Length Of Stay For Each Post-Merger No. 1 Pick
Kevin Love is the headliner in the trade agreement that will send him to the Cavs, but there will be at least two other historically significant players in the transaction once it becomes official. Andrew Wiggins will become just the third No. 1 overall pick to be traded before playing a regular season game for the team that selected him. Chris Webber and David Thompson are the others, as Marc Stein of ESPN.com pointed out today via Twitter. The inclusion of Anthony Bennett, last year’s No. 1 overall pick, is fairly noteworthy, too. He’ll pair with Pervis Ellison as the only top picks since the NBA-ABA merger to have been traded after only one season with the team that drafted them.
In many ways, Wiggins and Webber stand alone. Thompson signed with the Nuggets, then an ABA team, rather than the Hawks after Atlanta made him the NBA’s No. 1 pick in 1975. Thompson’s rookie season was the last of the ABA before the merger. The Rockets, who had the first overall pick in 1976, parted ways with draftee John Lucas two years later because the rules at that time held that teams had to give up players as compensation when they signed another club’s free agent. So, that’s why this look at the length of time each No. 1 overall pick has spent with his team starts with Kent Benson, the top pick in 1977. Player movement rules have evolved gradually since then, but the first draft after the first post-merger season seems an appropriate place to begin.
Since that time, top picks have spent an average of six and a half seasons with their teams. That takes into account active players who still remain with the clubs that drafted them and assumes Bennett and Wiggins will indeed spend just one and zero seasons, respectively, as Cavs. This post counts years in which a draftee didn’t play for his team due to injury, but not seasons during which a player was retired. In cases where teams traded their top picks midseason, it goes down as a half-season for the purposes of this post.
Here’s the complete list, since 1977, with the number of seasons the top pick played for his team in parentheses.
- 2014: Andrew Wiggins, Cavaliers (0) — Trade agreement in place to send Wiggins to the Timberwolves once he becomes eligible to be traded on August 23rd.
- 2013: Anthony Bennett, Cavaliers (1) — Trade agreement in place to sent Bennett to the Sixers once Wiggins becomes eligible to be traded on August 23rd.
- 2012: Anthony Davis, Pelicans (2) — Still with team
- 2011: Kyrie Irving, Cavaliers (3) — Still with team
- 2010: John Wall, Wizards (4) — Still with team
- 2009: Blake Griffin, Clippers (5) — Still with team
- 2008: Derrick Rose, Bulls (6) — Still with team
- 2007: Greg Oden, Trail Blazers (4.5) — Waived March 15th, 2012.
- 2006: Andrea Bargnani, Raptors (7) — Traded to Knicks on July 10th, 2013.
- 2005: Andrew Bogut, Bucks (6.5) — Traded to Warriors on March 13th, 2012.
- 2004: Dwight Howard, Magic (8) — Traded to Lakers on August 10th, 2012.
- 2003: LeBron James, Cavaliers (7) — Signed-and-traded to Heat on July 10, 2010.
- 2002: Yao Ming, Rockets (9) — Played entire career for Rockets.
- 2001: Kwame Brown, Wizards (4) — Traded to Lakers on August 2nd, 2005.
- 2000: Kenyon Martin, Nets (4) — Traded to Nuggets on July 15th, 2004.
- 1999: Elton Brand, Bulls (2) — Traded to Clippers on June 27th, 2001.
- 1998: Michael Olowokandi, Clippers (5) — Signed with Timberwolves on July 16th, 2003.
- 1997: Tim Duncan, Spurs (17) — Still with team.
- 1996: Allen Iverson, Sixers (9.5) — Traded to Nuggets on December 19th, 2006.
- 1995: Joe Smith, Warriors (2.5) — Traded to Sixers on February 17th, 1998.
- 1994: Glenn Robinson, Bucks (8) — Traded to Hawks on August 2nd, 2002.
- 1993: Chris Webber, Magic (0) — Traded to Warriors on June 30th, 1993 (draft night).
- 1992: Shaquille O’Neal, Magic (4) — Signed with Lakers on July 18th, 1996.
- 1991: Larry Johnson, Hornets (now Pelicans) (5) — Traded to Knicks on July 14th, 1996.
- 1990: Derrick Coleman, Nets (5.5) — Traded to Sixers on November 30th, 1995.
- 1989: Pervis Ellison, Kings (1) — Traded to Bullets (now Wizards) on June 25th, 1990.
- 1988: Danny Manning, Clippers (5.5) — Traded to Hawks on February 24th, 1994.
- 1987: David Robinson, Spurs (14) — Played entire career for Spurs.
- 1986: Brad Daugherty, Cavaliers (8) — Played entire career for Cavaliers.
- 1985: Patrick Ewing, Knicks (15) — Traded to SuperSonics (now Thunder) on September 20th, 2000.
- 1984: Hakeem Olajuwon, Rockets (17) — Traded to Raptors on August 2nd, 2001.
- 1983: Ralph Sampson, Rockets (4.5) — Traded to Warriors on December 12th, 1987.
- 1982: James Worthy, Lakers (12) — Played entire career for Lakers.
- 1981: Mark Aguirre, Mavericks (7.5) — Traded to Pistons on February 15, 1989.
- 1980: Joe Barry Carroll, Warriors (7.5) — Traded to Rockets on December 12th, 1987.
- 1979: Magic Johnson, Lakers (13) — Played entire career for Lakers. Was retired from 1991/92 season through 1994/95 season, but returned during 1995/96.
- 1978: Mychal Thompson, Trail Blazers (8) — Traded to Spurs on June 19th, 1986.
- 1977: Kent Benson, Bucks (2.5) — Traded to Pistons on February 4th, 1980.
Basketball-Reference was used in the creation of this post.
And-Ones: Parsons, Heat, Southerland, Pistons
Chandler Parsons was an all-around contributor for the Rockets, averaging 16.6 points, 5.5 rebounds and 4.0 assists this past season, but that sort of production isn’t why the Mavs gave him a near-max offer sheet that Houston declined to match. They’re confident he can be a “far better” player than he was with the Rockets, as owner Mark Cuban said, according to Tim MacMahon of ESPNDallas.com. While we wait to see whether Parsons proves worthy of Cuban’s investment, here’s more from around the league:
- The Heat will likely sign a center for the reserve role that Greg Oden played last season, writes Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald. Andray Blatche is available, but the Heat have shied away from him in the past because they’ve disliked his maturity level and behavior, according to Jackson, who seconds the notion that the Heat are unlikely to re-sign Oden following Oden’s arrest Thursday.
- The contract that James Southerland signed Thursday with the Blazers is a one-year, non-guaranteed pact, tweets Shams Charania of RealGM. That means it’s a summer contract, as I speculated. It also fits the stipulations required to make it an Exhibit 9 contract, though it’s not necessarily one.
- Former NBA players Tim Hardaway Sr. and Malik Allen will serve as assistant coaches for the Pistons next season, the team announced. The Pistons also announced the hiring of former Knicks executive Jeff Nix as assistant general manager. He’ll serve alongside fellow assistant GM Brian Wright underneath president of basketball operations Stan Van Gundy and GM Jeff Bower.
Suns Sign Tyler Ennis
The Suns have signed 2014 No. 18 pick Tyler Ennis, the team announced in conjunction with confirmation of its deal with 14th overall selection T.J. Warren. Ennis will likely make slightly more than $1.59MM this season, as our table of salaries for 2014 first-round picks shows.
The point guard from Syracuse made a run at becoming a top-10 pick before falling back. Still, the Raptors appeared to covet Ennis, a native of Ontario, eyeing him before the draft as well as after the Suns took him. Toronto has since re-signed Kyle Lowry and Greivis Vasquez, so it appears unlikely that they’ll continue to pursue him. The Suns have no shortage of point guards, either, but coach Jeff Hornacek frequently employs lineups that feature two point guards.
Ennis displayed efficent ball-handling in his lone season with the Orange, averaging 5.5 assists against only 1.7 turnovers per game, a ratio of better than 3-to-1. He also tallied 12.9 points in 35.7 minutes per contest. He was more turnover prone in the small sample size of his five-game summer league stint with the Suns, averaging 3.2 assists against 2.6 turnovers per game.
Eddie Scarito of Hoops Rumors was among those who thought Ennis would become a top-10 pick, citing the 19-year-old’s intangibles in his Prospect Profile, while our Alex Lee had him going to the Raptors at No. 20 in the latest version of the Hoops Rumors Mock Draft.
How Salary Matching Affects Kevin Love Trade
The Kevin Love trade agreement seemed like a straightforward two-team swap Thursday, when Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports reported that the Wolves would send Love to the Cavs for Andrew Wiggins, Anthony Bennett and a protected 2015 first-round pick. That structure came as something of a surprise, since rumors had indicated that a third team would be involved. There will indeed be a third team in the mix, according Mark Perner of the Philadelphia Daily News, who wrote that Sixers will jump in the deal to send Thaddeus Young to the Wolves and that Bennett will be rerouted to Philadelphia. Still, fellow Daily News scribe Bob Cooney indicates that the Young-Bennett exchange will take place as a separate transaction after the Love deal is official, a report that leaves the precise structure of the Love trade in flux.
Regardless of where Love, Wiggins, Young and the rest end up, all the moves will have to meet the NBA’s salary-matching requirements. The Sixers are unbound by the rules, since they’re under the cap, but the Wolves and Cavs are over the cap, so they must adhere to them. The stipulations germane to the Love-related moves hold that teams under the tax but over the cap, like the Cavs and Wolves, can receive 150% plus 100K of the salary that they trade away, as long as the salary they part with adds up to no more than $9.8MM. Should the Cavs or Wolves trade away more than that, they can receive up to $5MM more than the salaries they give up. A further rule applies if either the Cavs or Wolves relinquish $19.6MM or more. In that case, they’d only be able to take back 125% plus $100K of what they give up, but this limit is unlikely to come into play.
The two-team deal in the form that Wojnarowski originally reported works because the salaries for Wiggins and Bennett add up to $11,074,560. That’s more than $9.8MM, so it triggers the $5MM rule for Cleveland. Love is set to make $15,719,063 this coming season, which is $4,644,503 more than Wiggins and Bennett will make put together. It’s a tight squeeze beneath $5MM, but it still fits.
The addition of the Sixers and Young would add a layer of complexity, but it would still make for a legal trade. The Wolves would be taking back Wiggins and Young, whose salaries add up to $14,921,509, simply moving them closer in line with the salary for Love that they’re relinquishing. The only salaries the Cavs would be giving up would be those of Wiggins and Bennett, and they’d be acquiring only Love. It doesn’t matter that Bennett would be going to a different team in this scenario, as long as it’s all part of the same transaction. The Cavs would still be taking back less than $5MM more than the amount they’re giving up, which exceeds $9.8MM, so it’s kosher. The Sixers would be reducing their salary with this trade structure, dropping them farther beneath the cap.
What wouldn’t work is if the Wolves and Sixers simply swap Young and Bennett after making the Love trade that Wojnarowski originally outlined. Bennett’s $5,563,920 salary is less than $9.8MM, so Minnesota could only trade for 150% plus $100K of what Bennett makes, which would come to $8,445,880. Young’s $9,410,869 salary exceeds that, so the Wolves and Sixers couldn’t make this deal.
Minnesota is hoping to trade J.J. Barea, Luc Mbah a Moute and Alexey Shved, as Wojnarowski added when he reported the Love agreement Thursday, and Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune said the Wolves would like to unload Barea and Mbah a Moute in a deal for Young. Still, NBA rules would prohibit the Wolves from packaging Bennett along with Barea, Mbah a Moute, Shved or anyone else on the roster for two months after acquiring Bennett from the Cavs. Capped-out teams like the Wolves can flip a player for whom they just traded, but only if they send the player out by himself. Since trading Bennett alone for Young wouldn’t work, either, the Cavs and Sixers would have to wait until the two months pass for Minnesota to add enough salary to the deal to make it work.
Any trade involving Wiggins can’t be complete until August 23rd because of the 30-day waiting period the Cavs must endure after signing him, as has been much publicized. So, a separate deal that sends Young to Minnesota and Bennett to Philadelphia couldn’t be consummated until late October, weeks after the start of training camp. That wouldn’t make it impossible, of course. But it would be less than ideal.
The Sixers and Wolves could try to split the Bennett-Young deal into parts, so that Bennett would go out on his own for a draft pick. If they attempt that, there’s a decent chance the league would object on the grounds that such a maneuver would be an attempt to circumvent the rules, as Tom Moore of Calkins Media explains.
If the Sixers would consent to taking Barea, Mbah a Moute, Shved or some combination of those players back in a deal that sends out Young and nets them Bennett, Minnesota and Philadelphia could more easily accomplish this as part of the Love trade. It wouldn’t muddy the salary-matching waters for the Wolves or Cavs, and the Sixers have enough room to give up Young and take Bennett and the entire trio of Barea, Mbah a Moute and Shved without going over the cap. The Sixers probably wouldn’t agree to taking all of them, but regardless of how many of them, or even if any of them, were involved, it would be much easier for Young to end up in Minnesota and Bennett to wind up with the Sixers if it happened as part of the Love trade. If the Wolves and Sixers have that aim, expect them to accomplish it at the same time Love heads to Cleveland.
ShamSports and Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ were used in the creation of this post.
Cavs Offer First-Round Pick For Timofey Mozgov
The Cavs targeted Timofey Mozgov, offering a first-round pick to the Nuggets to entice them to part with the 7’1″ center, as Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports said in an appearance Thursday on WFAN Radio in New York, according to Tommy Beer of Basketball Insiders (Twitter link). It’s not clear whether that offer remains on the table for Denver, but the Cavs, who are over the cap and without a trade exception, would have to send salary to the Nuggets in order for such an exchange to be feasible under the league’s salary matching rules. The Kevin Love trade agreement, in its current form, wouldn’t change that.
Cleveland has been eyeing big men to supplement Love and Anderson Varejao, as Sam Amico of Fox Sports Ohio reported Thursday. Mozgov would be a potential starter, having made 30 starts for the Nuggets this past season to go along with career highs in points (9.4), rebounds (6.4) and minutes (21.6) per game. The 28-year-old sealed off the rim, notching 2.0 blocks per 36 minutes, and his 16.7 PER demonstrated above-average efficiency. He’ll make $4.65MM this coming season, and his contract includes a $4.95MM team option for 2015/16.
Still, the Cavs have faith that Brendan Haywood, whom they acquired last month from the Hornets, can contribute this season, as Amico noted in the same report. Haywood’s unusually structured contract will also become an intriguing trade asset next summer, as I explained.
The Nuggets are halfway through a four-year, $44MM deal with center JaVale McGee, and Denver’s management has been anxious for him to get minutes. He’s returning from having missed most of last season because of injury, and the team also has Jusuf Nurkic, this year’s No. 16 overall pick, at center. J.J. Hickson is another option at the position, even though he’s undersized.
MarShon Brooks Signs To Play In Italy
FRIDAY, 7:54am: The deal is official, the team announced (translation via Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia).
THURSDAY, 4:19pm: Free agent swingman MarShon Brooks has reached agreement to join Olimpia Milano of Italy, Sportando’s Enea Trapani reports. Trapani earlier reported the deal was likely after Shams Charania of RealGM first broke news of the talks. The terms aren’t immediately clear, but it figures to be a fairly lucrative arrangement, since the Pacers, Kings and a title-contending team from the NBA’s Eastern Conference were all in pursuit, according to a separate report from Charania earlier this week.
Brooks finished last season with the Lakers, but it appeared unlikely he would remain in purple-and-gold as free agency began. A report in late June indicated that he was the only one of the team’s plethora of free agents who was certain not to return, and a dispatch on the third day of free agency noted that he was the only Lakers free agent to whom the team hadn’t reached out. The Lakers renounced his rights in mid-July, and Brooks changed agents, hiring Wallace Prather, who reportedly tried to sell the Heat on his new client, though it’s unclear if Miami reciprocated the interest.
The Nets made heavy use of Brooks in his rookie season, putting the 25th overall pick from the 2011 draft on the floor for 29.4 minutes per game and watching him pile up 12.6 points per contest in spite of inefficiency that resulted in a 12.9 PER. A more veteran-laden roster pushed Brooks into the background the following season, and after the Nets shipped him to Boston in last summer’s Paul Pierce/Kevin Garnett blockbuster, the Celtics declined the fourth-year option on his rookie scale contract. That set Brooks up for his unrestricted free agency this summer, even though his 15.5 PER this past season represented his second consecutive improvement in that category. Brooks was traded twice this season, spending a brief spell with the Warriors before ending up with the Lakers.
Pistons Hire Quentin Richardson For Staff
5:18pm: The hiring is now official, the team announced via press release.
10:20am: Pistons president of basketball operations Stan Van Gundy plans to hire Quentin Richardson for a role that would include player development and mentorship duties, reports Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link). Presumably, the job would mark the end of Richardson’s 13-year NBA playing career.
The former McDonald’s All-American emerged as a valuable swingman for the Clippers in the early 2000s, setting a career high with 17.2 points per game in 2003/04. He led the NBA in three-pointers made the next season as a member of the Suns. He averaged 10.3 points and 35.5% three-point shooting during his time in the league that also included stops with the Knicks, Heat and Magic. He played in just one regular season game and five playoff contests during 2012/13, his final season in the NBA, when the Knicks signed him shortly before the postseason. They shipped him to Toronto as part of the Andrea Bargnani deal the next summer, and the Raptors released him before training camp this past fall.
That swap was the sixth trade in which Richardson had been involved during his career, the most notable of which was the one that briefly sent him back to the Clippers in 2009 and allowed the Grizzlies to acquire Zach Randolph. He made more than $63MM as an NBA player, according to Basketball-Reference.
NBA Middle Class Deals
The NBA’s middle class might not be vanishing, but it is not robust. There has been no evidence of drastic change in the willingness of teams to hand out middle class deals over the past few years, as team sources and former interim players union executive director Ron Klempner told Grantland’s Zach Lowe for a piece published in April. Lowe defined a middle class deal as one with annual salaries that fell between $5MM and $10MM. There have been 108 signings or agreements between free agents and NBA teams so far this summer, according to our Free Agent Tracker, and 20 of them fall with Lowe’s range. But the equation changes with a slight alteration to the definition of middle class.
The NBA’s non-taxpayer mid-level exception this season calls for a deal with a starting salary of up to $5.305MM. The most a player could receive through this exception is slightly more than $22.652MM over four years. That works out to an average annual value of about $5.663MM. That’s strikingly close to the league’s $5.632MM estimated average salary for 2014/15 season. The average annual value of a four-year mid-level deal would nonetheless likely end up beneath the NBA average salary over the full span of the contract, since average salaries have risen each season since the first one under the latest collective bargaining agreement. That equation isn’t different even for a player who signs a shorter mid-level contract, since the 4.5% annual raises involved in a mid-level deal boost the average annual value of longer such contracts. The average annual value of a two-year mid-level deal, for instance, is only about $5.425MM, beneath this year’s estimated average salary.
The exception is a tool that teams can use without opening cap space. If we remove the deals that would have fit within the parameters of the mid-level and instead define middle class deals as those that come in above the mid-level amount, only 12 of this year’s signings and agreements fit the middle class criteria. That means teams have been largely unwilling to commit cap space to players making more than the mid-level but less than eight-figure salaries.
There’s an even more profound dearth of pacts in the next bracket. Teams have handed out only three contracts with starting salaries of at least $10MM but less than $14.746MM, the maximum salary for a player with fewer than seven years of experience. This sort of “upper middle class” deal has been exceedingly difficult for players to find this year.
I’ve listed this year’s middle class deals here, grouped by tier and listed in descending order of average annual value. The salaries are rounded to the nearest $1K.
Upper middle class ($10MM or more but less than $14.746MM)
- Marcin Gortat, Wizards: Five years, $60MM
- Chandler Parsons, Mavericks: Three years, $46,085MM
- Kyle Lowry, Raptors: Four years, $48MM
Above mid-level deals (More than mid-level exception, less than $10MM)
- Luol Deng, Heat: Two years, $19.86MM
- Lance Stephenson, Hornets: Three years, $27.405MM
- Jordan Hill, Lakers: Two years, $18MM
- Dirk Nowitzki, Mavericks: Three years, $25MM
- Trevor Ariza, Rockets: Four years, $32MM
- Channing Frye, Magic: Four years, $32MM
- Avery Bradley, Celtics: Four years, $32MM
- Boris Diaw, Spurs: Four years, $28MM
- Marvin Williams, Hornets: Two years, $14MM
- Isaiah Thomas, Suns: Four years, $27MM
- Greivis Vasquez, Raptors: Two years, $13MM
- Jodie Meeks, Pistons: Three years, $18.81MM
Mid-level and near-mid-level ($5MM to mid-level exception)
- Spencer Hawes, Clippers: Four years, $22.652MM
- Josh McRoberts, Heat: Four years, $22.652MM
- Shaun Livingston, Warriors: Three years, $16.631MM
- *P.J. Tucker, Suns: Three years, $16.5MM
- Paul Pierce, Wizards: Two years, $10.849MM
- Chris Andersen, Heat: Two years, $10.4MM
- Nick Young, Lakers: Four years, $21.326MM
- Darren Collison, Kings: Three years, $15.041MM
* — The salaries in Tucker’s deal descend over the life of the contract, so his first-year salary exceeds the amount of the mid-level, while the average annual value comes in at less than the mid-level.
ShamSports and Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ were used in the creation of this post.
And-Ones: Kings, Felton, Knicks, Singleton, Oden
Lost in the noise surrounding the agreement between the Cavs and Wolves to send Kevin Love to Cleveland is a trade that actually became official Wednesday. The Kings can create a pair of trade exceptions from their deal with the Knicks, one worth $915,243 for Quincy Acy‘s salary, and another worth $228,660 for the difference between the salaries of Travis Outlaw and Wayne Ellington. The Knicks, limited in part because they’re a taxpaying team, can only make a tiny trade exception worth $32,920 for the difference between the three-year veteran’s minimum that Jeremy Tyler makes and the two-year veteran’s minimum that’s coming to Acy. Here’s more on the Knicks and other teams and players from around the league:
- Mavs point guard Raymond Felton will serve a four-game suspension at the start of the regular season for his guilty plea to gun-related charges stemming from a February incident, the league announced via press release.
- Knicks GM Steve Mills didn’t rule out further moves, but he said Wednesday that the team is satisfied with its backcourt situation after alleviating a logjam with the trade, as Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com chronicles.
- The Wizards no longer have free agent Chris Singleton in their plans, a source tells J. Michael of CSNWashington.com. Singleton nonetheless turned down an overseas offer in hopes of landing an NBA job, and has dropped agent Bill Duffy of BDA Sports in favor of Todd Ramasar from Stealth Sports, Michael also reports.
- The Heat were unlikely to re-sign Greg Oden before his arrest this morning on misdemeanor battery charges, and the incident probably ends any chance he had of returning to the team, as Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel writes in a pair of tweets.
- Mark Deeks of ShamSports clarifies an earlier report indicating that Jusuf Nurkic received less than the standard 120% of the rookie scale from the Nuggets. Denver is doling out the full 120%, but the team is using a portion of it to pay Nurkic’s buyout from his Croatian club, so while Nurkic is receiving less than 120% of the scale in actual salary, his cap figure will reflect that the Nuggets are paying 120%. The move is not unprecedented for a player picked as highly as Nurkic, who went 16th overall.
Fallout From Kevin Love Trade Agreement
The time between now and August 23rd, when the Kevin Love trade agreement can become an official transaction, makes it possible that the deal could fall apart, but the Cavs and Wolves are under “enormous pressure” to honor the pact, writes Ken Berger of CBSSports.com. A source tells Berger that Wolves coach/executive Flip Saunders would listen if the Warriors decided to offer Klay Thompson, but Golden State has been steadfastly against doing so. The Warriors haven’t spoken with Minnesota for weeks, according to Berger, and Sam Amick of USA Today hears that Golden State doesn’t intend to jump back into the fray (Twitter link). Here are more aftershocks from the Love deal:
- Even if the Warriors did offer up Thompson to Minnesota, it wouldn’t cause the Cavs deal to come apart, as the Wolves prefer what Cleveland is set to send them, tweets Jon Krawczynski of The Associated Press.
Earlier updates:
- The Wolves gave the Cavs permission more than two weeks ago to negotiate with Love about a long-term future with the Cavs, reports Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune. There are conflicting reports about whether Love has committed to signing a max deal with Cleveland next summer.
- Minnesota maintains interest in Thaddeus Young, but the Wolves wouldn’t end up sending Anthony Bennett to Philadelphia if such a deal materializes, Zgoda writes in the same piece. Minnesota hopes instead to ship the 2015 first-rounder it’s acquiring from Cleveland in the Love trade to the Sixers for Young, Zgoda writes. The Wolves would also like to shed J.J. Barea and Luc Mbah a Moute in a deal for Young, according to Zgoda, who speculates that Minnesota might include Shabazz Muhammad, too.
- Kevin Martin was in plenty of Love rumors, but there’s no indication that the Wolves are looking to trade him or Corey Brewer, Zgoda tweets.
- Most around the league believe that the addition of Love will convince Ray Allen to sign with Cleveland at some point before camp, according to Sam Amico of Fox Sports Ohio, and Chris Broussard of ESPN.com tweets that he heard weeks ago that Allen would come aboard if the Cavs traded for Love. Still, Allen has dismissed similar rumors and his criteria for signing with a team appear to exclude the Cavs, as I explained Wednesday.
- The Cavs aren’t looking to trade Dion Waiters, who was one of the first within the Cavs organization to whom LeBron James spoke after he made his decision to return from the Heat, Amico writes in his piece.
- Cleveland is targeting big men, but the team has faith that Brendan Haywood can contribute, as Amico also notes.
