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Warriors Waive Nemanja Nedovic
The Warriors have waived guard Nemanja Nedovic, the team announced via a press release. This comes on the heels of a report from Diamond Leung of the Bay Area News Group that relayed the team was in talks with Nedovic about a way to allow him to move on from the team. According to Leung, the Warriors were interested in a buyout or possible trade rather than an outright release. It is not yet clear if the two sides reached an agreement on a buyout prior to Nedovic being waived.
Unless Nedovic is claimed off waivers, which is unlikely, Golden State is on the hook for Nedovic’s $1.1MM salary for this season, and this move reduces the team’s roster count to 14 players. It was apparent that the point guard wasn’t in their long-term plans after the team declined to pick up their third-year team option for Nedovic last month. For his part, Nedovic has seemingly been the subject of attention from overseas. Valencia of Spain has targeted Nedovic as a replacement for Dwight Buycks, who reached a buyout arrangement with the Spanish club last week, according to PlazaDeportiva.com (Translation via HoopsHype).
Nedovic, 23, appeared in 24 games with the Warriors last season as a rookie, averaging 1.1 points in 5.9 minutes per contest. He hasn’t seen any regular season action this year after averaging 9.2 points, 2.6 assists and in 15.9 minutes in the preseason.
Eddie Scarito contributed to this post.
Lakers, Others Pursue Quincy Miller
NOVEMBER 11TH: Miller is set to work out for the Lakers later this week, Charania tweets. The team recently received its disabled player exception for Randle, though it’s unclear if Los Angeles is targeting Miller for more than the minimum.
NOVEMBER 1ST, 1:16pm: Two other teams interested in potentially signing Miller are the Rockets and the Pacers, Charania reports
OCTOBER 31ST, 9:25pm: The Lakers are the leading team among the several that are going after former Nuggets forward Quincy Miller, reports Shams Charania of RealGM (Twitter link). The Nuggets waived Miller just before the deadline for teams to cut their rosters to 15 players this week after trying to find trade partners who’d take him on. It appears clubs were waiting to have a crack at the player drafted 38th overall in 2012 without having to give up anything in a swap, given the high volume of interest that Charania indicates.
Miller, who turns 22 on November 18th, finally recovered last year from a torn left ACL that he suffered as a high school senior, averaging 4.9 points in 15.2 minutes per game across 52 contests after he made only seven appearances as a rookie the season before. He was the fifth-rated high school prospect in the country in 2011, according to the Recruiting Services Consensus Index, and front offices are apparently interested to see if his renewed health will allow him to finally realize that potential.
Injuries have taken their toll on the Lakers, who are without Steve Nash and Julius Randle for the rest of the season. They have 15 players on the roster and are limited to paying no more than the minimum salary, but they’re planning to apply for a disabled player exception for Nash that would allow them to spend close to $4.851MM on a free agent. They could also apply for such an exception based on Randle’s injury that would be worth about $1.499MM.
That smaller amount would likely be enough for Miller, and it would still be somewhat surprising to see a team commit more than the minimum salary to him. The more pressing concern for the Lakers might be the roster spot that adding Miller would cost them. Point guard Ronnie Price and shooting guard Wayne Ellington are the team’s only players without fully guaranteed contracts, and their non-guaranteed pacts become partially guaranteed if they’re still on the roster at the end of November 15th. Additional serious injuries could put the Lakers in line to apply for a hardship provision that would allow them to add at 16th player, but that’s not in play for now.
Central Notes: Price, Cavs, Pistons
The Bulls are in first place in the Central Division, and with the struggles of the Cavs so far this season, that might not change for a while. The same stability could be seen in the division’s cellar, even though the last-place Pacers won Monday for a second time this year, beating the Jazz. Both Cleveland and Indiana have made roster moves in the regular season’s first two weeks, and there’s more on the newest Pacer amid the latest from around the Central:
- The 16th roster spot that the league granted the Pacers is only temporary, but coach Frank Vogel believes that A.J. Price, whom the team signed to fill that slot, deserves a spot on an NBA roster somewhere, notes Curt Cavin of the Indianapolis Star. Price merely hopes that Vogel is right. “I’m playing for my life, man,” Price said. “I’m staying till they tell me to go or tell me to stay longer, either or.” Price has an offer to play in China, writes Mark Montieth of Pacers.com, but he’s unsurprisingly eager to stay longer if the Pacers see fit to keep him and offload another player, as the Star’s Autumn Allison tweets.
- The Cavs should be kicking around trade ideas internally, but they shouldn’t be reaching out to other teams at this stage in spite of their .500 record, as Tom Penn of ESPN.com opines amid an Insider-only “Front Office” piece.
- Stan Van Gundy isn’t the first Pistons coach to start poorly in recent years, but the difference with him is that he has the power to change the team’s personnel, an idea that must be increasingly appealing to him, MLive’s David Mayo writes.
And-Ones: Leonard, Millsap, Mekel, Sixers
Kawhi Leonard says he was “never upset” that the Spurs passed on a rookie-scale extension for him before last month’s deadline, as he tells USA Today’s Sam Amick.
“I don’t think I’m going anywhere,” Leonard said. “I mean they love me here. I like the organization, and if it was up to me, I want to finish out with one team like a lot of great players have done, to stay with one organization their whole career and just be loyal to that. You never know. We’ll see what happens next summer, but I’m pretty sure I’ll be in a Spurs jersey for my whole life.”
The Spurs reportedly passed on Leonard’s request for a max extension because they prefer maintain maximum cap flexibility for next summer, even though they’ve indicated that they’ll match any offer another team might make for the player Gregg Popovich calls a “coach’s dream.” Here’s more from around the NBA:
- Paul Millsap acknowledged Monday that he’ll look around when he hits free agency in the summer, but he made it clear that the Hawks are the front-runners to re-sign him, as Marc Berman of the New York Post chronicles. “Anywhere could be an option,” Millsap said. “But my loyalty right now is in Atlanta. Free agency is free agency. When it happens, I’ll weigh my options and see where I’m at. But I’m happy in Atlanta right now.’’
- A report late last month indicated that the Thunder had interest in Gal Mekel before they were beset by injuries, but with Ish Smith having joined the team as a 16th player and some of the wounded recovering, Mekel and OKC aren’t in active talks, tweets Marc Stein of ESPN.com.
- Details are scarce about the contract that Drew Gordon signed Monday with the Sixers, but it is a multiyear arrangement, according to the RealGM transactions log.
- The Timberwolves lost a star when Kevin Love forced a trade this summer, and Flip Saunders recognizes the importance of creating an environment that will help prevent a repeat in the future with Andrew Wiggins, as Bleacher Report’s Ethan Skolnick examines.
DraftKings NBA $1K Mini Layup
The following is a sponsored post from DraftKings.
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All you have to do is draft a team of the best fantasy performers in this salary-cap style pick ’em. You have $50,000 to select eight players — one at all five positions, plus another guard, another forward, and a utility player. The deadline to enter is tonight at 6:30pm Central time.
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D-League Assignments
The shuttling of players back and forth from the D-League to the NBA has begun even though the D-League regular season has yet to start, and it only figures to intensify once the season begins for real on the NBA’s junior circuit. NBA teams have been allowed to make an unlimited number of D-League assignments the past two years, and they’ve taken full advantage.
D-League teams have no shortage of ways to stock their rosters. The eight-round D-League draft at the beginning of the month filled plenty of slots, while NBA teams kept the D-League rights to a combined 47 players they cut during the preseason, taking advantage of expanded leeway to do so. Most first-time D-Leaguers entering the league after its draft must go through waivers, allowing interested affiliates to submit claims, but D-League teams are allowed to make outright signings of the players they find through preseason tryout camps. Yet perhaps the most noteworthy players to pass through the D-League come via NBA assignment.
The players whom NBA teams assign to the D-League aren’t quite like other D-Leaguers. NBA players receive their full salaries while on D-League assignment, whereas the D-Leaguers without an NBA contract receive paltry annual earnings that top out at around $26K. Still, a D-League assignment could wind up costing an NBA player, since performance in the D-League doesn’t count toward any incentive clauses built into an NBA contract. So, for instance, say Andrew Bogut is injured at some point this season, and he plays a few rehab games with Golden State’s D-League affiliate, the Santa Cruz Warriors. None of the numbers Bogut might put up in Santa Cruz would count toward the performance incentives built into his deal with the big club.
Of course, Bogut would be a rare case as a long-tenured NBA player on a D-League assignment. Most NBA players in the D-League have fewer than three years of experience. That’s in part because NBA teams want to give their young players some extra seasoning, as the “D” in D-League stands for development, after all. Yet players in their first, second or third NBA seasons are the only ones whom NBA teams can unilaterally send down to the D-League. Otherwise, they must get the consent of the union as well as the player. Still, it happens on occasion, as with Rajon Rondo‘s brief D-League assignment last year, one that lasted less than two hours.
Most players on D-League assignment spend more time with the farm team than Rondo did. Once a player has been assigned to the D-League, he can remain there indefinitely, and lengthy stints are not uncommon. The Rockets sent Robert Covington to the D-League on November 7th last year, and he didn’t return to Houston until January 18th. Still, Covington later went on multiple D-League assignments that lasted only a day or less. The Rockets are one of 17 NBA teams that either own their D-League teams outright or operate the basketball operations of their affiliates in “hybrid” partnerships with local ownership groups. Teams that have these arrangements can set up a unified system in which the D-League club runs the same offensive and defensive schemes and coaches dole out playing time based on what’s best for the parent club. That gives these NBA teams an advantage, so it’s no surprise that a growing number of them are striking up one-to-one affiliations — as recently as 2012/13, only 11 teams had such an arrangement.
That leaves the other 13 NBA teams to share just one D-League squad, the Fort Wayne Mad Ants, which will make for a tight squeeze. D-League teams can expand their rosters from 10 to 12 to accept players on assignment from the NBA, but no D-League team may accept more than four players on assignment, or two at any one position, at the same time. If Fort Wayne is at those maximums and one of its 13 NBA parents wants to assign a player, other D-League teams may volunteer to accept the player. The NBA team making the assignment can choose from those clubs if there are multiple volunteers, but if no D-League team raises its hand, the D-League will randomly choose one of its teams to accept the player.
For more on the D-League, check out our list of affiliations for this year and bookmark https://www.hoopsrumors.com/nba-d-league/ to track the latest news about NBA players in the D-League.
Note: This is a Hoops Rumors Glossary entry. Our glossary posts will explain specific rules relating to trades, free agency, or other aspects of the NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement. Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ was used in the creation of this post.
Versions of this post were initially published on November 7th, 2012 and November 2nd, 2013.
Knicks Notes: Jackson, Fisher, Dolan, Agents
Phil Jackson isn’t keen on commissioner Adam Silver’s recent assertion that the Knicks have been slow to pick up on the triangle, but the Zen Master made it clear Monday that he, too, recognizes his 2-6 team still has a lot to learn, as Marc Berman of the New York Post chronicles. The Knicks team president hinted that he’ll soon be drawing conclusions about members of his roster, which suggests moves won’t be far behind.
“There’s still quite a ways from their execution capabilities as a team,’’ Jackson said. “This is going to happen, [it’s] all part of the process. We think in terms of basketball-wise, Thanksgiving, December, it’s time to really say, ‘If you haven’t gotten it by now, maybe we’ll have to think of you as a learner or not a learner as a ballplayer at that time.’ ’’
There’s more from Jackson’s chat with reporters amid the latest on the struggling Knicks:
- Coach Derek Fisher insists Jackson doesn’t micromanage, as Berman notes in his piece, and Jackson explained that he’s tried to strike a balance between giving input and letting Fisher make his own decisions, observes Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com. “I came back to impart what I learned,’’ Jackson said of his first-time foray into a team’s front office. “I’m constantly giving off ideas in the form of writing notes, communicating in various forms, some things we can try, some things we can initiate. We’ve touched just a very small part of our offense and adding bits and pieces as we go on.’’
- Jackson has said before that input from James Dolan was sparse throughout the offseason, but the Zen Master said Monday that the owner has already spoken to him several times since the start of the season, as Begley points out. “Mostly, it was about pleasantries,” Jackson said. “But, to my surprise, he was happy with how the team performed.”
- Jackson is delegating the duties of negotiation with player agents, as Begley notes via Twitter. “I’ve kind of let [GM] Steve Mills deal with those friends of ours,” Jackson said.
Offseason In Review: Philadelphia 76ers
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
- Malcolm Thomas: Four years, $4.373MM. Signed via cap room. First year is partially guaranteed for $474K. Second, third and fourth years are non-guaranteed. Fourth year is also team option. (Waived after season began)
- JaKarr Sampson: Four years, $3.384MM. Signed via cap room. First year is partially guaranteed for $50K. Second, third and fourth years are non-guaranteed. Fourth year is also team option.
Extensions
- None
Trades
- Acquired 2014 pick No. 12, Orlando’s 2015 second-round pick, and their own 2017 first-round pick that they’d given up in a previous trade from the Magic in exchange for 2014 pick No. 10.
- Acquired the rights to Pierre Jackson from the Pelicans in exchange for 2014 pick No. 47.
- Acquired 2014 pick No. 58 and 2014 pick No. 60 from the Spurs in exchange for 2014 pick No. 54.
- Acquired cash from the Nets in exchange for 2014 pick No. 60.
- Acquired Luc Mbah a Moute, Alexey Shved, and Miami’s 2015 first-round pick (top-10 protected) in a three-way trade with the Cavaliers and Timberwolves in exchange for Thaddeus Young.
- Acquired Hasheem Thabeet and $100K cash from the Thunder in exchange for Philadelphia’s 2015 second-round pick (top-55 protected). Thabeet was subsequently waived.
- Acquired Keith Bogans and Cleveland’s 2018 second-round pick from the Cavaliers in exchange for 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. Bogans was subsequently waived.
- Acquired Marquis Teague and the more favorable of Milwaukee’s and Sacramento’s 2019 second-round picks from the Nets in exchange for Casper Ware. Teague was subsequently waived.
- Acquired Travis Outlaw, New York’s 2019 second-round pick, and the right to swap the Clippers’ 2018 second-round pick with New York’s 2018 second-round pick from the Knicks in exchange for Arnett Moultrie. Outlaw was subsequently waived.
Waiver Claims
- Chris Johnson: Claimed from the Celtics. Three years, $2.948MM remaining. Contract is non-guaranteed. Final year is also team option.
Draft Picks
- Joel Embiid (Round 1, 3rd overall). Signed via rookie scale exception to rookie scale contract.
- Dario Saric (Round 1, 12th overall). Playing overseas.
- K.J. McDaniels (Round 2, 32nd overall). Signed required tender for one year, $507K. Non-guaranteed.
- Jerami Grant (Round 2, 39th overall). Signed via cap room for four years, $3.762MM. Third and fourth years are non-guaranteed. Fourth year is also team option.
- Vasilije Micic (Round 2, 52nd overall). Playing overseas.
- Jordan McRae (Round 2, 58th overall). Playing overseas.
- Pierre Jackson (2013, Round 2, 42nd overall). Signed via cap room for one year, $507K. Partially guaranteed for $400K. Subsequently waived.
Camp Invitees
- Drew Gordon
- Malcolm Lee
- Ronald Roberts Jr.
Departing Players
- James Anderson
- Adonis Thomas
- Arnett Moultrie
- Byron Mullens
- Jarvis Varnado
- Casper Ware
- Elliot Williams
- Thaddeus Young
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- Michael Carter-Williams (third year, $2,399,040) — Exercised
- Nerlens Noel (third year, $3,457,800) — Exercised
- Tony Wroten (fourth year, $2,179,354) — Exercised
You might assume that a team that pulls off nine trades in a single offseason and comes away with two of the top 12 picks in the draft would be in line to make significant improvements on a 19-63 record from the season before. But in the Bizarro world of the Sixers, where the concerns of tomorrow effectively blot out the existence of today, such conventional wisdom simply doesn’t hold. Those nine trades netted only a pair of players who are on the current roster. One of those top 12 picks is months from playing again, while the other probably won’t be in the NBA until 2016/17. Malcolm Thomas, the team’s most lucrative free agent signee, inked but a four-year, minimum-salary contract, and the Sixers have already released him.
Ultimately, the key figure of Philly’s summer of 2014 will be No. 3 overall pick Joel Embiid, who seemed primed to become the top pick until he broke his foot several days before the draft. The fear that Embiid might miss a significant portion of this season, if not all of it, dissuaded the Cavs and Bucks, who held the top two picks, from drafting him. Neither of them had the stomach to wait that long and risk that the 7-footer would never make it back fully healthy. The Sixers, with more patience than any team in memory, had no such qualms. Of course, it’s not necessarily a matter of merely waiting, since the Cameroonian’s skills, though eminently intriguing, are raw and in need of careful development. The Sixers already have 6’11” Nerlens Noel in place to offset the risk that Embiid simply doesn’t pan out, and while Noel has returned seemingly at full strength after missing all of 2013/14, two big men with a history of injuries doesn’t always add up to at least one healthy player.
There’s no specific timetable for Embiid’s return to the lineup, and there seems a decent chance that he, like Noel, will sit out the first year of his rookie scale contract. This, too, is a gamble for the Sixers, since even as they may be willing to wait longer to compete than anyone had imagined a team could, their up-and-coming talent won’t wait an eternity to be paid. The Sixers surely have no shortage of flexibility to grant extensions or new contracts to Noel and reigning Rookie of the Year Michael Carter-Williams when the time comes. Still, if 2014/15 is a lost cause of a year for Philadelphia, at least as far as the standings are concerned, that means Noel and Carter-Williams will have gone through half of their bargain rookie scale contracts without the Sixers having reaped much tangible benefit.
Philadelphia could nonetheless convert their existing talent into yet more future considerations, and reports this summer indicated the team considered trading Carter-Williams, with the acquisition of another high draft pick in mind. Such a swap would seem a last resort even for the brazen Sixers, as there’s seemingly little logic in giving up on a young prospect who’s already shown signs of achievement for the goal of either acquiring promising but unproven talent or buying more time to develop the rest of the team. Of course, GM Sam Hinkie doesn’t necessarily agree with that sentiment.
Hinkie and owner Josh Harris, who has empowered the GM to ignore any regard for winning in the near term, nearly found out the hard way what it’s like to hold an unpopular opinion about the way an NBA team should conduct its business. Rampant distaste around the NBA for Philadelphia’s take-no-prisoners approach to rebuilding fueled a league proposal to change the lottery and reduce the chances that the teams at the very bottom of the standings each year would receive the top pick in the subsequent draft. Luckily for the Sixers, they found an ally in Thunder GM Sam Presti, whose campaign against lottery reform seemed to play a crucial role in convincing enough owners to block the measure, which needed a three-fourths majority to pass. Support for adding greater disincentive to tank still remains, and another proposal seems likely to surface. It’s nonetheless an issue that almost certainly won’t affect the 2015 lottery, allowing the Sixers to proceed with their radical plan for the time being.
Even if the 2016 lottery takes place under a different set of rules, that still gives Hinkie plenty of time to prepare. The GM has made his moves in relatively short order even as he keeps his eye firmly on long-term goals. He traded his team’s three most talented healthy players from the start of last season within a span of six months, completing the trifecta when he shipped Thaddeus Young to Minnesota as the third team in the trade that sent Kevin Love to Cleveland. The prize for Philadelphia was the future first-round pick that Hinkie had been unable to obtain for Evan Turner and Spencer Hawes. Six of the nine trades the Sixers made in the offseason sent draft picks for 2014 and beyond to Philadelphia. They netted just two first-round picks, but Hinkie continued to demonstrate his affection for second-rounders. Philadelphia could make as many as a dozen second-round picks between 2015 and 2019 after making four this past June.
One of those second-rounders threw the Sixers a curve this summer. No. 32 overall pick K.J. McDaniels, a small forward from Clemson talented enough to go in the first round, balked when the Sixers offered a deal similar to the four-year, mostly non-guaranteed contract for slightly better than the minimum salary that they gave No. 39 overall pick Jerami Grant. McDaniels probably could have grabbed a more lucrative contract overseas, but agent Mark Bartelstein convinced him to bet that a one-year deal for the minimum salary with zero guaranteed money provided the best way to beat Philly’s system. McDaniels signed the required tender for those terms, an offer that the Sixers had to make to keep his draft rights, and so far, his gamble appears to be paying off at least to a modest extent, as he’s averaged 7.2 points and 5.6 rebounds in 28.4 minutes per game across five starts. He’s set for restricted free agency next summer, when he’ll be 21, and though the Sixers still have the ability to match all offers, McDaniels has the ability to solicit bids from 30 teams instead of just one, as he did this past summer.
The McDaniels saga proves that while Harris and Hinkie are bent on future glory at the expense of the present, the concerns of today are nonetheless important for realizing the dreams of tomorrow. The Sixers have to give at least enough regard to the talent they have already in their possession if they’re ever to gather enough of it to start to build some momentum toward their ultimate goals. It’s unclear whether the team regards McDaniels as an outlier or a trend-setter, but it’s critical for the Sixers that they heed all the lessons they learn from their experiment.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images. The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.
Atlantic Notes: Raptors, Pressey, Knicks
The Raptors are tied for the league’s best record at 6-1, and any trepidation about whether Kyle Lowry merely lucked into his four-year, $48MM deal thanks to an aberration of a season last year is dissolving with each passing game. His 17.9 points per contest this season is precisely the same number he put up in 2013/14, when he set a new career high. While we wait to see just how well Lowry and the Raptors will continue to play, here’s more from Toronto and other Atlantic Division locales:
- Greivis Vasquez and James Johnson haven’t been Raptors teammates for long, but the point guard is already sold on the value of the forward the team signed this past summer, note Ryan Wolstat of the Toronto Sun notes and Josh Lewenberg of TSN Sports (Twitter links). “He’s a little spicy, a little crazy, but I love playing with a guy like him because I know he’s got my back,” Vasquez said.
- The decision the Celtics made to keep Phil Pressey past the date his minimum salary became guaranteed this summer is paying off with Marcus Smart injured, as Marc D’Amico of Celtics.com examines.
- Phil Jackson has made his share of changes in his eight months as Knicks president, but none of them appear to have made a difference in the team’s effectiveness, opines Marc Berman of the New York Post.

