Slava Kravtsov To Play In China

Two-year NBA veteran Slava Kravtsov has signed a deal to play with China’s Foshan Long Lions, agent Misko Raznatovic tweets (hat tip to Sportando’s Orazio Cauchi). The terms aren’t unknown, and it’s not clear whether the contract includes an NBA escape clause, but the early end to the Chinese schedule usually allows signees to return stateside toward the end of the NBA season and hunt for a deal at that point.

The 27-year-old center became a free agent shortly after the Suns let him go at the beginning of March to make room for Shavlik Randolph. The 6’11” Kravtsov saw precious little playing time in the NBA, averaging 2.2 points and 1.4 rebounds in 6.3 minutes per game over 45 appearances over two seasons with the Suns and Pistons, who signed him to a two-year, $3MM deal in 2012.

Kravtsov made a strong impression against Team USA in the World Cup, scoring 15 points and grabbing four rebounds in 26 minutes of work for Ukraine in its matchup against America. He averaged 7.4 PPG and 5.6 RPG in 21.4 MPG over five games in the event, but it didn’t appear as though it helped him generate enough NBA interest to bring him back to the league.

Extension Candidate: Kemba Walker

Kemba Walker rode quite a wave into the NBA three years ago, having been a consensus first-team All-American at Connecticut, which he led to the national championship as a senior. Charlotte spent its lottery pick on him, trusting that he could meet or exceed the expectations incumbent upon a ninth overall selection. The circumstances surrounding Walker quickly darkened, as he spent his rookie season in and out of the starting lineup for a Bobcats team that compiled the worst winning percentage in NBA history. Al Jefferson and coach Steve Clifford, deservedly, receive much of the credit for having turned the franchise around upon their arrival last year, leaving Walker a secondary figure of sorts as the October 31st deadline for an extension to his rookie scale contract looms. Still, Walker’s game has grown over his time in the league, and while he hasn’t become a star, GM Rich Cho must decide soon if the 24-year-old has shown enough to prove that he has what it takes to be the starting point guard on a championship-level team.

Charlotte’s addition of Lance Stephenson and an Eastern Conference that’s wide open beyond the Cavs and Bulls puts Walker in line to play in the sort of high-leverage games this year that would help the newly rechristened Hornets test his meddle. That won’t help Cho and his staff as they ponder an extension, given the early deadline, and while it ostensibly would give them reason to hesitate, since a golden opportunity for evaluation awaits in the months ahead, the Hornets won’t be the only team watching the Jeff Schwartz client. Allowing Walker to hit restricted free agency next summer would invite bidders to drive up the price to retain him if he puts up strong numbers and helps lead the Hornets deep into the playoffs. The Hornets are well aware of how the process works, having signed Gordon Hayward to a maximum-salary offer sheet this summer that forced the Jazz, who exercised their right to match, to pay him more than they’d offered during extension talks last year.

Walker’s most significant leap to date came in between his first and second seasons, when he grabbed the full-time starting role and set career highs virtually across the board. A few of those numbers stagnated or declined this past season even as Walker saw more minutes per game, as his scoring average held steady at 17.7 points per contest while his shooting percentage dropped from 42.3% to 39.3%. The 6’1″ Bronx native took three-pointers a bit more often and slightly improved his accuracy, from 32.2% to 33.3%, but what seemed to drive down his field goal percentage the most was an increase in his frequency of long two-point attempts and a decrease of his shots at the rim. He more frequently shot from 16 feet and out than he did from three feet and in, according to his Basketball-Reference page, after the inverse was true during his second season in the league.

Ball-distribution is the No. 1 assignment for many, if not most, point guards, and the data suggests Walker has shown consistent improvement in that part of the game. He dished out 6.1 assists against 2.3 turnovers per game last season, the best ratio of his career. His per-36-minute numbers in assists and turnovers were also the best he’s recorded to date. Still, those gains weren’t enough to offset his poor shot selection, as his PER declined from 18.8 in 2012/13 to 16.8 this past year.

Walker was fifth in the league with 2.0 steals per game in 2012/13, but last season saw that number cut nearly in half, to 1.2. The team seemed to benefit from his more conservative approach. The then-Bobcats gave up just 99.1 points per 100 possessions with Walker on the floor compared to 105.1 when he sat last season, according to NBA.com. The gap wasn’t nearly as profound the year before, when Walker’s lineups gave up 108.2 points per 100 possessions compared to the 110.7 points per 100 possessions the Cats surrendered without him. Charlotte was statistically better defensively with Walker on the floor even when he was a rookie, though his teammates weren’t exactly world-beaters.

John Wall was the only point guard to receive a rookie-scale extension last year, and Walker isn’t in his max-salary neighborhood. Three point guards received rookie-scale extensions the year before, with Ty Lawson and Jrue Holiday the closest comparisons. Walker’s ball-handling numbers closely mirror what Lawson put up the season before he signed his four-year, $48MM extension, and they exceed what Holiday put up right before his four-year, $41MM extension, even though Walker lags behind both Lawson and Holiday as a shooter. Neither deal comes off as a bargain for their respective teams two years later, but they aren’t especially player-friendly contracts, either.

The Hornets would probably be pleased to come away with an extension that committed them to Walker for four years and $40MM, as I predicted earlier in the offseason that they would. Schwartz would rightly hesitate to let his client go for such a number and instead target one in the $41-48MM range that Holiday and Lawson established. We’ll soon see just how high the Hornets are willing to go to keep their positive momentum of the past two offseasons rolling.

And-Ones: World Cup, Ayon, Budenholzer, Hill

Support is growing stronger to make both the Olympics and the World Cup of Basketball solely for players age 22 and under, one NBA GM tells Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports, who bemoans an existing system that he believes to primarily benefit Mike Krzyzewski. The change would take effect for 2018 World Cup, Wojnarowski writes. SB Nation’s Tom Ziller argues that while the NBA could work with FIBA to implement an age limit, FIBA has shown hesitancy to cooperate, and that the players union would have a case that any league-imposed restriction should be collectively bargained. Nonetheless, it seems there’s a decent chance that even without so many A-level stars, this year’s World Cup champion Team USA squad will be significantly more talented than the next American entry into the competition. Here’s more from around the NBA:

  • Shandong of China has jumped into the race for Gustavo Ayon as his European rights remain up in the air, tweets Shams Charania of RealGM. The Spurs are reportedly still in the mix, with Ayon needing to come up with $376K to pay FC Barcelona, which holds his European rights, if he’s to put pen to paper on a deal with Spanish rival Real Madrid.
  • Mike Budenholzer has never held an NBA front-office job, but he played as much of a role in talent acquisition for the Spurs as anyone outside of Gregg Popovich and R.C. Buford during his time in San Antonio, writes TNT’s David Aldridge amid his Morning Tip column for NBA.com. Budenholzer is in charge of player personnel for the Hawks while GM Danny Ferry is on indefinite leave.
  • A group that included Grant Hill as well as billionaires Tony Ressler and Bruce Karsh made a strong impression on the league when they put up a $1.2 billion bid to purchase the Clippers this spring, Aldridge writes in the same piece. The TNT scribe speculates that they could resurface as contenders for the Hawks.

D-League Affiliations For 2014/15

The system of partnerships between NBA and D-League teams will take on a new look this year, with 17 of the D-League’s 18 clubs in one-to-one setups with their NBA parents. For the 13 NBA teams without a direct affiliate, new rules will help them accommodate the players they wish to send on D-League assignment this season, the league announced.

The Fort Wayne Mad Ants, the only D-League team that’s not in a one-to-one partnership, serve as the affiliate for those 13 NBA teams. They’re allowed to carry a maximum of four NBA players on D-League assignment and two at any one position. Should the Mad Ants be unable to accommodate a player on assignment from one of their 13 NBA partners, the D-League will allow the NBA team to pick from a pool of other D-League clubs that volunteer to accept the player. If no D-League teams volunteer, the D-League will hold a lottery to determine the player’s destination.

It appears to be a complex system that could slow the process of sending a player on assignment and make it especially difficult for any NBA team without a one-to-one affiliate to liberally shuttle players back and forth. Still, there’s a wide dichotomy in the use of the D-League, as some NBA teams pull players back and forth multiple times each week while others go entire seasons without sending anyone down.

As we wait to see how the revamped system works out, here’s each NBA team and its affiliate for the coming season. Teams without a one-to-one affiliation are marked with an asterisk.

  • *Atlanta Hawks — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • Boston Celtics — Maine Red Claws
  • *Brooklyn Nets — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • *Charlotte Hornets — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • *Chicago Bulls — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • Cleveland Cavaliers — Canton Charge
  • Dallas Mavericks — Texas Legends
  • *Denver Nuggets — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • Detroit Pistons — Grand Rapids Drive
  • Golden State Warriors — Santa Cruz Warriors
  • Houston Rockets — Rio Grande Valley Vipers
  • *Indiana Pacers — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • *Los Angeles Clippers — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • Los Angeles Lakers — Los Angeles D-Fenders
  • Memphis Grizzlies — Iowa Energy
  • Miami Heat — Sioux Falls Skyforce
  • *Milwaukee Bucks — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • *Minnesota Timberwolves — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • *New Orleans Pelicans — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • New York Knicks — Westchester Knicks
  • Oklahoma City Thunder — Oklahoma City (nickname TBA; former Tulsa 66ers moved to Oklahoma City)
  • Orlando Magic — Erie BayHawks
  • Philadelphia 76ers — Delaware 76ers
  • Phoenix Suns — Bakersfield Jam
  • *Portland Trail Blazers — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • Sacramento Kings — Reno Bighorns
  • San Antonio Spurs — Austin Spurs
  • *Toronto Raptors — Fort Wayne Mad Ants
  • Utah Jazz — Idaho Stampede
  • *Washington Wizards — Fort Wayne Mad Ants

Pistons Work Out Denzel Bowles

The Pistons are putting free agent center Denzel Bowles through a workout today, and there’s a distinct possibility the former James Madison standout will be auditioning for the Bulls, too, a source tells Shams Charania of RealGM (Twitter link).

The 6’10” Bowles has played overseas each of the past three seasons after going undrafted in 2011, with stops in Lithuania, the Philippines and China. He joined the Nuggets for summer league in July, averaging 5.0 points and 4.2 rebounds in 17.7 minutes per contest. His numbers were more impressive in China last season, when he put up 26.0 PPG and 8.6 RPG in 32.5 MPG in 34 appearances with the Jilin Northeast Tigers.

The Pistons wouldn’t offer Bowles much opportunity to make the opening night roster if they were to add him for training camp, since they’re already carrying 16 guaranteed deals, as our roster counts show. It’s possible that the Pistons envision bringing Bowles to camp so they can get an extended look at him for down the road and so that they can retain his D-League rights for their new one-to-one affiliate. The Bulls have only 12 guaranteed pacts, but they haven’t carried more than 13 players on opening night in any of the last three seasons, as I pointed out. Chicago is among a host of teams targeting Ray Allen, and it would make sense that the contending Bulls would prioritize adding a veteran.

Teams Without Full Rosters On Opening Night

The Bulls have deals with 12 players, fewer than any other team in the NBA, as our roster counts show. They’ll surely make additions in the two weeks that remain before the start of training camp, but it would be somewhat surprising to see any more than one of the players they’ll be signing soon remain on the roster come opening night. Chicago is the only team in the NBA to start each of the last three regular seasons with the NBA-minimum 13 players on the roster.

Financial concerns are often at the root of a team’s decision not to carry a full complement of 15 players. There’s little call for the 14th and 15th men on a team’s roster, especially considering that only 13 players can be active for any single game, and rather than shoulder the cost of their salaries, teams like the Bulls have cut corners. Of course, rarely do players occupying spots Nos. 14 and 15 on a roster make more than the minimum salary, but as Chicago’s tightrope-walking with the luxury tax line demonstrated last season, every dollar counts.

Short opening-night rosters don’t preclude a team from success. The ever-contending Spurs carried 13 players to begin the 2011/12 season and have had just 14 as each of the last two regular seasons has begun. The Spurs have 14 fully guaranteed deals for this coming season, so history bodes poorly for Bryce Cotton, Josh Davis and JaMychal Green, each of whom has a partial guarantee of less than $100K. San Antonio’s reluctance to carry 15 players in recent years is also an ominous sign for the prospect that restricted free agent Aron Baynes will be back in black-and-silver. Still, the team continues to scour the market, having shown interest in Allen, Julyan Stone, Ryan Hollins and others, so it seems a distinct possibility that the Spurs will buck their trend and carry 15, or perhaps stay at 14 and shed one of the fully guaranteed deals on their books to make room for someone else.

The Clippers have carried 14 players on opening night each of the past three seasons, whether it was former GM Neil Olshey, a triumrivate of Gary Sacks, Vinny Del Negro and Andy Roeser, or current president of basketball operations Doc Rivers in charge of player personnel. The difference this year is that Donald Sterling is no longer around, replaced by Steve Ballmer, who’s already demonstrated a willingness to spare no expense, having dropped $2 billion to buy the franchise and having committed more than $50MM over the next five years to Rivers. That gives rise to the idea that the Clippers, who have 13 known fully guaranteed deals plus one for Hedo Turkoglu that’s presumably fully guaranteed, will make room for one more.

Other teams have carried fewer than 15 twice in the last three years. Oklahoma City has begun each of the past two regular seasons at 14 players, a foreboding precedent for Lance Thomas, who’s the only one of the 15 players the Thunder are currently carrying who’s without a fully guaranteed deal. The Pacers, who have only 13 fully guaranteed deals as it stands, have started the regular season with 14 players in each of the last two seasons that president of basketball operations Larry Bird has been at the helm. The Grizzlies have entered the regular season with only 13 players in both of the past two seasons, but after an offseason shakeup restored GM Chris Wallace to power, there’s reason to suspect that Memphis will at least keep the 14 players on fully guaranteed deals whom they currently possess. The Celtics have twice carried 14, but their roster is bloated with 21 deals, a logjam that’s prevented them from officially signing Evan Turner. A handful of other organizations have also kept an open roster spot on two of the last three opening nights, but all of them have seen regime changes in the front office over that time.

The 2011 lockout appeared to have an effect on the opening-night rosters for the 2011/12 season, when nearly half the league started with fewer than 15 players. Still, nearly a third of the league has done so in each of the past two seasons, and surely there will be open roster spots when the regular season commences late next month, to the disappointment of many camp invitees. Here’s a look at each team to have started the regular season at less than the 15-man roster maximum over the past three years. Those that began with 13 have (13) by their names.

2013/14

  • Boston Celtics
  • Chicago Bulls (13)
  • Golden State Warriors
  • Indiana Pacers
  • L.A. Clippers
  • Memphis Grizzlies (13)
  • Oklahoma City Thunder
  • Phoenix Suns
  • San Antonio Spurs

2012/13

  • Atlanta Hawks
  • Charlotte Hornets (then known as the Bobcats)
  • Chicago Bulls (13)
  • L.A. Clippers
  • Memphis Grizzlies (13)
  • New Orleans Pelicans
  • Oklahoma City Thunder
  • Philadelphia 76ers
  • Sacramento Kings
  • San Antonio Spurs

2011/12

  • Boston Celtics
  • Charlotte Hornets (then known as the Bobcats)
  • Chicago Bulls (13)
  • Dallas Mavericks
  • Detroit Pistons (13)
  • Golden State Warriors
  • Indiana Pacers (13)
  • L.A. Clippers (13)
  • New York Knicks
  • Philadelphia 76ers
  • Phoenix Suns (13)
  • Sacramento Kings
  • San Antonio Spurs (13)
  • Utah Jazz (13)

RealGM was used in the creation of this post. 

Cavs Audition Lou Amundson

The Cavs worked out Lou Amundson last week, a source tells Jorge Sierra of HoopsHype (Twitter link). They’re among the teams that the Mark Bartelstein client is considering with training camps set to open in two weeks, Sierra adds.

Amundson has been a free agent since the middle of July, shortly after the Bulls released his non-guaranteed deal. That was no surprise, since the Bulls signed him late last season chiefly so he could serve as a trade chip, and it never appeared as though Chicago had any intention of keeping him into this coming season. The 31-year-old has bounced around quite a bit, having played for five teams in the last four seasons after a successful run in Phoenix’s rotation. He’s been exclusively on minimum-salary contracts the past two seasons, and it’d be surprising to see him land more than that for this year. Cleveland is limited to giving out no more than the minimum.

The Cavs have been looking for rim protection of late, and though he’s listed at just 6’9″, Amundson has recorded 2.0 blocks per 36 minutes over the course of his eight years in the NBA. Cleveland already has deals with 18 players, but only 12 of them have fully guaranteed pacts. Anderson Varejao, who’s set to play a prominent role in the team’s frontcourt rotation as usual, is one of four Cavs with partially guaranteed deals.

Hoops Rumors On Facebook/Twitter/RSS

Eric Bledsoe has hesitated to sign a new deal all offseason, but he’s going to have to do so within the next two weeks if he intends to go to training camp. The same goes for Ray Allen and every other desirable free agent still on the market. There are a handful of ways you can follow us to keep tabs on the latest news and rumors as these players finally make their decisions.

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Heat Sign Khem Birch

SEPTEMBER 14th, 11:23am: The signing is official, the team announced.

8:24pm: Birch’s deal is partially guaranteed, agent Mike George confirms to Ben Standig of CSNWashington.com.

SEPTEMBER 2nd, 1:22pm: Undrafted power forward Khem Birch will join the Heat on a camp deal, reports Ryan Wolstat of the Toronto Sun (Twitter link). Birch will almost certainly be making the minimum salary should he stick until opening night, just like Andre Dawkins, who also appears headed to Miami, as another report indicated within the hour.

The Wizards were also high on Birch, Wolstat tweets, and it wouldn’t be surprising if still more teams were pursuing the former UNLV standout who entered this year’s draft as the No. 42 prospect in Chad Ford’s ESPN.com rankings. Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress had him going at No. 58 in his final 2014 mock draft, so he sits at or near the top of the best undrafted talent still available from this year’s class.

The 6’9″ Birch made his mark on the boards in a breakout campaign for the Runnin’ Rebels this past season, averaging 10.2 rebounds in 31.4 minutes per game. He grabbed 5.7 RPG in 19.5 MPG with the Wizards summer league team in July.

Miami’s roster is poised to swell to 19 with the addition of Birch and Dawkins, one shy of the preseason limit. Reports have linked the Heat to several veteran shooting guards and big men in recent weeks, but it appears as though Miami is close to finishing its offseason pickups.

Latest On Zoran Dragic

FRIDAY, 8:36pm: Paul Coro of The Arizona Republic adds the Cavs to the list of teams interested in Dragic, and reports that Dragic’s current salary is approximately $1.4MM. It would take upwards of $2MM in annual salary to pry the younger Dragic guard from his current club in Coro’s estimation, considering the earnings and covered living expenses provided by his current team. The Arizona Republic scribe pegs Dragic’s NBA escape clause at $1.1MM, which lines up with an earlier report that the buyout exceeds $971K.

WEDNESDAY, 7:49am: The Suns, Pacers and Kings are the teams most aggressively going after Dragic, Stein tweets, expanding on his report about Phoenix’s heavy pursuit from a few days ago. Talks are expected to intensity now that Dragic’s World Cup obligations are over, Stein adds (Twitter links). Phoenix, Indiana and Sacramento all have the capacity to exceed the minimum salary.

TUESDAY, 4:51pm: The Heat, Magic, Spurs and Mavs are maintaining dialogues with Spanish-league shooting guard Zoran Dragic, reports Shams Charania of RealGM. Marc Stein of ESPN.com wrote earlier this week that the Suns were one of the three teams with the most interest in signing the 25-year-old, but it’s not clear if they remain in the running. The Pacers, too, have appeared to be in pursuit of Dragic of late, while the Rockets were reportedly the leading contender for him in May.

Several NBA teams scouted Dragic in the World Cup the past couple of weeks, Charania writes, a run that ended when his Slovenian team lost this afternoon to Team USA. New teams are inquiring about him with each passing day, the RealGM scribe adds. Dragic is the younger brother of Goran Dragic, who appears poised to opt out his deal next summer and hit free agency, and teams are already lining up to try to poach Goran from the Suns.

Zoran Dragic averaged 10.6 points in 20.3 minutes per game for Unicaja Malaga this past season but he reportedly possesses a strong desire to come to the NBA. He’d have to sign with an NBA team by Oct. 5th, according to Charania, and cover a buyout greater than the equivalent of $971K to break free from Unicaja Malaga this year, as Stein wrote in his report this week. That would appear to give the Spurs and Magic an edge on the Heat and Mavs, since Miami and Dallas can’t exceed the minimum salary and thus can’t give him more than the Excluded International Player Payment Amount of $600K toward his buyout.