Mavericks Links: Kaman, Carlisle, Ledo

The Mavericks scored an encouraging victory in their last outing, knocking off a Western Conference heavyweight with a win over the Grizzlies. Still, memories of last season’s failure resurfaced before tonight’s tilt against the Lakers and center Chris Kaman, part of a host of Mavs who didn’t return to the team after playing on expiring deals last season. Here’s the latest:

  • Kaman takes issue with what he perceives as Rick Carlisle‘s tendency to “micromanage” and says the Mavs coach is “uptight and kind of plays games with people a little bit here and there,” as Dave McMenamin of ESPNLosAngeles.com observes. Carlisle told reporters that he takes his share of the responsibility for Kaman’s poor fit in Dallas, notes Mike Trudell of Lakers.com (Twitter link).
  • Kaman had more to say about Carlisle, as Eddie Sefko of the Dallas Morning News shares the new Lakers center’s belief that the coach was duplicitous and played favorites. Kaman also doubted he would see many minutes if he re-signed with Dallas.
  • Ricky Ledo is probably headed for a D-League assignment at some point this season, Carlisle says, according to Earl K. Sneed of Mavs.com (on Twitter).

Offseason In Review: Washington Wizards

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

  • Otto Porter (Round 1, 3rd overall). Signed via rookie exception.
  • Glen Rice Jr. (Round 2, 35th overall). Signed via minimum salary exception for two years, $1.31MM. Second year is partially guaranteed for $400K.

Camp Invitees

Departing Players

Rookie Contract Option Decisions

The pressure’s on in Washington. GM Ernie Grunfeld, like coach Randy Wittman, is entering the final season of his contract, and owner Ted Leonsis says he expects the Wizards to be a “playoff-caliber team” this year. That’s not quite a playoffs-or-else declaration, but it’s about as close as it gets. It would be surprising to see either Grunfeld or Wittman still on the job if the Wizards miss the postseason, and that’s evident in the trade the team pulled off just before the regular season began.

The news that Emeka Okafor‘s neck injury threatens to keep him out all season broke shortly after the Wizards traded him to the Suns. The Wizards had no doubt known already that Okafor could miss significant time, so Grunfeld pulled the trigger on a deal he’d been working on for a few weeks. The acquisition of Marcin Gortat, a replacement at center for Okafor, came at the cost of a first-round pick, a precious commodity these days made even more so by the likelihood that the pick will go to Phoenix this coming year, meaning the Wizards will miss out on a heralded draft class. The selection is top-12 protected for 2014, meaning there’s a disaster scenario in which the Wizards miss out on the playoffs and lose their 2014 first-rounder. The trade had a negligible financial impact, and Gortat’s on an expiring contract, so there’s a chance that come July, the Wizards will have nothing to show for having done the deal. That’s why it served to tighten the screws on a postseason mandate.

Still, not all of Grunfeld’s offseason moves were made solely with the present in mind. The Wizards committed a five-year maximum-salary extension to John Wall, banking on the notion that a brilliant second half of the season in 2012/13 is a harbinger of the point guard’s future performance. The five-year deal makes Wall the team’s designated player, essentially meaning Grunfeld and company are confident they won’t draft a superior talent either of the next two years. That’s probably a safe assumption, but it was nonetheless a risky move to give max money to a player who hasn’t definitively proven he’s worth it. That’s doubly so since the Wizards could have waited until Wall hit restricted free agency next summer to either do the same deal or match another team’s offer sheet that would have locked Wall up for only four seasons.

Wall was the first player eligible for a rookie-scale extension this summer to sign one, and the Wizards wasted no time getting their other major deals done, reaching agreements with Eric Maynor and Martell Webster on the first and second days of free agency, respectively. The Wizards re-signed Webster to a four-year deal for the full value of the non-taxpayer’s mid-level exception. It’s another potential overpay, especially considering Webster’s not in the starting lineup, but the sixth overall pick from 2005 is still just 26 years old, so he should still be producing at his current rate when his contract expires in 2017.

Maynor lost out to Reggie Jackson for the backup job in Oklahoma City, but he recouped some of his value when he helped shore up Portland’s bench after a midseason trade. Using the biannual exception on him somewhat limits the team’s flexibility for next summer, since, as the name suggests, the biannual can only be used every other year, but few teams make use of it as frequently as that. Like Webster, Maynor is a bench player and doesn’t figure to see too much time at the point behind Wall, but perhaps Maynor will see significant minutes in small backcourts alongside Wall.

The Wizards were fortunate in the lottery this past May, moving up to the third spot, though that luck was tempered by the weakness of the draft field. Grunfeld went with the hometown choice in Georgetown’s Otto Porter, a small forward with polish but limited potential. The team’s high-profile draft failures of the past, and former No. 6 overall pick Jan Vesely in particular, might have made Grunfeld hesitate to go with a bolder choice. Porter’s selection and the speed with which the team came to a long-term agreement with Webster is an odd juxtaposition, since they primarily play the same position. The team’s desire to make a playoff run this season also likely factored into their decision to draft Porter, since the 20-year-old was supposed to be able to contribute immediately. Of course, an injury prior to training camp caused him to miss all of preseason and the start of the regular season, so there’s been no immediate return on the team’s investment.

It’s possible that minimum-salary addition Al Harrington makes a greater impact than Porter does this season. Harrington missed most of last season with a staph infection, but he’s only a year and a half removed from playing a key role on a Nuggets team that made some noise in the postseason. He’s a stretch power forward who duplicates some of the same skills that Martell Webster has, but he offers Wittman a chance to field an intriguing lineup of Harrington, Webster and Bradley Beal, all of whom offer the outside shooting that Wall and the team’s centers don’t.

The Wizards might have hoped they could pencil Vesely in at power forward this year, but they instead began the season by declining his 2014/15 team option. The Wizards also did the same for former 18th overall pick Chris Singleton, further underscoring the need for Porter to at least hit the relatively low ceiling most draft analysts predicted for his career.

Wittman is already drawing mention as perhaps the coach most likely to meet an end to his tenure at midseason, and while Grunfeld seems like a safer bet to at least finish the season, these are nervous times in the capital city. The Wizards are married to Wall and Webster for years to come, and Nene‘s contract doesn’t run out until 2016, but next summer represents a chance for Leonsis to green-light major changes to the roster. If the Wizards on the court look different this time next year, expect the Wizards in the executive suite to have new faces, too.

Luke Adams contributed to this post.

Eastern Notes: Stephenson, Jordan, Marshall

Lance Stephenson is off to a hot start for the Pacers, further underscoring the dilemma the team will face in the summer when the shooting guard’s bargain contract runs out. Stephenson nonetheless swears to Mark Montieth of Pacers.com that he’ll be back in Indiana, despite the team’s cramped financial picture.

“I don’t think about that,” Stephenson said about his impending free agency. “It’s a long season, I’m not thinking nothing about contracts. I’m going to stay with the Pacers, so I’m not even thinking about the contract.”

It’s not uncommon for a player to declare allegiance to his franchise when he’s months away from free agency, only to change his mind when the money’s on the table. While we wait to see if Stephenson is true to his word, here’s more from the NBA:

China Has Most Recent NBA Vets Overseas

The regular season is underway in the NBA and for leagues around the globe, creating the opportunity to look back on the full scope of an offseason of player movement. One tool that helps accomplish that is our International Player Movement Tracker, compiled by Hoops Rumors contributor Mark Porcaro. The tracker documents the flow of players in and out of leagues worldwide, including the NBA. Using the filter function, we can see all of the players who had NBA contracts at the end of last season but find themselves out of the league as 2013/14 gets going. In this post, we’ll narrow that group even further to look at guys who went from the NBA to overseas leagues.

China is the leading destination by a wide margin, boasting eight players who were in the NBA just this past spring. The Zheijian Chouzhou Golden Bulls made the most profound splash, grabbing Ivan Johnson, perhaps the most significant NBA talent making the jump to China this year, as well as Jerel McNeal, a late-season addition to the Jazz. The haul the Golden Bulls took in equals the number of recent NBA players signing in Italy, Russia and Turkey, the only countries other than China to make multiple such acquisitions. The Spanish ACB league, long considered the league with the most talent outside the NBA, brought in just one NBA import: Tyler Hansbrough‘s brother Ben Hansbrough.

Note that this list doesn’t include Jeremy Pargo, who signed with Russia’s CSKA. Pargo didn’t finish last season on an NBA roster, falling just short when the Sixers waived him on April 1st.

China

Italy

Russia

Turkey

Croatia

France

Serbia

Spain

Ukraine

Atlantic Rumors: Nets, Anderson, Hardaway

One outgrowth of the Nets‘ record spending spree is depth, and that was on full display on Friday when Brooklyn knocked off the Heat. Paul Pierce, one of the team’s veteran starters who stands to benefit from a bench capable of allowing him to play fewer minutes, acknowledged the advantage to Mitch Abramson of the New York Daily News.

“It was huge,” Pierce said. “One to 10, one to 15, we match up pretty much with anybody in the league and we have more depth than anybody in the league, especially when you talk about Andray Blatche, Reggie Evans, Andrei Kirilenko, Shaun Livingston, Alan Anderson.”

Here’s more on a member of the Nets bench and other notes from Brooklyn’s Atlantic Division rivals:

Offseason In Review: Miami Heat

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 No. 50 pick in 2013 from the Hawks in exchange for a 2017 second-round pick (31-40 protected).

Draft Picks

Camp Invitees

  • Larry Drew II
  • Eric Griffin
  • Charlie Westbrook

Departing Players

Rookie Contract Option Decisions

Most NBA executives spend their time trying how to figure out how to build a championship team. The task for Heat president Pat Riley is figuring out how to keep a two-time champion together. Riley may have trademarked the term “three-peat,” but he’s never overseen one as a coach or an executive. This could be the last chance for Riley, now 68, to do so, and the last chance for him to show he’s capable of providing LeBron James with a place where he can continue to compete for titles before the four-time MVP can opt for free agency next summer.

Making the task more difficult is the luxury tax, which for the first time includes escalating incremental rates that make it more than a dollar-for-dollar arrangement in 2013/14. Heat owner Micky Arison appears OK with paying some tax penalties, but there is a limit to the depth of his pockets. So, the Heat sacrificed Mike Miller, using the amnesty clause to get rid of the final two years and $12.8MM of his contract. Miller’s $6.2MM salary for this season alone could have cost the team more than three times as much, considering the tax.

The Heat could have saved a more modest amount if they’d chosen to amnesty Joel Anthony and the two years and $7.6MM remaining on his deal, but neither Miller nor Anthony were mainstays in the team’s rotation during the team’s back-to-back championship seasons. Of course, Miller proved his value during the playoffs, but the odds that he could resurface with a heroic performance at just the right time for a third season in a row were low enough to convince the Heat that they were better off removing his salary from their books.

The team’s new austerity kick showed up in its deal with Greg Oden. Riley convinced Oden to take a one-year, minimum-salary contract rather than a two-year pact that included a player option. That allowed the Heat to reduce the cap hit for Oden’s five-year veteran’s minimum to the equivalent of a two-year veteran’s minimum, a savings of a few hundred thousand dollars that makes it easier for the team to carry 15 players rather than the minimum 13 to begin the regular season. Those extra men on the roster could prove handy as Oden continues to recover at a slow pace from the injuries that derailed his career. The former first-round pick may make a negligible contribution to the Heat, but Riley’s ability to twist his arm into accepting less when the volume of his suitors suggested he could have commanded more shouldn’t be understated.

Chris Andersen wound up re-signing for a two-year deal with a player option, the kind of contract that Oden gave up, but he, too, probably sacrificed what might have been more money after his energetic play off the bench last season invigorated the bench and revived his career. The Heat have been keen on such reclamation projects of late, and took on another this summer in Michael Beasley. There was little wrangling required to get him to accept a non-guaranteed minimum-salary deal that amounted to a training camp invitation, but Oden’s sacrifice helps the Heat keep him on the roster as the regular season dawns. Beasley’s contrition for his past transgressions has been the other key to his continued presence on the roster, but ultimately, as with Oden, there are few expectations that he’ll make a difference on the court this year.

Roger Mason Jr., the Heat’s least-heralded new addition, could be the most important. He played a fairly significant role for New Orleans last season, averaging 5.3 points and 41.5% three-point shooting in 17.7 minutes per game over 69 contests, 13 of them starts. He, more than anyone else, could wind up the replacement for Miller’s occasional sharpshooting, and the 33-year-old’s veteran presence and leadership ability as a union executive should offset the addition of Beasley and his questionable demeanor to the locker room. Like Beasley, he’s essentially a training camp invitee, so the Heat could cut his non-guaranteed deal anytime before January 10th.

Perhaps the most significant move the team made was to give coach Erik Spoelstra an extension. Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports, who revealed that the deal is for four years, argues that the deal is an important step toward convincing James to stay, given the close relationship between coach and superstar. It nonetheless ensures some stability for the franchise in what could be some tumultuous years ahead.

The ability for James to opt out of his contract after this season will hang over the franchise all year. Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh also have early termination options, meaning it’s possible that the Heat could look much different in a year’s time. Riley and the rest of the front office have prepared as best they can, saving money on little-used players, strengthening the bond with LeBron’s trusted coach, and largely maintaining a championship roster. James has said he won’t spend the season giving hints about his next move, so we’ll have to wait until the summer to know whether the Heat have done enough to convince him to stay. For now, the task is how to help James cement his legacy — no matter how much more time he’ll spend building it in Miami — with that “three-peat” that’s proven so elusive for Riley.

Luke Adams contributed to this post.

Players Who Can Veto Trades

No-trade clauses are rare in the NBA. Only four of the most decorated players have them — Kobe BryantTim DuncanKevin Garnett and Dirk Nowitzki. Garnett retains his no-trade power even though he waived it this summer to facilitate his move to the Nets. It’s much more common that a player will gain a de-facto no-trade clause through a quirk in the league’s collective bargaining agreement.

Bird rightsEarly Bird rights and Non-Bird rights are all mechanisms that allow teams to go above the salary cap to retain their own players. Trades usually have no effect on those rights, but that’s not the case with players on one-year contracts. A team that acquires a player on a one-year deal via trade can’t use any form of Bird rights to re-sign that player the following offseason. The player often stands to lose financially in such a case, so the NBA allows players on one-year contracts to block trades. Despite this, some players allow trades to go through anyway, as Marreese Speights did last year when the Grizzlies sent him to the Cavaliers.

The no-trade rule includes players signed to two-year deals that include a team or player option on the final year. For the purposes of the no-trade rule, option seasons don’t count until they’re exercised, and options on non-rookie scale contracts generally aren’t exercised until the end of the season, well past the trade deadline.

Clubs retain Bird rights on players they re-sign even if they had renounced their rights before re-signing them. In other words, a player’s “Bird clock” doesn’t reset if a team renounces his rights, as long as he re-signs with that team. For instance, Jannero Pargo spent last season with the Bobcats, who renounced his rights this past summer before signing him to a new one-year contract. Pargo will be eligible for Early Bird rights next offseason, even though the Bobcats renounced his non-Bird rights this summer. So, the ‘Cats would need his consent to trade him this year.

Similarly, the Mavericks waived Bernard James this summer and re-signed him, but, just as with Pargo, his “Bird clock” did not reset, so the Mavs can’t trade James and his new one-year contract without consent.

This rule is also one reason why teams will often tack a non-guaranteed season onto the contract of an end-of-the-bench player they sign at midseason. Partial seasons count toward Bird eligibility just as much as full seasons do. Also, non-guaranteed seasons don’t function like option seasons, so their existence doesn’t invoke the trade-consent rule.

There’s one other situation that would require a team to have a player’s consent before trading him. A restricted free agent who signs with a new team only to have his original team match the offer sheet has the power to veto trades during the first year of his deal. Jeff Teague of the Hawks, who signed an offer sheet with the Bucks in the offseason, is the lone player who falls under the rule this year.

One additional note: No player signed this offseason can be traded until December 15th, at the earliest.

Here’s a team-by-team breakdown of players who can block trades this season. All these players gained their veto power based on the Bird rights stipulation unless otherwise noted:

Atlanta Hawks

Boston Celtics

  • None

Brooklyn Nets

Charlotte Bobcats

Chicago Bulls

Cleveland Cavaliers

  • None

Dallas Mavericks

Denver Nuggets

  • None

Detroit Pistons

  • None

Golden State Warriors

  • None

Houston Rockets

Indiana Pacers

  • None

Los Angeles Clippers

Los Angeles Lakers

Memphis Grizzlies

  • None

Miami Heat

Milwaukee Bucks

  • None

Minnesota Timberwolves

  • None

New Orleans Pelicans

New York Knicks

Oklahoma City Thunder

Orlando Magic

  • None

Philadelphia 76ers

  • None

Phoenix Suns

  • None

Portland Trail Blazers

  • None

Sacramento Kings

  • None

San Antonio Spurs

Toronto Raptors

  • None

Utah Jazz

Washington Wizards

ShamSports was used in the creation of this post.

Western Rumors: Kings, Martin, Bledsoe

Kings GM Pete D’Alessandro said the lack of extensions for Greivis Vasquez and Patrick Patterson and the team’s decision to decline its fourth-year option on Jimmer Fredette aren’t necessarily a reflection of the way the club feels about those players.

“With Jimmer, we spoke to him and his representatives throughout the process,” D’Alessandro said, as Jason Jones of The Sacramento Bee observes. “And they’re not easy decisions to make. We have these deadlines that are at an awkward time, Oct. 31, especially at a time when we just got our positions here.”

We heard earlier that the Kings are enamored with Vasquez and intend to match any offer he gets in restricted free agency this summer. Here’s more on free agents past and future, with a Western kick:

D-League Assignments

D-League teams stocked their rosters through last night’s draft, and soon NBA teams will be adding more players to D-League lineups. Last year, rules were adjusted to allow NBA clubs to make an unlimited number of D-League assignments, and they took full advantage, as our lengthy list of 2012/13 assignments and recalls shows. The same rules are in place again this year, so once the D-League season gets underway, rare will be the day when players aren’t being shuttled back and forth between the NBA and its junior circuit.

The players that NBA teams assign to the D-League aren’t quite like other D-Leaguers. NBA players receive their full salaries while on D-League assignment, whereas the D-Leaguers without an NBA contract receive paltry annual earnings that topped out at around $26K last season. Still, a D-League assignment could wind up costing an NBA player, since performance in the D-League doesn’t count toward any incentive clauses built into an NBA contract. So, for instance, say Anderson Varejao is injured at some point this season, and he plays a few rehab games with Cleveland’s D-League affiliate, the Canton Charge. None of the numbers Varejao might put up in Canton would count toward the $250K in performance incentives built into his deal with the Cavs.

Of course, Varejao would be a rare case as a long-tenured NBA player on a D-League assignment. Most NBA players in the D-League have fewer than three years of experience. That’s in part because NBA teams want to give their young players some extra seasoning, as the “D” in D-League stands for development, after all. Yet players in their first, second or third NBA seasons are the only ones NBA teams can unilaterally send down to the D-League. Otherwise, they must get the consent of the union as well as the player. Still, it’s not uncommon for a team to send a veteran player to practice with its D-League affiliate without making the formal assignment necessary for the player to appear in a D-League game.

Once a player has been assigned to the D-League, he can remain there indefinitely. He may also return to the NBA team the very next day only to once more find himself in the D-League hours later. That’s what happened multiple times for a few Thunder players last season, as Oklahoma City made frequent use of its one-to-one affiliation with the nearby Tulsa 66ers. The Thunder are one of 14 NBA teams that either owns a D-League team outright or operates the affiliate’s basketball operations in a “hybrid” partnership with a local ownership group. Teams that have these arrangements can set up a unified system in which the D-League club runs the same offensive and defensive schemes and coaches dole out playing time based on what’s best for the parent club. That gives these NBA teams an advantage, so it’s no surprise that a growing number of them are striking up one-to-one affiliations — last year, only 11 teams had such an arrangement.

That leaves the other 16 NBA teams to share just three D-League squads, which will make for a tight squeeze. D-League teams are allowed to expand their rosters to accept players on assignment from their NBA affiliates, and if there’s still no room, an NBA team would be allowed to send a player to a D-League team with which it’s not affiliated.

For more on the D-League, check out our list of affiliations for this year and bookmark https://www.hoopsrumors.com/nba-d-league/ to track the latest news about NBA players in the D-League.

Note: This is a Hoops Rumors Glossary entry. Our glossary posts will explain specific rules relating to trades, free agency, or other aspects of the NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement. Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ was used in the creation of this post.

This post was initially published on November 7th, 2012.

Atlantic Notes: Sixers, Bradley, Lawal

The stripped-down Sixers have somehow managed to start 2-0, with wins over the Wizards and Heat. Still, not all is rosy in Philadelphia, where Evan Turner and GM Sam Hinkie appear to be suffering from a disconnect. Turner has spoken about feeling unwanted with coach Brett Brown, who doesn’t think the issue will cause problems for the team this year, as Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer observes. Here’s more on the Sixers and their Atlantic Division rivals:

  • Avery Bradley isn’t worried that he and the Celtics couldn’t come to a deal on an extension, and neither is GM Danny Ainge, notes Mark Murphy of the Boston Herald. “It doesn’t mean anything other than we talk next summer,” Ainge said. “He’s a big piece of our future.”
  • The Sixers waived camp invitee Gani Lawal last week, and he’s headed back to Italy, where he played last season. Lawal has agreed to a deal with Olimpia Milano, reports Chema de Lucas of Gigantes (translation via Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia).
  • Paul Pierce knew weeks before the Celtics traded him to the Nets this summer that his time in Boston was short, writes Chris Mannix of SI.com, who examines the attitudinal adjustment Pierce and Kevin Garnett have brought to the Nets.
  • Executives from rival teams are convinced the Celtics have some sort of clause in their six-year contract with Brad Stevens that would allow them to recoup money in case Stevens leaves early, according to Ian Thomsen of SI.com. That’s an indication of the unusually high stature Stevens has as he enters his first NBA job.