Rookie Scale Team Option Tracker

The October 31st deadline for rookie scale extensions generates plenty of rumors this time of year, as a glance at the news on Klay Thompson, Kenneth Faried, Ricky Rubio, Brandon Knight and Jimmy Butler in our “Top Stories” on the right side of the site indicates. Still, that’s not the only piece of business NBA teams must address by Halloween. Clubs also have to decide whether to exercise or decline 2015/16 options for rookie-scale players heading into their second or third NBA seasons.

The players listed below are already on guaranteed contracts with their respective teams for the 2014/15 season, but they only have team options for 2015/16. These players’ clubs must decide by the end of the month whether to lock them up for ’15/’16 for the contract amount indicated in parentheses, or to let them become unrestricted free agents next summer. Many of these guys are locks to have their options picked up, but that’s not the case for all of them, as I examined in August.

That October 31st deadline is still a few weeks away, and many of the moves on these players won’t become official until much closer to that date, but we’ll be tracking every decision right here for the rest of the month. You can find our rookie contract 2015/16 option tracker anytime on the right sidebar under “Hoops Rumors Features.” Here’s the list to date, with updates to come as decisions are announced:

76ers

Bucks

Bulls

Cavaliers

Celtics

Clippers

Grizzlies

  • None

Hawks

Heat

  • None

Hornets

Jazz

Kings

Knicks

Lakers

  • None

Magic

Mavericks

  • None

Nets

Nuggets

  • None

Pacers

Pelicans

Pistons

Raptors

Rockets

Spurs

  • None

Suns

Thunder

Timberwolves

 Trail Blazers

Warriors

Wizards

Basketball Insiders was used in the creation of this post.

Poll: Will Michael Beasley Return To The NBA?

Michael Beasley‘s basketball odyssey took yet another unexpected turn Thursday, when he agreed to a deal to play for China’s Shanghai Sharks and the Grizzlies obliged, waiving his non-guaranteed contract. An undisclosed illness that kept him out of the team’s first preseason game might have helped contribute to the decision, since the 25-year-old had to make the most of his time this month if he were to have made the Grizzlies regular season roster, but his departure is nonetheless surprising. Memphis has guaranteed money on the books for 14 players, which left the Jared Karnes client a decent chance to stick for opening night, just as he did on a non-guaranteed deal with the Heat last season.

The former No. 2 overall pick didn’t see an abundance of playing time for the Finals-bound Heat, but he was effective when he did hit the floor, scoring 18.9 points per 36 minutes. He appeared in 55 regular season games but only four postseason contests, as it seemed by the spring that the Heat had already moved on. Team president Pat Riley was quick to dismiss whispers that his team continued to worry about Beasley’s maturity level, but the former Kansas State standout’s reputation is still in need of heavy scrubbing. It was little more than a year ago that the Suns took the unusual step of impugning Beasley’s “personal and professional conduct” when they waived him after agreeing to a buyout deal. That didn’t stop the Spurs, who tolerate no hijinks, from working him out this summer, and the Lakers auditioned him twice.

Beasley was one of the top scorers, rebounders and three-point shooters still on the market in August before he hooked on with the Grizzlies, so it’s clear that much of the talent that made him such an intriguing prospect when he came out of Kansas State in 2008 is still there. He’s only 25, so he still has time to forge a productive NBA career, if he gets that chance. That won’t happen until the end of the Chinese season, at the earliest. Let us know whether you think Beasley will make it back to the NBA, and elaborate on your choice in the comments.

Will Michael Beasley Ever Return To The NBA?
Yes 64.43% (346 votes)
No 35.57% (191 votes)
Total Votes: 537

How Last Year’s Rookie Extension Eligibles Fared

Three players among those eligible for rookie scale extensions this year have already put pen to paper, but several key decisions loom in the three weeks left before the October 31st deadline. A half dozen players signed rookie scale extensions last fall, but most who could have done so instead wound up in free agency this summer.

The results were decidedly mixed, and just about every possible outcome came to pass among the 12 players who went without rookie scale extensions a year ago. Two re-signed with their teams on long-term deals, four signed with other teams, two inked qualifying offers, and one is no longer playing in the NBA. Another signed an offer sheet, only to see his former team match and yank him back, while two were traded after failing to reach extensions but re-signed with their new team this summer.

Here’s a look at what happened with each of the players who were up for rookie scale extensions in 2013, including those who signed extensions as well as those who became free agents.

  • Eric Bledsoe — Phoenix’s brass passed on an extension to see how he would perform last year as a starter for the first time, and the Suns and Bledsoe engaged in the summer’s most contentious negotiations before striking a five-year, $70MM deal.
  • Trevor Booker — The Wizards and Booker didn’t reach an extension, and after the power forward met the starter criteria to up his qualifying offer, Washington decided against extending him the QO and made him an unrestricted free agent. Booker will earn more than the qualifying offer would have given him this season in the first year of a two-year, $9.775MM deal with the Jazz.
  • Avery Bradley — The Celtics and Bradley didn’t come to terms on an extension, but they committed to each other this summer with a four-year, $32MM contract.
  • DeMarcus Cousins — The Kings went all-in with their talented but temperamental center, signing him to a four-year, maximum salary extension.
  • Jordan Crawford — Boston unsurprisingly passed on an extension, but he performed capably as a fill-in at point guard for the Celtics last season. He didn’t play nearly as well as Stephen Curry‘s backup after a trade sent him to the Warriors, and he wound up heading to China for this coming season.
  • Ed Davis — CEO Jason Levien‘s regime was high on the big man, but they didn’t come to terms on an extension. GM Chris Wallace, having been restored to power, prefers to ride with Zach Randolph instead, and Randolph’s veteran extension helped push Davis out of Memphis and to the Lakers on a two-year, minimum salary deal.
  • Derrick Favors — The former No. 3 overall pick signed a four-year, $48MM extension with the Jazz that looks like a bargain for the team next to Hayward’s deal.
  • Paul George — The Pacers made him their Designated Player, giving him a five-year, maximum-salary extension. George actually wound up with a little less than he could have made, since he triggered the Derrick Rose rule after agreeing to take less than the 30% max the rule would afford him. Still, the slight discount is of little solace to the Pacers, who’ll likely be without him for the whole season after he broke his leg this summer.
  • Gordon Hayward — He and the Jazz didn’t come to terms on an extension, unlike his teammate Favors, and he scored a four-year, maximum-salary offer sheet from the Hornets, which Utah matched.
  • Greg Monroe — Agent David Falk doesn’t generally sign extensions and didn’t come to terms with former Pistons president of basketball operations Joe Dumars. New coach/executive Stan Van Gundy was in place by the time Monroe hit restricted free agency, but Falk and his client were still reluctant to make a long-term commitment. Monroe wound up boldly signing Detroit’s $5.48MM qualfying offer to hit unrestricted free agency next year.
  • Patrick Patterson — It certainly wasn’t a shock when he and the Kings went without an extension last fall, and it wasn’t altogether surprising when trade-happy GM Pete D’Alessandro sent the power forward out in a swap. Patterson nonetheless played a key role on a suddenly insurgent Raptors team, and Toronto re-signed him to a new three-year, $18.15MM contract this summer.
  • Quincy Pondexter — He signed a four-year, $14MM extension with the Grizzlies that was probably the most unexpected extension of the bunch last year.
  • Larry Sanders — The Bucks inked him to a four-year, $44MM extension, a deal that soon looked regrettable as a season to forget unfolded for Milwaukee and its center.
  • Kevin Seraphin — Agent Rich Paul, who threatened to have Bledsoe sign his qualifying offer, also represents Seraphin, who did just that, inking his QO worth $3.899MM to return to the Wizards.
  • Evan Turner — The Sixers decided against tabbing the former No. 2 overall pick as a building block of their new core, declining to extend his contract last fall and shipping him to the Pacers at the deadline. Turner’s numbers as an Indiana reserve paled next to what he put up on a depleted Philadelphia team, and the Pacers didn’t tender a qualifying offer, making him an unrestricted free agent. He wound up with a two-year, $6.704MM deal from the Celtics.
  • Ekpe Udoh — The Bucks committed to Sanders as their big man instead, passing on an extension with Udoh and later declining to tender a qualifying offer. The former sixth overall pick spent most of the summer on the market before signing a one-year, minimum salary deal to join the Clippers.
  • Greivis Vasquez — The 28th overall pick from 2010 seemed primed for an extension after averaging 9.0 assists per game for the Pelicans in his third NBA season, but the Kings decided against it after trading for him in the summer of 2013. Sacramento flipped him to Toronto in the same trade that sent Patterson out, and like Patterson, Vasquez became a key reserve for the Raptors. He fell in love with Toronto and inked a new two-year, $13MM contract.
  • John Wall — The Wizards took a leap of faith, signing Wall to a five-year, maximum salary extension, and the team’s newly christened Designated Player paid immediate dividends, helping lead Washington to its best postseason performance in more than three decades.

Southeast Notes: Stephenson, Brand, Magic

The Heat will take on LeBron James and his Cavaliers in Saturday’s preseason game for the first time since he left to return to Cleveland, but the sentiments between James and those he left behind in Miami aren’t as raw as the feeling between new Wizards forward Paul Pierce and the Nets. Pierce and his former team have conflicting stories about just what led to his departure, but the Wizards are surely glad about whatever it is that pried the 16-year veteran from Brooklyn. Here’s more from the Southeast Division:

  • Lance Stephenson cried when he told Pacers he was signing with the Hornets instead this summer, as he admits to Bleacher Report’s Jared Zwerling, but a surprise appearance by owner Michael Jordan in the team’s meeting helped seal the pitch. “When I shook [Jordan’s] hand, I was shaking,” Stephenson said. “I was very nervous because that’s like everybody in the world who played basketball’s idol. I thought I would never meet Michael Jordan, but when I finally met him and talked to him and got to know him, that was the best feeling ever.”
  • Kemba Walker‘s endorsement of Stephenson, whom he played against for years when they were both growing up in New York City, helped convince the Hornets to pursue the free agent shooting guard this year, as Zwerling details in the same piece.
  • Elton Brand‘s ability to guard opposing centers is the chief reason why the Hawks brought him back, and familiarity is what led the 35-year-old to choose Atlanta over a handful of other suitors this summer, as he tells Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
  • Tobias Harris and Nikola Vucevic are starting their seasons by making strong impressions in Orlando, writes Ken Hornack of FOX Sports Florida. Timing is everything for these players as they have until the end of the month to sign extensions to their rookie contracts. Magic head coach Jacque Vaughn isn’t letting his players get distracted by their pending contract statuses. “My message to them has been I’m going to coach you. No matter if you’re in a contract year or your first year in the league. I’m going to coach you the same. Hopefully that puts a little bit of ease underneath their wings in the sense of, ‘Just go play basketball,’“ Vaughn said.

Chris Crouse contributed to this post.

Michael Beasley Leaves Grizzlies For China

4:29pm: Memphis has officially waived Beasley, the team announced in a press release.

4:10pm: The Grizzlies reported that Beasley has been ill recently, making it difficult for him to contend for the final regular season roster spot, Ira Winderman of The Sun Sentinel notes. This information sheds some more light on why Beasley would decide to leave an NBA training camp to play overseas.

2:00pm: Beasley is receiving a “lucrative” one-year deal from the Sharks, Wojnarowski writes in his full story. Wojnarowski indicates that he’s already signed the contract, but the move can’t become official until the Grizzlies let him go and Beasley receives FIBA clearance.

1:30pm: Michael Beasley is leaving the Grizzlies and will sign to play in China, agent Jared Karnes tells Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link). He’s set to join the Yao Ming-owned Shanghai Sharks, Wojnarowski adds (on Twitter). Beasley is on a non-guaranteed contract with Memphis, but the team has yet to formally release him. The Grizzlies would have to be on board with the move for Beasley to depart, and the former No. 2 overall pick has the best track record of the six players on non-guaranteed deals that Memphis brought to camp. Memphis only has 14 guaranteed contracts, seemingly indicating that Beasley had a decent shot to make the opening-night roster.

Still, Grizzlies coach Dave Joerger said last month that the 25-year-old Beasley would have to “come in and take somebody’s spot,” suggesting that it wouldn’t necessarily be easy for him to remain on the roster into the regular season. The forward worked out for the Spurs and twice auditioned for Lakers brass, but it’s unclear if either club offered him a job. The Heat moved on from him after he spent last season with Miami, and while a report indicated the team had concerns about his maturity and his ability to play defense, Heat team president Pat Riley suggested there were no such issues.

Beasley was on a non-guaranteed contract this time last year with the Heat, but he stuck with the team for the entire season, averaging 7.9 points and 3.1 rebounds in 15.1 minutes per game. His 38.9% three-point shooting and 16.8 PER were his best marks in either category since his rookie season.

The terms of Beasley’s deal with Shanghai are unclear, but I’d imagine it involves some guaranteed salary, although that’s just my speculation. Most Chinese contracts involving NBA veterans cover one season without NBA escape clauses, but because the Chinese season ends much earlier than the NBA’s does, many players in Beasley’s position are able to latch on with NBA teams for the back stretch of the regular season and the playoffs.

Coaching Rumors: Vogel, Joerger, Hoiberg

Pacers president of basketball operations Larry Bird today called Frank Vogel a “perfect fit” for the team, as Candace Buckner of the Indianapolis Star notes (Twitter link), one day after Indiana granted an extension to the coach whose job appeared in serious jeopardy a few months ago. Much has changed for the Pacers since then, and Vogel’s task this year will be different than in years past, when he was in charge of a team on the rise. While we wait to see just how much Vogel can squeeze out of his depleted roster, we’ll pass along more on his deal and other news from NBA coaching circles.

  • Indications are that Vogel’s extension runs until the summer of 2017, according to Sean Deveney of The Sporting News, who also notes that Vogel is likely to have received a raise on the $2MM average annual value of the extension he signed in 2013.
  • Dave Joerger‘s contract calls for him to make about $2MM each season through 2017/18, as Deveney also relays in the same slideshow. The Grizzlies this summer added the 2017/18 season onto the deal as a team option.
  • Warriors GM Bob Myers acknowledged that the team engaged in discussions with Iowa State coach Fred Hoiberg this spring before hiring Steve Kerr, but Myers downplayed the significance of the inquiry as he spoke to reporters, including Travis Hines of the Ames Tribune. “We focused on some other guys that had been around and got a pretty early indication from Fred that he was happy where he was,” Myers said. “We weren’t the first team to kind of at least put a phone call in. Mine was much more informal from our side just because I have a previous relationship with him so it wasn’t anything formal. I got the sense he’s very happy where he is.”

League Likely To Vote For Lottery Changes

OCTOBER 9TH: The proposal has “overwheming support,” a league executive tells John Gonzalez of CSNPhilly.com, who hears that a sizable percentage of teams want the changes to take effect for the 2015 lottery, lending credence to Lowe’s initial reporting from last week.

OCTOBER 3RD: 1:33pm: Harris believes only “incremental changes” will occur, as Moore tweets. It’s not clear if Harris considers the proposal that Lowe outlined to include just “incremental changes” or if he’s aware of a different proposal.

1:25pm: The NBA’s Board of Governors is expected to vote later this month on a slightly altered version of the league’s earlier proposal to change the draft lottery, Grantland’s Zach Lowe reports (Twitter links). It’s not entirely certain that the measure will come up for a vote, but Lowe senses that it’s likely to pass easily, perhaps with only the Sixers voting against it (Twitter link). The changes would probably go into effect for the 2015 lottery if the Board of Governors vote to approve them, Lowe tweets.

The latest version of the proposal would give the four worst teams equal 12% chances at the top pick, while the worst team would fall no farther than seventh, since the lottery would determine the top six picks, according to Lowe (on Twitter). The worst team gets a 25% shot at the No. 1 overall pick under the current system in which the lottery determines only the top three picks.

It’s unclear how much of a shot the fifth- and sixth-worst teams would have at the top pick, but the seventh-worst would have an 8.5% chance, eighth would have 7%, ninth would have 5.5% and 10th would have 4%, as Lowe tweets. Teams 7-10 would have a 13% chance or better to move into the top three. Teams with the 11th- through 14th-worst marks would have 2.5%, 1.5%, 1% and 0.5% chances, respectively, and that group of four would have better chances of moving into the top six than they have today, Lowe adds (via Twitter).

A deep leaguewide discontent about the Sixers’ aggressive rebuilding is fueling the reform efforts, as Lowe wrote earlier this week and reiterates today (on Twitter). Still, Sixers co-owner Josh Harris doesn’t appear to be backing down, telling reporters today that he believes the team’s radical roster strip-down is the franchise’s best path to a championship, as Tom Moore of Calkins Media notes (Twitter link). Harris said that the proposed changes would make it slightly tougher on his team in the short term but help the club long-term, notes John Schuhmann of NBA.com (on Twitter).

Pacers Exercise 2015/16 Option On Solomon Hill

The Pacers have picked up their 2015/16 team option on their rookie scale contract with small forward Solomon Hill, the team announced. That means Hill, the 23rd overall pick in 2013, will make a guaranteed salary of approximately $1.359MM that season.

The move is no surprise given the expanded role that the 23-year-old Hill is likely to play for the Pacers this year. Key wing players Lance Stephenson and Evan Turner departed via free agency, and Paul George suffered a horrific broken leg that will likely keep him out for all of this season. Hill saw action in just 28 regular season games and appeared in the playoffs for only one minute this past season, but there’s a decent chance he’ll become a starter this year.

Indiana has about $36MM in commitments for next season now that the team has exercised Hill’s option, the only rookie scale option decision the team had to make before the October 31st deadline. No Pacers are up for rookie scale extensions this year, either, so the team is poised to have plenty of cap room to retool next summer.

Warriors, Klay Thompson At Odds On Extension

11:51am: Thompson is unwilling to accept a discounted extension, as Marcus Thompson of the Bay Area News group hears (Twitter link). It’s not entirely clear whether that means he’s unwilling to drop beneath a $15MM average annual value or if he won’t take any deal for less than the max.

11:12am: The Warriors and Klay Thompson haven’t made progress toward an extension in the past few weeks, and the sides are $2-3MM apart in the average annual value of their proposals, sources tell Monte Poole of CSNBayArea.com. Still, it doesn’t appear as though agent Bill Duffy has lost optimism that the sides will strike agreement, Poole adds.

Thompson wants at least $15MM a year, while Warriors co-owner Joe Lacob isn’t sold on the idea of paying Thompson as much as the approximately $15MM that David Lee will make this season, according to Poole, who indicates that the team is hovering around $13MM in its offers. A July report indicated that Thompson was seeking the max. It won’t be clear until next July just how much Thompson could make in a max extension, since the cap figures won’t be set until then, but such a deal would yield about $85MM over five years based on this year’s max, or $66MM over four seasons. Next year’s maximum salaries will likely rise above those figures, given the projected increase to the salary cap.

The Timberwolves were prepared to give Thompson a max extension if they had acquired him in a trade for Kevin Love, sources tell Poole, but the Warriors steadfastly held Thompson out of those talks. The Warriors have appeared high on Thompson, and GM Bob Myers last month expressed a desire to strike a deal to keep him around, echoing the vow that Lacob made in the spring. Thompson wants to come to an agreement and his teammates do, too, Poole writes.

Lacob has hinted at a willingness to exceed the luxury tax in the past, but he doesn’t want to do so at this point, Poole hears. The Warriors already have about $56MM in commitments for 2015/16, so an extension would bring the team relatively close to the tax threshold for that season, though it’s unknown just where the tax line will be. Still, the league’s $24 billion TV deal figures to soon bring about a sharp rise in the salary cap, and the tax line along with it, so even a max extension for Thompson probably wouldn’t put the Warriors in too much danger of repeatedly becoming a taxpayer in the years ahead.

The Warriors have apparently budgeted for a Thompson extension, though it’s unclear just how much they’ve set aside. It’s uncommon for the team to strike an extension deal ahead of the deadline to do so, notes Marcus Thompson of the Bay Area News Group (Twitter link). So the lack of progress at this point doesn’t necessarily mean that talks won’t gain momentum closer to October 31st, the final day that the sides can put pen to paper on an extension.

Phil Jackson’s Influence On Knicks Personnel

Phil Jackson didn’t waste time putting his stamp on the Knicks. Two days after owner James Dolan officially installed him as team president, Jackson re-signed Shannon Brown, whom Jackson had coached on the Lakers and whose 10-day contract with New York had expired, to a deal that covered the rest of the season and beyond. It seemed reasonable to expect at that point that the Knicks would start to resemble a latter-day East Coast version of Jackson’s old Lakers and Bulls teams.

Jackson has indeed surrounded himself with people from both of the teams for which he used to work, but the connections are not widespread with the Knicks organization. Brown was only one of three of Jackson’s former players the team has signed under the Zen Master’s watch, and only D.J. Mbenga is still with the Knicks. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Jackson’s greatest influence appears to have been on the coaching staff, where two of his pupils will man the bench.

The Knicks haven’t hired everyone with a connection to Jackson who’s asked for a job, as Metta World Peace‘s fruitless clamoring for a contract demonstrates, and not all who worked under Jackson in the past wound up answering his call to do so again, as the Steve Kerr saga proved. Still, there are a half dozen with ties to Jackson who have either signed playing contracts with the Knicks, joined the team’s coaching staff, or agreed work under Jackson in the front office. Here’s a look at all of them.

Players

  • Shannon Brown — The guard was already on the second of a pair of 10-day contracts he signed with the Knicks before Jackson officially came on board, and the contract to which Jackson signed Brown covered the rest of the season and also included a non-guaranteed salary for 2014/15. Still, the reunion didn’t last long, as Jackson and the Knicks waived Brown in July.
  • D.J. Mbenga — The Knicks signed Mbenga on Wednesday. He played for Jackson on the Lakers from 2008-2010.
  • Lamar Odom — Jackson took a minimal risk on the troubled forward, signing him to a deal on the final day of the regular season. The Knicks invested $5,202 in guaranteed salary for that last day of 2013/14, apparently in the hopes that Odom could either return to form as an NBA player, or at least that his non-guaranteed salary for 2014/15 would serve as a trade asset. Neither happened, and the Knicks waived Odom in July.

Coaches

  • Derek Fisher — The longtime Laker was Jackson’s second choice to become the team’s head coach after former Bulls sharpshooter Steve Kerr spurned New York to coach the Warriors instead. Still, Fisher is in the job and at work installing the triangle offense that Jackson ran at both of his NBA head coaching stops.
  • Kurt Rambis — For an assistant to Fisher, Jackson hired the man who immediately preceded him as head coach of the Lakers. Rambis finished the 1999 season in that job before Jackson took over the following offseason, and later Rambis returned to the Lakers bench as an assistant under Jackson.

Front Office

  • Clarence Gaines Jr. — The Zen Master brought Gaines on in an informal advisory capacity. Gaines scouted for the Bulls during Jackson’s time in Chicago.