Offseason In Review: Atlanta Hawks

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

Trades

  • Acquired Jared Cunningham, the No. 16 pick in 2013, and the No. 44 pick in 2013 from the Mavericks in exchange for the No. 18 pick in 2013.
  • Acquired the Nets’ 2015 second-round pick from the Jazz in exchange for the No. 47 pick in 2013.
  • Acquired a 2017 second-round pick (31-40 protected) from the Heat in exchange for the No. 50 pick in 2013.

Waiver Claims

Draft Picks

Camp Invitees

Departing Players

Rookie Contract Option Decisions

Atlanta native Dwight Howard was a free agent this summer, and the Hawks had plenty of cap flexibility to accommodate his inflated maximum salary. It made sense for GM Danny Ferry to make a run at the star center, even though Howard never seemed keen on returning to his hometown. There was even chatter that Howard and Chris Paul could team up in Atlanta, which could clear enough space to fit max contracts for both. Neither marquee free agent wound up with the Hawks, who also let go of Josh Smith. Instead of Howard, Paul and Smith, who signed the three most lucrative deals among all unrestricted free agents this summer, Ferry spent the team’s ample available cash on a mostly underwhelming, if perhaps underrated, haul of players.

Ferry’s best move of the summer involved his greatest expenditure, as he inked Paul Millsap for two seasons at $9.5MM per. When I examined Millsap’s free agent stock in the spring, I figured the 28-year-old power forward could command a deal similar to the $13.5MM a season former Jazz teammate Al Jefferson signed for with the Bobcats, or at least the $12MM David West is seeing from the Pacers this year. Millsap figured to be a Plan B for teams that missed out on Howard, so it was a shock to see him sign for a yearly salary south of $10MM. Still, there wasn’t much reported interest in the overachieving former second-round pick in the days leading up to his signing with the Hawks, as only the Jazz and Celtics appeared to be in the mix. Millsap gives the Hawks a craftier, less athletic replacement for Smith at power forward.

It seemed for a time that Atlanta might be switching out its starting point guard as well. Jeff Teague signed an offer sheet to join ex-Hawks coach Larry Drew in Milwaukee, taking advantage of the Bucks’ standoff with fellow restricted free agent point guard Brandon Jennings. Multiple reports indicated that Teague was quite ready to leave Atlanta behind. That may have been posturing from the ASM Sports Client, similar to the sort of negative messages that came out from Eric Gordon‘s camp about New Orleans when he signed his offer sheet with the Suns in 2012. The Hawks didn’t fulfill Teague’s stated desire to play for a new team, and they matched Milwaukee’s offer sheet, ready to once more turn the reigns of their offense to the former 19th overall pick.

Another Hawks free agent also wound up back in Atlanta after appearing ready to head elsewhere. A rival GM told Marc Stein of ESPN.com on the first night of free agency that a deal between Kyle Korver and the Nets was “in the bag,” but Korver ultimately turned down the idea of a three-year, $10MM contract with Brooklyn for significantly more money with the Hawks. The three-point marksman had been a sought-after commodity, with the Spurs and Bucks also in the mix and interest from the Nuggets that dated all the way back to early March. Still, he represents something of a risk for Ferry, since Korver is 32 years old and signed a four-year contract. His shooting touch probably won’t disappear anytime soon, but his ability to stay in front of opponents on defense figures to erode as time goes by, turning him into an expensive role player by the end of the deal.

The rest of Ferry’s free agent pursuits were more low-key, and included the additions of DeMarre Carroll, another ex-Jazz forward, and former Maverick Elton Brand, who joined a team that fell short of grandiose free agent goals for the second straight summer. Ferry also took a swing on Macedonian center Pero Antic, a move that was one of several that will test just how much the GM learned from his time with the Spurs, the league’s foremost experts at international scouting.

The Hawks used back-to-back first round picks on players from overseas. Point guard Dennis Schröder has jumped immediately into the Atlanta’s rotation as the backup to Teague, while center Lucas Nogueira will spend this season, and perhaps longer, refining his game in Spain. Both are the sort of hit-or-miss gambles that populate the middle of the first round, and time will tell if Ferry can hit the jackpot with one or both of them, just as Ferry did while he was with the Spurs in 2011, the year San Antonio nabbed 15th overall pick Kawhi Leonard.

Ferry took on another foreign-born player this summer when he claimed Gustavo Ayon off waivers from the Bucks, another Milwaukee-Atlanta offseason connection. Still, the influx of players from outside the U.S. to the Hawks roster represents a greater philosophical tie to the Spurs, who have a record 10 international players this season. Ferry hired longtime San Antonio assistant Mike Budenholzer to replace Drew as coach, and it’s clear that the GM is copying as much of the Spurs’ model as possible without the benefit of the fortuitous bounce of lottery balls that put Tim Duncan in black-and-silver.

The Hawks roster is “built to trade,” as Grantland’s Zach Lowe has written, so the team Ferry put together this summer might look different after the February trade deadline passes. That makes sense, given that the Hawks are no closer to contention than they were last season. Ferry aggressively engineered a chance for the cap space to go after this past summer’s marquee names, and his backup plan involved sacrificing much of the team’s flexibility for the next two seasons on less-than-stellar options. Atlanta would have to dump salary to be able to go after 2014’s class of max-level free agents, though the team could have enough money to chase a top-tier restricted free agent. In any case, the Hawks are unlikely to land the superstar needed for a traditional run at a title, requiring Ferry to make the most of whatever creativity he picked up in San Antonio to bring even a fraction of the success of the Spurs to Atlanta.

Luke Adams contributed to this post.

Western Notes: Pelicans, Warriors, Kings, Garrett

There are only four games on the NBA slate tonight, but Western Conference teams provided plenty of excitement off the court. The Pelicans waived Lance Thomas and Arinze Onuaku so they could bring aboard veterans Louis Amundson and Josh Childress. The Jazz went the opposite direction, dumping vet Jamaal Tinsley as they eye a younger replacement. The Timberwolves are reportedly shopping a pair of players while the Lakers are considering a point guard search. We have more on a couple of those story lines as we check the latest from the West:

  • Pelicans coach Monty Williams says the team has been thinking about making today’s roster moves for the past few weeks, but Jimmy Smith of The Times-Picayune chastises GM Dell Demps for acting out of apparent desperation to win immediately.
  • The latest plan for the Warriors‘ new San Francisco arena is reduced in scale, but it’s still likely to face an uphill battle against local political opponents, as John Coté of the San Francisco Chronicle details.
  • For all the excitement surrounding the new ownership, GM and coach in Sacramento, the Kings are just 1-5 to start the season, and coach Michael Malone acknowledges the team’s losing habits will be tough to shake, observes Jason Jones of The Sacramento Bee.
  • It’s unclear whether Diante Garrett has a job with the Jazz virtually sewn up or if he’ll have to be especially impressive when he auditions, but we might have our answer soon, as Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports tweets that Garrett’s workout is set for Wednesday.

Poll: Should Wolves Trade Derrick Williams Now?

One of the NBA’s most frequently mentioned trade candidates over the past couple of years appears to be on the block again. Team executives from around the league tell Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports that the Timberwolves are making Derrick Williams available in trade talks, as we passed along earlier today.  The Wolves are also shopping Alexey Shved, according to the report, but Williams is the much more intriguing name.

The news comes just two and a half weeks after the Timberwolves committed to Williams through 2014/15, picking up the former No. 2 overall pick’s option for more than $6.3MM next season. That could make Williams either more difficult or easier to trade, depending on how rival clubs view him. Timberwolves president Flip Saunders and GM Milt Newton surely hope they can find a team that still believes in the potential that made Williams such a high draft selection and sees his $6.3MM+ salary next season as a potential bargain. The option pickup also allows Williams to remain on track for restricted free agency, furthering his value to a team that has faith in him.

Conversely, Williams no longer has value as an expiring deal, and teams that feel as though his career lows of 5.8 points and 2.0 rebounds in 17.3 minutes this season are more reflective of his worth than his draft status might not be willing to commit for two years. The Timberwolves appear ready to improve their roster now to demonstrate to potential 2015 free agent Kevin Love that they’re serious about winning, but that could be tough to accomplish with Williams off to such a slow start.

There are teams that see Williams as an intriguing buy-low candidate, as Grantland’s Zach Lowe reports. Of course, that would make Williams a “sell-low” proposition for the Wolves, so perhaps now isn’t the right time for a trade. Still, if Williams continues to languish on Minnesota’s bench and gets farther removed from his days as a promising college prospect, his value may only decrease.

Let us know if you think it’s time for the Wolves to pull the trigger on a Williams deal, and elaborate on your thoughts in the comments.

Should Wolves Trade Derrick Williams Now?
Yes, his value isn't getting any higher 76.71% (415 votes)
No, the Wolves should wait for him to get hot 23.29% (126 votes)
Total Votes: 541

Bulls Audition Reggie Williams

Swingman Reggie Williams had his second workout for the Bulls today, a source tells K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune. The report doesn’t indicate that a signing is imminent, though the Bulls could be without Derrick Rose for a while with a minor injury to his right hamstring, so perhaps Chicago is searching for depth. The Bulls are carrying the minimum 13 players on their roster.

Williams was a victim of a numbers crunch in Houston, where the Rockets cut his 50% guaranteed contract at the end of the preseason to get under the 15-man roster limit. He’s played in the NBA each of the past four seasons, but his scoring average has decreased each year since he broke into the Association with 15.2 points per game as a late-season addition for the Warriors in 2009/10. He shot 40.5% from three-point range in each of his two seasons with Golden State, and just 30.7% from behind the arc the past two years with the Bobcats.

Chicago is roughly $8MM above the luxury tax threshold, so if the team signs Williams or anyone else, the Bulls would be subject to paying more in tax than they’d pay the player if they don’t dump salary before the end of the season. Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf has traditionally avoided the tax, having paid it for the first time last season, so I wouldn’t be surprised if the team is just lining up Williams as a contingency plan in case there’s a pressing need, though that’s just my speculation.

Pelicans Sign Lou Amundson

TUESDAY, 1:19pm: The Pelicans have signed Amundson, the team officially announced today in a press release.

MONDAY, 11:39pm: The Pelicans will sign big man Lou Amundson, agent Mark Bartelstein tells Marc Stein of ESPN.com (Twitter link). New Orleans has 15 players on its roster, so the team will have to waive one of them before the Amundson signing becomes official. The likeliest candidate would appear to be Arinze Onuaku, the only Pelican on a non-guaranteed deal, though Lance Thomas, who has the smallest partial guarantee in the league at $15K, could also be in danger.

The 30-year-old Amundson drew interest from the Knicks last week after the Clippers waived him at the end of the preseason. He finished last season with New Orleans after stops in Minnesota and Chicago, averaging 2.4 points and 3.2 rebounds in 11.6 minutes per contest in 18 games wearing the uniform of the then-Hornets. The seven-year vet has done better than I thought when I examined his free agent stock in late September, predicting that his best path back to the NBA would involve playing overseas.

It’s unclear whether Amundson’s deal will include any sort of guarantee, but I’d be surprised if it were for more than the minimum salary, even though the Pelicans have their $2.652MM room exception available. The move could indicate that Ryan Anderson, who hasn’t played in the regular season because of a chip fracture in his right middle toe, might not return for a while.

Several Seeing Limited Minutes On $10MM+ Deals

Much has been made of the limited playing time Larry Sanders has seen to start the season. A thumb injury he suffered in a fight at a nightclub a week ago has kept him out of action since, but he’s yet to play a single fourth-quarter minute in the three games in which he’s appeared so far. It’s not what anyone expected after the Bucks signed him to a four-year, $44MM extension in the summer, and Sanders has been frustrated with his reduced role, as he told Steve Aschburner of NBA.com.

Of course, it’s early, and it would be an even greater surprise if Sanders’ minutes-per-game average continues to hang around 17.3, where it stands for the time being. He’s not the only player seeing more bench time than court time among those who signed eight-figure deals in the offseason.

Here are the half-dozen players who have at appeared in at least one game this season but have failed to log 20 minutes per contest on new deals worth at least $10MM.

Four others who’ve signed deals of $10MM or more have injuries that have kept them from playing at all this season:

J.R. Smith re-signed with the Knicks on a three-year, $17.947MM contract this summer, but he’s just now making his season debut this afternoon against the Spurs because of a five-game drug-related suspension.

The Hoops Rumors 2013 Free Agent Tracker was used in the creation of this post. 

Northwest Rumors: Martin, Thunder, Lopez

The Northwest Division is home to the NBA’s only winless team, the 0-7 Jazz, along with a struggling 1-4 Nuggets outfit. Still, the Thunder are one of a pair of teams in the league with just a single loss, and the Trail Blazers and Timberwolves are off to 4-2 starts. Here’s news on the three Northwest clubs who’ve impressed so far:

  • The Wolves made Kevin Martin a much better financial offer than the Thunder did this summer, but that’s not the only benefit of his decision to sign with Minnesota, writes Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune. The Wolves are giving Martin a chance to start and play more than just a complementary role on a team with other marquee players.
  • Martin’s departure seemed to leave the Thunder‘s bench in disrepair, but Steven Adams and Jeremy Lamb, fruits of the James Harden deal, have combined with Derek Fisher to outperform three of the team’s starters, notes Darnell Mayberry of The Oklahoman.
  • LaMarcus Aldridge and Damian Lillard tell Chris Haynes of CSNNW.com they feel more freedom to play aggressively on defense now that offseason trade acquisition Robin Lopez is protecting the rim for the Trail Blazers.
  • Lior Eliyahu is nearing a three-year deal with Hapoel Jerusalem in Israel, according to Roey Gladstone of Israeli Channel 5 TV (Twitter link; hat tip to Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia). The Wolves own the 28-year-old’s NBA rights, but it’s unclear if Eliyahu’s deal would allow him to leave for the NBA before the three years are up.

Offseason In Review: Indiana Pacers

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

Extensions

Trades

Draft Picks

  • Solomon Hill (Round 1, 23rd overall). Signed via rookie exception.

Camp Invitees

Departing Players

Rookie Contract Option Decisions

  • None

The Pacers made plenty of upgrades this summer, but the most important one might have happened the day before the draft. That’s when Larry Bird came back from a year away from the game to return to his role as the team’s president of basketball operations. Bird had been Executive of the Year in 2011/12 before stepping away, and he was a sought-after commodity, as witnessed by the Kings’ attempt to woo him out of retirement and into their front office. There were rumors that discord between Bird and ownership helped prompt him to walk away from the club, but ultimately, Larry Legend chose to come back to his native state.

Veteran executive Donnie Walsh, who oversaw the Pacers front office in Bird’s absence, is no slouch, but the bench he assembled lagged far behind the starting unit. Bird aggressively attacked that weakness, acquiring Luis Scola from the Suns. The cost was relatively cheap, even though Gerald Green, one of the underachievers on Indiana’s bench last season, and Miles Plumlee have performed well so far for Phoenix. The 2014 first-rounder the Pacers gave up is likely to be no higher than the mid-20s. Scola addresses two deficiencies that were perhaps the team’s most profound last season, as he provides much-needed depth while boosting an offense that finished 19th in points per possession last season.

Scola has been a starting power forward for the vast majority of his six seasons in the league, but he’ll be a backup for Indiana because the Pacers re-signed David West. There was no drama to the negotiations, as both team and player made it clear before free agency that there was mutual determination to get a deal done. They reached an agreement on the second day of free agency, and West wound up with a contract that pays him an annual salary similar to what Kevin Garnett, Serge Ibaka and Tim Duncan make. All are power forwards who might not be the best players on their respective teams, but play integral roles on squads that are eyeing a championship.

Even before West returned to the fold, the Pacers made an upgrade at backup point guard, a role in which D.J. Augustin flopped last season. They signed C.J. Watson on the first day of free agency, giving him a raise from the minimum-salary contract he’d signed with the Nets a year earlier. Watson seemingly had an off year in Brooklyn, as his per-minute scoring and assist production fell off from his time with a renowned Bulls bench. Still, Watson posted higher PER and win-shares-per-minute figures in Brooklyn than he had in Chicago. Indiana’s front office isn’t too concerned with advanced statistics, and yet the Pacers saw value in a player who fit so well with the Bulls, a defensive-minded team with plenty of similarities to Indiana.

Bird spent more money on another free agent pickup, rewarding Chris Copeland for an out-of-nowhere season for the Knicks with a part of the Pacers’ mid-level exception money. The 6’9″ Copeland was a 28-year-old training camp invitee with no NBA experience when he arrived in New York last year, and he combined his 6’9″ frame with a 42.1% clip from three-point range to give the Knicks a dangerous floor-stretching forward. The Knicks had only Non-Bird rights at their disposal if they wanted to re-sign Copeland, and chose to retain fellow Non-Bird free agent Pablo Prigioni instead, declining to make Copeland a formal offer. Still, the Pacers won out over a half-dozen other teams interested in the John Spencer client. Copeland hasn’t been a part of the rotation to begin the season, but he, like Scola, gives the Pacers another offensive weapon along the front line. His ability to find playing time may come down to his improvement on defense, since coach Frank Vogel may be hesitant to play Copeland together with Scola, another defensive liability.

Even before Scola and Copeland came aboard, the Pacers cut ties with former first-round pick Tyler Hansbrough, rescinding his qualifying offer and allowing him to become a unrestricted free agent. West’s presence had contributed to declining minutes for Hansbrough in each of the past two seasons, and Psycho-T wound up signing with the Raptors for slightly more money than the Pacers gave Copeland. Toronto also wound up with Augustin, apparently hoping he and Hansbrough will perform better on the Raptors bench than they did in Indiana.

Bird’s final major move of the offseason was his richest expenditure, as the Pacers anointed Paul George as the team’s designated player with a five-year max extension. That means Indiana can’t give a five-year rookie scale extension to any other player until 2019 as long as George remains on the roster. Of course, it’s unlikely they’ll want to make a similar commitment to Solomon Hill or any of the players they’ll draft in the next two years, so that part of their deal with George probably means little. The financial outlay of at least $80MM is of greater importance for a franchise unwilling to pay the luxury tax. There’s a strong chance George will make an All-NBA team this season and trigger a higher maximum salary via the Derrick Rose Rule, which would mean a difference of roughly $10MM over the life of the deal. The presence of George’s lucrative extension on the team’s books could have a profound effect as soon as next summer, when Lance Stephenson and Danny Granger will both be free agents.

Granger’s ability to bounce back from a season lost because of injury will be critical to Indiana’s title hopes, and Bird’s decision to hold on to perhaps his best trade chip is a gamble that leverages the present against the future. Bird could have dealt for a younger, cheaper asset or perhaps a first-round pick while Granger’s value was still relatively high this summer. The former All-Star remains plagued by injuries as the season begins, and it could be difficult to find takers for him until he proves he can regain his health. The Pacers are off to a fast start without him, and if Granger can return and contribute, Bird may again revisit the notion of trading the 30-year-old.

Still, Granger’s continued presence on the roster signals that the Pacers are going all-in for a championship this season. There’s plenty of reason for that approach following strong performances in the playoffs against the Heat during Miami’s title runs the past two seasons. It’s clear that the Pacers think they can overcome the Heat and come away with the franchise’s first Larry O’Brien trophy. Of course, LeBron and company aren’t the only threat Indiana will face among a strong field of Eastern Conference contenders. That’s why Bird must keep the future in mind even as he focuses on this season. The Pacers have a pair of All-Stars less than 27 years old in George and Roy Hibbert, along with the fast-rising Stephenson, who’s still just 23. Indiana can remain in championship contention for years to come, but Bird must wisely handle the team’s limited finances. That’s why his decision on Granger is so important, and why the roster Indiana put together in the offseason might look different by the time the playoffs begin.

Luke Adams contributed to this post.

Central Notes: Monroe, Copeland, Ellis

The Pacers finished one game shy of the NBA Finals last season, but the team is determined to keep pushing toward a title, observes Chris Mannix of SI.com. Indiana is 7-0 after a key win in Brooklyn last night, and with Paul George playing like an MVP, it seems there’s no ceiling on what the Pacers can do. Here’s more on them and their Central Division rivals:

  • Pistons power forward Greg Monroe says he’s not focusing on his upcoming restricted free agency, but he acknowledges that there’s extra motivation this year as he seeks a payday in the summer, as Vincent Goodwill of the Detroit News observes. Monroe is off to a strong start, and Goodwill points to the big man’s superior career numbers compared to peers who signed max and near-max extensions last month.
  • Chris Copeland was the Pacers‘ most expensive free agent acquisition in the offseason, and while he hasn’t been in the team’s rotation so far, coach Frank Vogel still thinks he’ll play a key role, and Copeland remains pleased with his decision to sign. Fred Kerber of the New York Post has the details.
  • Monta Ellis turned down a more lucrative offer from the Bucks before signing a three-year, $25.08MM contract with Dallas this summer, and though he knew the Milwaukee fans would boo him when the Mavs visited last night, Ellis has no hard feelings toward the Bucks. Dwain Price of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram has more from the one-night reunion. “It’s just how fans are,” Ellis said. “When I left this organization, everybody in this organization knew that Monta Ellis played every night, every minute, and he played hard, so that’s all that matters to me.”

Extra Year On Midseason Deals Rarely A Factor

NBA teams commonly tack an extra, non-guaranteed year onto a deal when they make a midseason signing, but data from 2012/13 shows most of those players don’t remain under contract as this season begins. Twenty-four players received midseason deals in 2012/13 that covered 2013/14 without a full guarantee. Only five of them are still on on NBA rosters,

Just four players are still with the team that signed them last season. The fifth, James Anderson, remains under contract thanks to the Sixers, who claimed his deal off waivers from the Rockets this summer. Houston also cut fellow midseason signee Tim Ohlbrecht at the same time, and the Sixers claimed him when they picked up Anderson, but Philadelphia put Ohlbrecht back on waivers last month. That’s similar to what happened with Josh Akognon. He signed a deal with the Mavericks in April that included a non-guaranteed season for 2013/14, but Dallas waived him while in a financial squeeze in late July. The Grizzlies claimed the player the Mavericks wished they could have kept, but Memphis waived Akognon in early October, and he hasn’t resurfaced in the NBA since.

Four other players signed to non-guaranteed multiyear deals last season filtered through a second team over the summer by way of trades, but none of them were on an opening-night roster. Two other players landed multiyear deals in the middle of the 2012/13 season that included full guarantees for 2013/14. Aron Baynes remains under contract with the Spurs, but the Timberwolves waived Chris Johnson last month in spite of his guarantee.

Since Baynes and Johnson had full guarantees, they’re not reflected here among the categories of players signed to non-guaranteed multiyear deals after the 2012/13 season began:

Remain with the team that signed them

Claimed off waivers

  • Josh Akognon, Mavericks (Grizzlies claimed him off waivers in August, but put him back on waivers in October).
  • James Anderson, Rockets — (Sixers claimed him off waivers)
  • Tim Ohlbrecht, Rockets — (Sixers claimed him off waivers in July, but put him back on waivers in October).

Waived, became free agents