Eastern Rumors: Shumpert, Rondo, Heat, Pacers
Six Eastern Conference teams have 2-3 records, and all of them had playoff aspirations coming into the season. The Bulls, Nets and Knicks had even loftier expectations, but they’re among the clubs that find themselves below .500 five games into the season. It might not seem like it’s time for a drastic move yet, but tell that to Mike Brown, whom the Lakers fired five games into last season. Our look across the East has the latest on a team that could make a change soon:
- An Eastern Conference executive tells Frank Isola of the New York Daily News that Iman Shumpert‘s trade value around the league is high, and that the Knicks aren’t nearly as sold on the third-year swingman as the rest of the league is. Isola wonders if the return of J.R. Smith from suspension and the Knicks’ belief in rookie Tim Hardaway Jr. will prompt the team to trade Shumpert, speculating that a swap with the Nuggets for Kenneth Faried might be the best fit. A deal with the Celtics for Rajon Rondo would meet with Mike Woodson‘s approval, but no such trade is likely, Isola writes.
- More NBA teams appear to be putting stock in analytics, but the successful Heat and Pacers aren’t among them, as a coach points out to Isola for the same piece.
- Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution identifies John Jenkins and Jared Cunningham as possible candidates for D-League assignments once Lou Williams returns from injury for the Hawks.
Offseason In Review: Cleveland Cavaliers
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
- Jarrett Jack: Four years, $25.2MM. Signed via cap space. Fourth year is partially guaranteed for $500K.
- Andrew Bynum: Two years, $24.79MM. Signed via cap space. First year is partially guaranteed for $6MM. Second year is non-guaranteed.
- Earl Clark: Two years, $8.5MM. Signed via cap space. Second year is non-guaranteed.
- Henry Sims: Two years, $1.7MM. Signed via minimum salary exception. First year is partially guaranteed for $50K. Second year is non-guaranteed.
- Matthew Dellavedova: Two years, $1.31MM. Signed via minimum salary exception. First year is partially guaranteed for $100K. Second year is non-guaranteed.
Trades
- Acquired a 2015 second-round pick and a 2016 second-round pick from the Trail Blazers in exchange for the No. 31 pick in the 2013 draft.
Draft Picks
- Anthony Bennett (Round 1, 1st overall). Signed via rookie exception.
- Sergey Karasev (Round 1, 19th overall). Signed via rookie exception.
- Carrick Felix (Round 2, 33rd overall). Signed via cap space for four years, $3.29MM. Third year is non-guaranteed. Fourth year is team option.
Camp Invitees
- DeSagana Diop
- Kenny Kadji
- Michael Lee
- Jermaine Taylor
- Elliot Williams
Departing Players
- Omri Casspi
- Wayne Ellington
- Daniel Gibson
- Kevin Jones
- Shaun Livingston
- Chris Quinn
- Marreese Speights
- Luke Walton
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- Kyrie Irving (4th year, $7.07MM): Exercised
- Tristan Thompson (4th year, $5.14MM): Exercised
- Dion Waiters (3rd year, $4.06MM): Exercised
- Tyler Zeller (3rd year, $1.7MM): Exercised
The Cavaliers sure weren’t afraid to take a few chances this summer. Risk-taking might be necessary for a small-market team to succeed in a league where the Nets are spending $180MM+ in payroll and luxury taxes this season. Maybe it’s part of the team’s plan to show LeBron James they’re willing to do whatever it takes to win as the former Cav eyes potential free agency in the summer of 2014. Whatever it means for the franchise down the road, the team’s bold moves must help the team to the playoffs this season to satisfy owner Dan Gilbert.
The Andrew Bynum signing was the splashier gamble, but the risk with the most long-term consequences for the club could be the decision to draft Anthony Bennett with the No. 1 overall pick. Few anticipated that the UNLV forward would be the choice, and there was speculation on the eve of the draft that he could slide all the way to the Blazers at tenth overall. That same report said the Cavs were deciding between Alex Len and Nerlens Noel, while another dispatch within 10 days of the draft specifically mentioned Bennett as a player the Cavs wouldn’t draft unless they traded down. The Cavs took Bennett even though his injured rotator cuff prevented him from working out prior to the draft and kept him out of summer league, but neither Noel or Len were healthy at draft time, either.
GM Chris Grant seemingly had ample opportunity to trade the top pick, and he appeared willing to seek a deal of some kind for all four of the team’s selections, as a slew of trade rumors linked the Cavs to Paul Pierce, Kevin Love, Luol Deng and Shawn Marion, among others. They ultimately hung on to both of their first-round picks and converted the top pick in the second round into a pair of future picks that will probably fall somewhere in the middle of the second round. They open a playoffs-or-bust season with three June draftees and undrafted signee Matthew Dellavedova, and none of their four rookies are starting.
Grant’s most prominent free agent signing isn’t starting either, and Bynum has already hinted that he may be much closer to retirement than his old All-Star form. Hitching their wagon to Bynum’s creaky knees was a risk, to be sure, but the Cavs at least gave themselves an out, guaranteeing less than 25% of his nearly $25MM contract. The team can write the $6MM guarantee off as a loss if they don’t like what they see by January 10th, but doing so wouldn’t erase thoughts of what the Cavs might have done if they had used their ample cap space to go after another center, either through trade or free agency.
Nikola Pekovic went weeks without signing an offer from the Timberwolves or any other team, and if the Cavs had swooped in, the worst-case scenario would have involved the offer sheet tying up their cap room for a scant three days before Minnesota decided to match. Pekovic’s $12.1MM salary this season is slightly less than what Bynum will get if he remains on the roster past January 10th, so Grant and company probably wouldn’t have had to significantly alter their other free agent plans to come away with Pekovic.
Of course, Bynum’s upside, like Bennett’s, appeared higher than competing options, and Grant made it clear this summer that he would be bold. The GM gambled on another signing, betting that the half-season of helpful production that Earl Clark gave the Lakers was a greater indicator of Clark’s ability than his three and half years spent as a non-factor. I figured Clark would get a deal worth about $2MM a year when I examined his free agent stock in May, but the Cavs gave him double that.
Another of Grant’s moves seemed more on target. I thought Jarrett Jack would wind up with approximately $6MM annually, and that’s just about what the Cavs gave him. Jack is another bench piece, but he, not Stephen Curry, had the ball in his hands for key stretches with the Warriors last season, when Golden State emerged from the lottery to mount a serious challenge in the second round of the playoffs. Grant no doubt envisions Jack doing the same alongside Kyrie Irving this year.
Clark has opened the season as the starter at small forward, but all of the other additions for the Cavs this season are to the team’s bench. The eight players who departed the team were reserves, too, but Cleveland didn’t lose 58 games last season simply because its bench was substandard. The team’s first string has to improve for it to make the playoffs, and unless Bennett, Bynum or another player currently not in the starting lineup nabs a spot at some point, it seems the Cavs had a summer of lateral movement. The return of Anderson Varejao will certainly help, but his injury history cautions against banking on a full season from him. The pressure’s on Irving, Dion Waiters and Tristan Thompson to show marked improvement this year. The former top-five picks certainly seem capable of doing so, but an improvement of 17 wins, which would bring the team to .500, is not an easy leap.
The specter of LeBron returning to the team he left behind will tempt Cleveland all season, even if he refuses to talk about his ability to opt out of his contract with the Heat. The Cavs will be able to clear enough space to welcome him back to northeast Ohio with a max deal, and they’ll have plenty of talented young players with upside to surround him. But unless Grant continues to upgrade the roster with in-season trades, it’ll be a stretch for the Cavs to demonstrate to LeBron that they can put a playoff-caliber roster around him.
Luke Adams contributed to this post.
Odds & Ends: Aldridge, Blazers, Redick, Henry
LaMarcus Aldridge hasn’t told coach Terry Stotts that he wants to remain in Portland long-term, but he hasn’t said he wants to get out, either, so the coach tells Jim Rome of CBS Sports Radio that he isn’t worried about a player he believes is content playing for the Blazers. Ben Golliver of Blazer’s Edge has a transcript of those comments, as well as the coach’s remarks on the contributions of new acquisition Robin Lopez toward what Stotts perceives as a changed culture on the team. Here’s more on other new additions around the Association:
- Doc Rivers arrived in L.A. this summer with J.J. Redick atop his list of targets within the Clippers‘ price range, and he convinced Redick over dinner to come to the team, finally landing the player he’d sought multiple times while with the Celtics. Arash Markazi of ESPNLosAngeles.com has the details.
- Xavier Henry didn’t perform nearly as well in New Orleans as he is with the Lakers, and while Pelicans coach Monty Williams takes responsibility for his role in that, Henry doesn’t blame him, according to Mark Medina of the Los Angeles Daily News.
- Lester Hudson is headed to play in China for the third straight season, inking a deal with Xinjiang, agent Brad Ames tells Jorge Sierra of HoopsHype (Twitter link). Hudson’s first trip East in 2011/12 resulted in late-season NBA stints with the Cavs and Grizzlies.
- The Thunder have lost plenty with the departures of James Harden and Kevin Martin the past two offseasons, but Jeff Caplan of NBA.com thinks this could be the most complete Oklahoma City team yet, thanks to the team’s youthful bench.
- Steven Adams, a member of that Thunder bench, has seen more minutes than starter Kendrick Perkins this year, but Caplan passes along Perkins’ praise for the rookie, and coach Scott Brooks isn’t concerned that Perkins will pout, The Oklahoman’s Darnell Mayberry notes.
Minimum-Salary Contract Reimbursements
One of the reasons the Knicks don’t want to bring Jason Collins aboard right now is reportedly because they don’t want to go to the expense of doing so. But it’s not because Collins would cost the Knicks about $1.4MM on a minimum-salary contract. Instead, it’s probably because the team doesn’t want to cut a fully guaranteed deal and add anyone’s salary. Collins would only cost the Knicks and other NBA teams a prorated portion of $884,293 if he agreed to a one-year deal for the minimum, even though he’d indeed make nearly $1.4MM if paid for the entire season.
That’s because the league reimburses teams when they sign veterans with three or more years of experience to one-year, minimum-salary contracts. The NBA pays those veterans the difference between their escalated minimum salaries, which go up depending on how many years they’ve played in the league, and the equivalent of the two-year veteran’s minimum, which is $884,293 this season. The idea is to give long-tenured veterans equal footing against less-experienced players as they compete for jobs. Of course, younger talent still often has an advantage, since the rookie minimum of $490,180 is not much more than half the two-year vet’s minimum this year. Plus, multiyear deals aren’t covered by this provision, so the club has to foot the full amount of those contracts.
There are 18 teams taking advantage of reimbursements as the season begins. The Bulls, looking to save luxury tax money, are the only team set to receive more than $1MM, thanks to their pair of one-year contracts with players who have 10 or more years of experience, the most lucrative bracket on the minimum-salary scale. Of course, this could change, since Mike James‘ deal is non-guaranteed, as is the case with many on minimum contracts. Plenty of midseason signings will change the landscape. All 10-day contracts will be for the minimum and covered under the reimbursement provision.
Still, it’s interesting to see which teams are benefiting from the NBA’s money for now. The Knicks come in second behind the Bulls with three qualifying players. The Lakers have the most players covered by the provision, but since their vets are relatively inexperienced, they’re only the 13th highest on this list.
The Celtics, Cavaliers, Nuggets, Pistons, Warriors, Bucks, Pelicans, 76ers, Suns, Kings, Spurs and Raptors aren’t receiving any reimbursements.
Bulls (1,030,428)
- Mike James ($515,214)
- Nazr Mohammed ($515,214)
Knicks ($935,006)
- Kenyon Martin ($515,214)
- Beno Udrih ($387,986)
- Cole Aldrich ($31,806)
Clippers (817,380)
- Antawn Jamison ($515,214)
- Ryan Hollins ($302,166)
Thunder ($817,380)
- Derek Fisher ($515,214)
- Ryan Gomes ($302,166)
Heat ($801,476)
- Roger Mason Jr. ($515,214)
- Michael Beasley ($143,131)
- Greg Oden ($143,131)
Bobcats ($737,862)
- Jannero Pargo ($515,214)
- Anthony Tolliver ($222,648)
Rockets ($658,345)
- Marcus Camby ($515,214) — no longer on team, but remains on payroll
- Aaron Brooks ($143,131)
Jazz ($547,020)
- Jamaal Tinsley ($515,214)
- Mike Harris ($31,806)
Wizards ($547,020)
- Al Harrington ($515,214)
- Garrett Temple ($31,806)
Pacers ($515,214)
- Rasual Butler ($515,214)
Grizzlies ($515,214)
- Mike Miller ($515,214)
Trail Blazers ($515,214)
- Earl Watson ($515,214)
Lakers ($508,908)
- Jordan Farmar ($222,648)
- Shawne Williams ($222,648)
- Xavier Henry ($31,806)
- Wesley Johnson ($31,806)
Mavericks ($451,600)
- Devin Harris ($387,986)
- DeJuan Blair ($63,614)
Nets ($387,986)
- Shaun Livingston ($387,986)
Magic ($302,166)
- Solomon Jones ($302,166)
Hawks ($143,131)
- Cartier Martin ($143,131)
Timberwolves ($63,614)
- A.J. Price ($63,614)
ShamSports was used in the creation of this post.
Eastern Notes: Sixers, Bynum, Knicks
The Bobcats, Magic and Sixers all entered the evening tied for third place in the Eastern Conference with 3-2 records. While we wait to see how long the two losingest teams from last season and the club widely considered to be this year’s worst can keep it up, here’s more from the East:
- Spencer Hawes, Evan Turner and Thaddeus Young all have “sky high” trade value, as Sam Amico of Fox Sports Ohio opines on Twitter. NBA execs who spoke to ESPN’s Chris Broussard about the Sixers aren’t so sure about that, as we passed along earlier.
- About three-quarters of Hoops Rumors readers think Cavs center Andrew Bynum will retire early, but Turner was impressed with what he saw from a still-recovering Bynum in the big man’s lone practice with the Sixers last season, observes Mary Schmitt Boyer of the Plain Dealer.
- Mike Woodson suggested to reporters, including Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com, that the primary reason the Knicks aren’t going to sign anyone for the frontcourt right now is because there just isn’t a talented enough big man available.
- Mike Lupica of the New York Daily News quotes a coach from another team who echoes Woodson’s sentiments about a lack of quality bigs, supporting the Daily News scribe’s claim that Woodson, not GM Steve Mills, is the Knicks‘ best talent evaluator.
- Paul Millsap is leading the Hawks in scoring so far this season, but the team signed him for his leadership as well as what he can contribute on the court, as Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution details in a subscription-only piece.
- Patrick Hayes of PistonPowered, writing for the Detroit Free Press, believes Greg Monroe will sign a max deal in restricted free agency next summer. Still, Hayes thinks the Pistons aren’t likely to receive a worthwhile trade offer for him this season.
Pacers Signal Intent To Re-Sign Stephenson
Pacers president Larry Bird has been dropping hints to Lance Stephenson that the team intends to take care of him in free agency this summer, as Stephenson tells Candace Buckner of the Indianapolis Star. Bird keeps telling him, “You’re next,” Stephenson says, likely in reference to the lucrative contracts the team has handed out the past two summers to Roy Hibbert, David West and George Hill.
Stephenson is confident he’ll stay with the Pacers even though his bargain contract, which pays him slightly more than $1MM this year, expires at season’s end. The Pacers also have Danny Granger on an expiring deal, and with about $60.6MM committed for next season, it’ll be a tight squeeze to stay under the projected $75.7MM luxury tax line. Indiana’s brass has repeatedly expressed unwillingness to pay the tax, so it may come down to a choice between Stephenson and Granger, barring a trade to clear more room.
I doubt Stephenson will see a contract with an eight-figure annual salary, like the deals for Hibbert and West, but perhaps the club would be willing to do something similar to Hill’s $40MM deal, in which the team spread the money out over the maximum five seasons. That still wouldn’t leave much room for Granger if he returns to a form that’s at all close to what he exhibited before missing almost all of last season, but it would still give the team some breathing room to sign draft picks and other free agents.
Of course, the Pacers and Stephenson can’t sign a new contract until after the July Moratorium, more than eight months from now, and he’s ineligible for an extension, so plenty can change before pen hits paper. Stephenson left tonight’s game with a sore left knee, and while it doesn’t sound too serious, it serves as a reminder that a significant injury could prompt the team to change its plans.
Offseason In Review: Orlando Magic
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
- Jason Maxiell: Two years, $5MM. Signed via mid-level exception. Second year is non-guaranteed.
- Ronnie Price: Two years, $2.58MM. Signed via minimum salary exception. Second year is non-guaranteed.
- Solomon Jones: One year, $1.19MM. Signed via minimum salary exception. Non-guaranteed.
Trades
- None
Draft Picks
- Victor Oladipo (Round 1, 2nd overall). Signed via rookie exception.
- Romero Osby (Round 2, 51st overall). Signed via mid-level exception for three years, $2.45MM. He was subsequently waived, earning a partial guarantee of $100K.
Camp Invitees
Departing Players
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- Maurice Harkless (3rd year, $1.89MM): Exercised
- Tobias Harris (4th year, $2.38MM): Exercised
- Andrew Nicholson (3rd year, $1.55MM): Exercised
- Nikola Vucevic (4th year, $2.75MM): Exercised
As this summer’s Dwight Howard sweepstakes played out, the Magic left the drama for other teams to worry about. No longer does Howard’s indecisiveness grip the franchise in the stasis of a daily soap opera. GM Rob Hennigan has instead focused on making forward progress on a rebuilding project that began the moment he shipped D12 away in the four-team blockbuster that the other three franchises involved have little to show for 15 months later. The Magic came away from the deal with a pair of building blocks who took major strides last season in Nikola Vucevic and Maurice Harkless. The first of the three first-round picks that Hennigan arranged for in the deal will arrive next summer. Orlando is well-positioned for a rise back into the Eastern Conference elite, even if last season’s league-worst 20-62 record shows there’s still a long climb ahead.
Probably the most important decision Hennigan had this summer involved what to do with the No. 2 overall selection in June’s draft. The choice was a little harder than usual, since the Cavs left everyone guessing about their pick at No. 1 until the moment David Stern called Anthony Bennett’s name. Hennigan admitted that he fielded some “tempting” trade offers for the pick, but ultimately hung on to it. A trade rumor involving a swap of Arron Afflalo to the Clippers for Eric Bledsoe and Caron Butler persisted for a month leading up to the draft, and its proliferation seemed to signal that the team was interested in drafting a shooting guard. The Magic’s $22.5MM commitment to Afflalo over the next three years represents the team’s largest commitment, so there might have been plenty of reason to either draft a player at another position or move Afflalo’s contract elsewhere. Again, Hennigan decided against a trade, and though Orlando was reportedly interested in Nerlens Noel, the Magic instead picked Victor Oladipo, who had won out over fellow two-guard Ben McLemore in the team’s eyes.
The Magic have curiously tried Oladipo at point guard, and while that figures to steepen the rookie’s learning curve, he’s still receiving plenty of Rookie of the Year buzz in what should be a wide-open race. Oladipo wasn’t even a starter on his high school team as a junior in 2008/09, when the Magic’s last wave of talent peaked with a berth in the NBA Finals, but his rise has been just as precipitous as the team’s fall. He, clearly, is a building block along with center Vucevic, forwards Harkless and Tobias Harris, and, to a lesser degree, power forward Andrew Nicholson.
That group is an unbalanced one, with too many frontcourt pieces and not enough guards. The Magic may envision more players learning new positions, as they’re attempting to have Oladipo do, but their complete lack of trades this summer suggests the team still has some evaluations to make. Oladipo, Vucevic, Harkless, Harris and Nicholson will all remain on their rookie scale contracts through at least 2014/15. None are close to reaching their potential, as last season’s record indicates. That makes this year a crucial one, particularly for the three forwards, as Hennigan decides which players he keeps as he pivots toward a run at the playoffs.
For now, the sharpest focus is on growth, not wins. Hennigan initially suggested he wouldn’t use the team’s mid-level exception, but he wound up spending part of it on Jason Maxiell, a veteran who’s been on plenty of both winning teams and losing teams in his eight years with the Pistons. Maxiell’s contract is guaranteed only for this season, one in which the Magic don’t have legitimate playoff hopes, and he plays at the already crowded power forward position. It seems the Magic intend for the 30-year-old to act as a mentor for the club’s young guys, making his signing more about what he can bring off the court than on it.
By contrast, the Magic clearly don’t want the player with the most experience on the roster hanging around the locker room. They told Hedo Turkoglu to stay home before training camp, and he hasn’t been with the team since as Hennigan tries to find a taker for his contract. The Magic already have nearly $6.4MM on this season’s payroll committed to players who aren’t on the roster anymore, including more than $3.8MM for Al Harrington, whom the team waived in August. Hennigan would surely like to avoid adding to that dead money, even though Turkoglu’s $12MM contract is, like Harrington’s, only 50% guaranteed. It will be a challenge to come up with a team willing to trade for Turkoglu, and the team’s decision to keep him at home only makes it tougher.
Hennigan probably spent a lot of time this summer trying to find trade partners for a few of his other veterans. He’s seeking a first-round pick for Jameer Nelson, though it seems unlikely he’ll get one for Nelson alone, given the commoditization of first-rounders these days. The Magic’s best-case scenario might involve finding a team that would take Nelson and either Turkoglu or Glen Davis for some combination of young players and picks, but Davis, due $13MM in guaranteed cash over this season and next, will also be difficult to deal. He represents the team’s second-largest commitment behind Afflalo, who’ll no doubt continue to be a trade candidate, too.
It was a quiet offseason after draft night for the Magic, a welcome relief for a franchise still reeling from Dwight’s departure. Still, the front office remains at work trying to accelerate the shedding of the veterans left over from the last iteration of the team while keeping an eye on which among a growing store of talented young players emerge as keepers. The Magic have only about $33.5MM in guaranteed money for next season, not counting cap holds and two first-round draft picks. Hennigan and company probably have enough room to make a max offer to a marquee free agent this coming summer, with Orlando’s warm climate and lack of state income tax as carrots on a stick. The summer of 2014 figures to be more exciting for the Magic than the one that preceded it.
Luke Adams contributed to this post.
Odds & Ends: Ewing, Oriakhi, Jackson
The divergent paths the Nets and Pacers took to upgrade their teams this summer underscores how the current collective bargaining agreement allows deep-pocketed owners to further their advantage, opines Mark Deeks of ShamSports in a piece for HoopsWorld. Indiana steadfastly refuses to pay the luxury tax, while Brooklyn is set to pay about $80MM in penalties on its $100MM+ payroll this season. Still, the Pacers are the NBA’s lone unbeaten team and my pick to win the championship. Here’s more from a nine-game NBA evening:
- There were 13 coaching vacancies this past offseason, and Patrick Ewing didn’t receive an interview for any of them, notes Fred Kerber of the New York Post, who catches up with the Bobcats assistant pining for a chance to lead a team.
- Alex Oriakhi, whom the Suns drafted 57th overall this summer, is leaving the French team Limoges, but he wants to continue to play somewhere in Europe, according to Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia.
- This year is crucial for Reggie Jackson, as he’ll have a chance to prove his worth as a sixth man. The Thunder believe he can lead their second unit, but they must find out for sure before he becomes extension-eligible in the summer, as The Oklahoman’s Anthony Slater examines.
- Larry Sanders is averaging just 17.3 minutes per game after signing a four-year, $44MM extension with the Bucks this offseason, but he simply hasn’t earned any more playing time with his performance so far, the Journal Sentinel’s Michael Hunt argues.
Jazz Rumors: Rush, Favors, Fredette
The Jazz fell to 0-4 tonight for the first time since they moved from New Orleans for the 1979/80 season, but there was a silver lining to the team’s loss to the Nets. Brandon Rush played his first game since tearing the ACL in his left knee a year ago. He re-emerged in Utah as one of three Warriors who came over in a trade that was more about draft picks for the Jazz than it was about current players. Rush might not be part of Utah’s future, but Derrick Favors is, and there’s more on him as Jazz fans already start to think about 2014/15:
- Favors had no intention of letting contract talks with the Jazz play out until next summer once the team approached him about an extension, and says to Tim Bontemps of the New York Post that he told agent Wallace Prather to, “Go ahead and get this done.”
- Favors was of two minds when the Jazz decided not to re-sign Al Jefferson and Paul Millsap, as Bontemps notes in the same piece. “I mean, it’s exciting for me,” Favors said. “I hate it that we had to let Al and Paul go, because those guys are great guys, great teammates, great people overall. But I guess it was a time for a chance, and I’m excited about it.”
- Signing Jimmer Fredette next summer would serve neither the Jazz’s nor the former BYU star’s best interest, argues Brad Rock of the Deseret News, who believes that if the Jazz want to have a Mormon on the roster, they should draft Jabari Parker.
Few 2012/13 10-Day Signees Remain In NBA
A 10-day contract is a chance for a player to either establish his NBA career or to revive it. Still, even if they’re able to stick once the 10 days are over, most of the guys who sign the shortest of contracts don’t manage more than a brief foray into the Association.
Only nine of the 32 players who signed at least one 10-day contract last year remain in the NBA as the new season gets underway. Another 11 were in training camps last month but failed to make their teams. The largest subgroup comprises a dozen players who are no longer in the league and didn’t take part in an NBA camp at all.
Perhaps the most successful 10-day signee from last season is Chris Andersen, whose energetic play off the bench helped the Heat to the championship. He remains much a part of the team, unlike many of his peers. Kenyon Martin is the only other 2012/13 10-day signee who seems to be part of an NBA rotation right now. Maalik Wayns may only be in the league because he’s injured and the Clippers would have to guarantee his salary if they cut him loose before he heals.
Below is a look at each player to sign a 10-day contract last season, categorized by their proximity to the NBA as 2013/14 begins. For information on 10-day signings dating back to the 2006/07 season, check out the Hoops Rumors Ten Day Tracker.
On rosters:
- Chris Andersen, Heat
- Josh Harrellson, Pistons
- Mike James, Bulls
- Shelvin Mack, Hawks
- Kenyon Martin, Knicks
- Jannero Pargo, Bobcats
- Henry Sims, Cavaliers
- Donald Sloan, Pacers
- Maalik Wayns, Clippers
Camp cuts:
- Josh Akognon, Grizzlies
- Louis Amundson, Clippers
- Lazar Hayward, Pelicans
- Damion James, Nuggets
- Chris Johnson (Dayton), Nets
- Chris Johnson (LSU), Timberwolves
- Kris Joseph, Magic
- Dominic McGuire, Jazz
- Scott Machado: Jazz
- Jarvis Varnado, Heat
- D.J. White, Bulls
Not in camp:
