Assigned Glen Rice Jr. (Waived on January 7th)
Latest On Nemanja Nedovic
THURSDAY, 9:52am: The GM of Turkey’s Fenerbahce Ulker met with Nedovic’s camp, Pick tweets, casting another European team in the race for the ex-Warrior who’ll come off waivers today unless an NBA team submits a claim.
WEDNESDAY, 11:51am: Spain’s Laboral Kuxta is also among the interested teams, though Valencia is the front-runner, writes Aris Barkas of Eurohoops.net.
10:07am: Efes is heavily pursuing Nedovic, a source tells David Pick of Eurobasket.com (Twitter link).
9:51am: Nemanja Nedovic has struck a deal with Valencia of Spain contingent on him clearing NBA waivers after the Warriors released him Tuesday, a source tells Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia. Marc Stein of ESPN.com confirms that a deal with Valencia is in place (Twitter link), but Nikos Varlas of Eurohoops.net cautions that Anadolu Efes of Turkey would have the edge for the 23-year-old point guard if the team made a push to sign him.
The Misko Raznatovic client asked the Warriors to waive him so that he could seek more playing time with a team in Europe, Stein tweets, and Nedovic’s camp has been letting NBA teams know that he intends to play overseas for the near future, as the ESPN scribe also notes. Raznatovic told Ivan Bogunović of Mondo.rs in Nedovic’s native Serbia that Nedovic is headed to a Euroleague team, though he didn’t specify whether it would be Valencia, Efes, or another club (translation via Carchia). Nedovic told Novosti.rs, another Serbian outlet, that he still harbors NBA dreams but that he’s heading to Europe because his priority is to go where he can find playing time (translation via Carchia). Nedovic didn’t appear in any regular season games with the Warriors this season.
Valencia appeared to have interest in Nedovic prior to his release from the Warriors, who signaled that the 23-year-old wasn’t in their long-term plans when they declined his rookie scale team option for 2015/16 before last month’s deadline to pick it up. Golden State will nonetheless be on the hook for his 2014/15 guaranteed salary, worth more than $1.1MM, as long as he clears waivers. Set-off rights could allow the Warriors to reduce that amount, depending on how much Nedovic makes in Europe this year.
Michele Roberts On Cap, Max Deals, Rookie Scale
National Basketball Players Association executive director Michele Roberts has on many occasions deferred to the judgment of the players when asked about issues during her first month and a half of the job, but she’s nonetheless made her feelings known. Roberts took more pointed aim at NBA leadership and policies in an interview Wednesday with Pablo S. Torre of ESPN The Magazine, calling the league a monopoly, objecting to the salary cap, advocating for the end to maximum salaries and arguing against rookie scale contracts. She made it clear she’ll fight for the players to receive a larger portion of basketball related income, Torre writes.
Roberts isn’t ruling out the idea that the union will support a phasing in of expected increases to the salary cap, a matter that the league and the union will decide upon before 2016, but she says the idea is “not that attractive” at first glance. She wasn’t making many other concessions as she spoke with Torre, whose entire piece is worth a read. We’ll pass along Roberts’ most eye-opening comments here:
On the concept of a salary cap:
“I don’t know of any space other than the world of sports where there’s this notion that we will artificially deflate what someone’s able to make, just because. It’s incredibly un-American. My DNA is offended by it.”
On maximum salaries and the rookie scale:
“I can’t understand why the [union] would be interested in suppressing salaries at the top if we know that as salaries at the top have grown, so have salaries at the bottom. If that’s the case, I contend that there is no reason in the world why the union should embrace salary caps or any effort to place a barrier on the amount of money that marquee players can make.”
On the idea of a shorter season:
“Every time a player gets hurt, I think, my God, they really are pushing their bodies. And back-to-backs, those are the ones I really find disturbing. … So the answer, of course, is that everybody wants a shorter season. The tension is, Will that mean less money? And that’s something we need to talk about and think about. … I don’t think it would hurt the game to shorten the season.”
And-Ones: Howard, Waiters, Johnson, Pacers
Dwight Howard makes several candid comments in an EPIX.com documentary about his departure from the Magic, his year with the Lakers, and the 2013 back injury that one of his surgeons believes had a decent chance to end his career, notes Marc Stein of ESPN.com. Howard also delved into his relationship with Kobe Bryant.
“Before I got to the Lakers, I would talk to him [and] he would really help me out on the [down] low about how to become everything that I said I wanted to be. And I looked up to him and I looked up to everything he, as a basketball player, stood for,” Howard said, as Stein transcribes. “… [By the end of that season] I just felt so hurt and disappointed in the fact that the guy that I was expecting to be somebody who was gonna pass the torch, somebody to say, ‘Dwight, I’ll take you under my wing and I’ll show you how to get it done’ … it was none of that.”
Howard remains a fascinating figure even as his long-term deal with the Rockets has quieted the rumors that surrounded him. Here’s more from around the league:
- The Cavs shopped Dion Waiters this past August but found no takers, according to Bradford Doolittle of ESPN.com, who writes in an Insider-only piece. That conflicts with a report from early August that indicated the Cavs weren’t trying to trade the shooting guard.
- Ivan Johnson has drawn offers from NBA teams and clubs overseas, a source tells HoopsHype’s David Alarcón (Twitter link and translation). He plans to make a decision about whom to sign with in the next couple of weeks, Alarcón adds.
- Frank Vogel believes Lance Stephenson would have chosen to re-sign with the Pacers if he’d known Paul George would suffer his broken leg, as Vogel tells Ian Thomsen of NBA.com. “I think he probably — and we probably — would have approached it differently,” Vogel said. “The money would have to have been right, and we would’ve had to figure that out. But he would have had much more incentive to stay.”
Offseason In Review: Washington Wizards
Hoops Rumors is in the process of looking back at each team’s offseason, from the end of the playoffs in June right up until opening night. Trades, free agent signings, draft picks, contract extensions, option decisions, camp invitees, and more will be covered, as we examine the moves each franchise made over the last several months.
Signings
- Marcin Gortat: Five years, $60MM. Re-signed via Bird rights.
- Paul Pierce: Two years, $10.849MM. Signed via mid-level exception. Second year is player option.
- Kevin Seraphin: One year, $3.899MM. Signed qualifying offer.
- Garrett Temple: Two years, $2.082MM. Re-signed via minimum-salary exception. Second year is player option.
- Drew Gooden: One year, $1.448MM. Signed via minimum-salary exception.
- Rasual Butler: One year, $1.448MM. Signed via minimum-salary exception.
Extensions
- None
Trades
- Acquired $1.8MM cash from the Lakers in exchange for 2014 pick No. 46.
- Acquired Melvin Ely in a three-way trade with the Rockets and Pelicans in exchange for Trevor Ariza. Ely was subsequently waived.
- Acquired DeJuan Blair from the Mavericks in exchange for the rights to Emir Preldzic. Blair was signed-and-traded for three years, $6MM. Third year is non-guaranteed.
- Acquired Kris Humphries from the Celtics in exchange for Washington’s 2015 second-round pick (top-49 protected). Humphries was signed-and-traded for three years, $13.32MM. The third year is non-guaranteed.
Waiver Claims
- None
Draft Picks
- None
Camp Invitees
- Vander Blue
- Damion James
- John Lucas III
- Daniel Orton
- Xavier Silas
- David Stockton
Departing Players
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- Bradley Beal (fourth year, $5,694,674) — Exercised
- Otto Porter (third year, $4,662,960) — Exercised
The Wizards had their greatest postseason success in more than three decades last season, but it’s not as if there weren’t expectations that they would step forward. The franchise had just committed a five-year maximum-salary extension to John Wall in the summer of 2013 and traded a first-round pick to Phoenix on the eve of the season to acquire Marcin Gortat and keep its playoff hopes alive in the wake of a serious injury to Emeka Okafor. Coach Randy Wittman was under the gun, and rumors about his future with the team reportedly persisted until the Wizards dispatched the Bulls in the first round. Wittman wound up receiving a three-year extension worth roughly $3MM a year soon after the Pacers eliminated the Wizards in round two, but that was just a single step in an offseason journey that scarcely allowed time for GM Ernie Grunfeld to revel in the team’s newfound success.
There was pressure on the Wizards from the time Gortat arrived to ensure that they hadn’t surrendered the pick that turned out to be this year’s 18th overall selection for a mere rental. The Polish Hammer’s value only escalated as he proved he could handle the starting center job on a team capable of making noise in the playoffs. The Wizards tried to entice Gortat into signing an extension last season, but rare is the veteran who would do so, and he hit free agency as expected this past summer, drawing interest from the Cavs and Heat. Still, neither could offer the fifth year that the Wizards included in their proposal, and Gortat quickly chose to stay in Washington for $12MM annual salaries. The commitment is not especially dire for an accomplished starting center in his prime, especially given the expected jump in the salary cap in years to come. It made it harder for the team to find the money necessary to re-sign Trevor Ariza, but it wasn’t necessarily the reason why the swingman chose not to return.
Ariza said he took Houston’s offer of the same $32MM over four years that the Wizards had on the table in part because of the lack of a state income tax in Texas. The Wizards probably could have mitigated that difference, at least to some degree, and they certainly could have stuck a fifth year on their offer as they did with Gortat. Still, Ariza felt that the Rockets simply pursued him harder, even though the Wizards seemingly put him at or near equal footing with Gortat as the team established its priorities. Grunfeld nonetheless made the best of his loss, participating in a sign-and-trade that netted Washington a lucrative $8,579,089 trade exception. He also used the full mid-level exception that re-signing Ariza would have made difficult, if not impossible, to access to make the sort of signing the Wizards hadn’t made in ages.
Paul Pierce had his sights set on returning to the Nets, and once Brooklyn failed to bend to his demands, the Clippers were next in line. In an ironic twist, current Clippers and then-Wizards assistant coach Sam Cassell helped turn Pierce on to what had been an uncommon destination for late-career veteran stars. Washington’s playoff run had positioned the franchise to convince the 10-time All-Star to join a team that’s spent much of Pierce’s career looking up at his team in the standings. The now 37-year-old clearly isn’t the player he used to be, as he’s coming off a career-low 13.5 points per game, but his arrival signals a potential turning point for the Wizards, one that nonetheless heaps additional pressure on the team to keep the momentum going.
Grunfeld wasted no time reaping another benefit from the Ariza sign-and-trade, using part of the trade exception to engineer yet another sign-and-trade that saw Washington come away with a player this time around. Kris Humphries is a 10-year veteran whose production has tailed off in recent years, but he’s still just 29 years old and seemingly capable of finding the form that allowed him to average a double-double in back-to-back seasons with the Nets in 2010/11 and ’11/’12. His arrival lends further credence to the win-now attitude that surrounds the Wizards, particularly given Washington’s decision to pass on a qualifying offer for Trevor Booker at the conclusion of his rookie contract this summer. Humphries seems capable of filling the role that Booker, now with the Jazz, played last year off the bench and as a part-time starter for the oft-injured Nene.
DeJuan Blair figures to mount a challenge for those minutes, too. The undersized big man came to Washington via yet another sign-and-trade, one that Grunfeld made possible with the trade exception that rose from the vestiges of last summer’s ill-fated Eric Maynor signing. Blair’s acquisition seemed a clear signal that Grunfeld considers depth along the front line a priority. The re-signing of late-season find Drew Gooden is further indication of that. The Wizards will certainly have plenty in reserve should Nene go down with injury again, but they’ve also positioned themselves firmly in the dwindling camp of teams that believe in the benefits of having two big men on the floor.
The Wizards also secured the services of center Kevin Seraphin for another year when they extended him a qualifying offer, which Seraphin simply decided to ink. It was somewhat surprising to see the Wizards make a qualifying offer to Seraphin and not to Booker. Even though the Wizards had triggered a bump in the value of Booker’s would-be qualifying offer, it still would have been less than $1MM greater than Seraphin’s. Every dollar certainly counted for the team as it sought to bring back Gortat and Ariza, and Seraphin, at 6’9″, can play the center position a lot more capably than the 6’7″ Booker can. Still, it’s an odd choice, particularly given that Booker saw nearly twice as many minutes per game as Seraphin did last year.
The timing of the decision came as the team opted to guarantee Andre Miller‘s $4.625MM salary for this season rather than waive him and owe only a $2MM partial guarantee, so perhaps Washington viewed Miller and a qualifying offer for Booker as an either-or proposition. Regardless, Miller, another shrewd midseason veteran acquisition, gave the Wizards stability in the backcourt, as did the re-signing of Garrett Temple. Upgrading the backup point guard position was seemingly on the team’s to-do list before it acquired Miller, but Temple clearly proved his value to Grunfeld and company, earning a deal that gives him two guaranteed seasons, including a player option on year two. The 6’6″ Temple has shown his versatility as he’s capably plugged the hole that Bradley Beal‘s early season injury had created at shooting guard, leaving precious few minutes for Rasual Butler, whom the team kept to start the season on his non-guaranteed training camp deal.
Still, even the 35-year-old Butler is symbolic of the commitment to the present in Washington. Six of the team’s 15 players have already celebrated their 30th birthdays, and Humphries will join that club in February. Neither Wall nor Beal has yet reached age 25, but there’s no mistaking that the Wizards are a veteran team built to win now. They’re still a step or two away from title contention, but even amid all the pressure surrounding the club, that’s not necessarily the only goal in mind. If the team can sneak into the Eastern Conference Finals this year, thus continuing its trend of unfamiliar postseason success, the Wizards will have furthered their status as a free agent destination, with Washington native Kevin Durant‘s free agency looming in 2016.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images. The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.
Dionte Christmas Signs To Play In France
Former Suns guard Dionte Christmas has signed with Paris-Levallois of France, the team announced (translation via Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia). Christmas was in training camp with the Pelicans last month, but he didn’t make the opening-night roster. The terms of the new deal for the 28-year-old are unclear.
Christmas was on Phoenix’s roster all season last year even though he played sparingly. He made it into 31 games and averaged 2.3 points in 6.4 minutes per contest. The Pelicans only used him in one preseason game for a little more than four minutes. It was nonetheless the third consecutive October he’s spent with an NBA team, following a camp stint with the Celtics in 2012 and the Suns the next year.
The former Temple standout has managed to stay on the radar of NBA front offices despite never having played in the D-League. He’s made stops in Israel, Turkey, the Czech Republic, Greece, Russia and Italy since going undrafted in 2009.
Tobias Harris Interested In Joining Knicks
Tobias Harris has keen interest in signing with the Knicks next summer, a source tells Marc Berman of the New York Post. Harris is set for restricted free agency after the Magic failed to sign him to a rookie scale extension before last month’s deadline. Berman’s source points to the relationship that Harris, a Long Island native, has with Carmelo Anthony after the two worked out several times this past summer at Anthony’s gym in New York. Both Anthony and Harris are clients of the Creative Artists Agency.
An October report indicated that Harris would receive an “upgrade” in his shoe deal with Nike if he were to join a large-market team, though the NBA doesn’t permit players to receive any financial bonuses in their endorsement deals based on the teams that they play for. However, those contracts can give players a bump based on the number of national television appearances that their teams make.
The Magic have reportedly informed Harris’ camp that they’re likely to match any offers for the combo forward, who turns 23 in July. The same dispatch indicated that the Magic were eyeing salaries of around $9MM earlier this fall. Magic GM Rob Hennigan has said that he can’t imagine not keeping the former 19th overall pick, and Harris said at about the same time that he would like to stay in Orlando.
It’s unclear if the Knicks have strong interest in Harris. They have about $32.7MM in commitments for 2015/16, though that doesn’t count a nearly $6.34MM player option for J.R. Smith.
Grizzlies To Audition Kenyon Martin
WEDNESDAY, 8:10am: Today’s meeting is about a coaching position, tweets Michael Scotto of SheridanHoops (Twitter links). Given the conflicting reports, it seems possible that the Grizzlies have interest in Martin both as a player and as a coach, though that’s just my speculation. Player-coaches aren’t allowed under the current collective bargaining agreement, so the Grizzlies and Martin would have to choose one or the other.
TUESDAY, 11:42pm: The Grizzlies are set to work 14-year veteran Kenyon Martin on Wednesday, reports Ronald Tillery of The Commercial Appeal (Twitter link). No signing is imminent, Tillery cautions, but Memphis nonetheless apparently wants a close look at the former No. 1 overall pick who’s a month and a half shy of his 37th birthday.
The Andy Miller client met with the Rockets last month, though there were conflicting reports about whether the visit was in connection with a possible roster spot or a coaching gig. There’s otherwise been paltry interest in Martin since last season, when he finished up his second year with the Knicks. In April he expressed a desire to return to play for New York and suggested that he had no intention to retire just yet.
Memphis has only 14 players after waiving Kalin Lucas this weekend, so the team has the flexibility to take on Martin without letting anyone else go. The Grizzlies have a sliver of the mid-level exception left over, but it’s not enough to accommodate Martin, whose prorated minimum salary would exceed that amount. The team is less than $1MM shy of the luxury tax line, and while it appears as though a prorated minimum salary contract for Martin would fit beneath that threshold, it would severely limit the Grizzlies’ flexibility to make other moves unless it were a non-guaranteed arrangement.
