Odds & Ends: Ivey, Cavs, Fredette, Lakers, Draft
Former second-round pick Royal Ivey has never scored more than 5.6 points per game in the NBA, nor has he averaged as many as 20 minutes a night. Still, the 6'3" combo guard has consistently found work in the league, as he's spent the entirety of the last nine seasons on an NBA roster. He's unsigned this summer, but it looks like he'll have a chance to make it an even 10 years in the Association. Ivey will soon work out for the Hawks and Spurs, tweets Jared Zwerling of ESPNNewYork.com. Here's more on a few others looking to stick around the NBA awhile:
- It was Carrick Felix's performance over the summer that prompted the Cavs to give the 33rd overall pick a slight bump in his first-year salary, the Plain Dealer's Terry Pluto writes. Pluto refers to the contract as a four-year deal, as it was originally reported to be, but Mark Deeks of ShamSports and HoopsWorld's Eric Pincus have it as a three-year pact.
- Pluto has heard renewed chatter linking the Cavs to Jimmer Fredette. Marc Stein of ESPN.com reported in early July that the Kings were dangling Fredette and Chuck Hayes in discussions with the Cleveland, but Pluto says the Cavs haven't spoken to Sacramento in more than a month.
- The deal Elias Harris signed with the Lakers isn't fully guaranteed, but he seems a strong bet to make the team, since he's one of only 12 players under contract. Lakers assistant Mark Madsen shares his thoughts on the undrafted Gonzaga power forward with Mike Trudell of Lakers.com.
- HoopsWorld's Yannis Koutroupis checks in with a ranking of the top 40 prospects for the vaunted 2014 draft, and names 20 others who could hear their names called next June.
- This week's trade for Tony Wroten is further indication that the Sixers are all-in on player development, opines Michael Kaskey-Blomain of the Philadelphia Inquirer.
2013/14 Roster Counts
With little more than a month to go before training camp opens, we’ve already seen several players invited to training camps on non-guaranteed contracts. In many cases, those deals have taken their respective teams over the 15-man regular season roster limit. That’s OK this time of year, since teams can carry as many as 20 players in the offseason. Clubs must pare their rosters down to no more than 15 by October 28th.
In the meantime, several teams will hang above that 15-man line. Some clubs have more than 15 contracts that are at least partially guaranteed. That means they’ll wind up paying a player who won’t be on their regular season roster, unless they can find a trade partner.
With more movement to come, here’s the latest look at each team’s roster size. Check out our schedule of guarantee dates for more information and to see the names of specific players without fully guaranteed deals.
Updated 4-17-14
- 76ers (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Bobcats (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Bucks (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Bulls (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Cavaliers (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Celtics (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Clippers (14): 14 fully guaranteed
- Grizzlies (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Hawks (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Heat (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Jazz (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Kings (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Knicks (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Lakers (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Magic (13): 13 fully guaranteed
- Mavericks (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Nets (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Nuggets (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Pacers (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Pelicans (16): 16 fully guaranteed
- Pistons (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Raptors (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Rockets (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Spurs (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Suns (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Thunder (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Timberwolves (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Trail Blazers (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Warriors (15): 15 fully guaranteed
- Wizards (15): 15 fully guaranteed
ShamSports and HoopsWorld were used in the creation of this post.
Top 25 New Contracts By Average Annual Value
The Hoops Rumors Free Agent Tracker makes it easy to see who signed for the greatest total amount of money this summer. Just click on the word "Amount," atop the column farthest to the right, and the tracker will sort by contract value, allowing you to see Chris Paul atop the list. Still, the tool doesn't show the deals by average annual value, so that's where this post comes in.
Paul's five-year, $107.343MM pact with the Clippers is by far the most lucrative in terms of total value, but Dwight Howard has him beat when it comes to yearly take. Both signed maximum salary deals, and Paul got the extra year and higher raises because he re-signed with his club rather than bolt to another team, as Howard did. Yet, thanks to Howard's superior paychecks last season, he was eligible for a new deal with a starting salary nearly $2MM more than Paul's. The fifth year and better raises still aren't enough for Paul to make up the difference in the average annual value rankings.
The player at No. 5 on this list has the 17th most lucrative contract in terms of total value. That's because Andrew Bynum signed for two years rather than three, four or five, as everyone above him did. Bynum would rank even lower on a list of players who signed for the most guaranteed salary, since he's only assured of receiving $6MM. No one else who signed this summer agreed to nearly as much in non-guaranteed pay.
The three players receiving $8MM annually in their new contracts all have ties to the Bucks. Milwaukee reached a deal with shooting guard O.J. Mayo within the first week of free agency, and had the same salary slot in mind for point guard Jeff Teague when they signed him to an offer sheet a few days later. The Hawks matched, making it seem as though Milwaukee was destined to re-sign incumbent point guard Brandon Jennings. The Bucks instead pulled off a surprise sign-and-trade that sent Jennings to the Pistons, and Jennings' contract details revealed an average annual value that precisely matches what Teague got. So, it seems the Bucks clearly would have preferred Teague as their point guard, since they apparently weren't willing to pay Jennings an annual salary equal to what they were prepared to dish out for Teague.
The next two names on the list are a pair of Spanish-speaking guards who signed for identical $7.25MM average annual salaries. Manu Ginobili reached his deal with the Spurs before Jose Calderon and the Mavericks came to their agreement, so perhaps Ginobili served as a model, as he so often does with foreign-born players in the NBA.
The list ends with Martell Webster, the only player to truly receive the full amount of the mid-level exception: a four-year deal with the maximum 4.5% raises on a $5.15MM starting salary equal to the value of the non-taxpayer's version of the exception. The salaries in Webster's deal, like many on the list, escalate with each successive year, so the average annual values shown here aren't necessarily a player's salary in any particular season. They're simply derived from taking the full value of the contract and dividing it by the number of seasons the deal calls for.
- Dwight Howard, Rockets: $21.898MM
- Chris Paul, Clippers: $21.469MM
- Al Jefferson, Bobcats: $13.5MM
- Josh Smith, Pistons: $13.5MM
- Andrew Bynum, Cavaliers: $12.395MM
- David West, Pacers: $12.2MM
- Andre Iguodala, Warriors: $12MM
- Nikola Pekovic, Timberwolves: $12MM
- Tyreke Evans, Pelicans: $11MM
- Paul Millsap, Hawks: $9.5MM
- Tiago Splitter, Spurs: $9MM
- Monta Ellis, Mavericks: $8.36MM
- Brandon Jennings, Pistons: $8MM
- O.J. Mayo, Bucks: $8MM
- Jeff Teague, Hawks: $8MM
- Jose Calderon, Mavericks: $7.25MM
- Manu Ginobili, Spurs: $7.25MM
- Kevin Martin, Timberwolves: $6.951MM
- J.J. Redick, Clippers: $6.939MM
- Carl Landry, Kings: $6.512MM
- Jarrett Jack, Cavaliers: $6.3MM
- Gerald Henderson, Bobcats: $6MM
- Kyle Korver, Hawks: $6MM
- J.R. Smith, Knicks: $5.982MM
- Martell Webster, Wizards: $5.498MM
Odds & Ends: Kobe, Sixers, Seattle, Hibbert
Kobe Bryant is celebrating his 35th birthday today, but the passage of time doesn't bode well for his chances to catch Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the top spot on the all-time scoring list. He has 6,671 points to go, notes Marc Stein of ESPN.com, who adds that Abdul-Jabbar, Karl Malone and Robert Parish are the only players to score at least that many points after they turned 35 (Twitter link). Of course, breaking records involves outperforming history anyway, so the numbers seem as unlikely to deter the Black Mamba as most of the defenders he's faced over the years. Here's more from the Association:
- Bob Cooney of the Philadelphia Inquirer outlines the Sixers' priorities for the rest of the offseason, which likely include a few more front office hires. He also says Jason Richardson will likely miss the entire season and Kwame Brown will probably be waived, but that appears to be speculation on both points.
- Brier Dudley of The Seattle Times thinks Steve Ballmer's announcement today that he's retiring as Microsoft CEO is a boost to Seattle's effort to land an NBA team. Dudley also wonders if Ballmer will follow Paul Allen, another tech magnate, as owner of the Blazers (hat tip to Golliver).
- USA Basketball executive director Jerry Colangelo would have interest in making Roy Hibbert part of the program, but Hibbert's appearance with Jamaica during a game in 2010 likely precludes the Pacers center from ever joining Team USA. Michael Pointer of the Indianapolis Star provides further explanation.
- Ben Golliver of SI.com gives the Thunder a grade of D+ for their offseason moves, but he's high on first-round pick Steven Adams, doesn't think the departure of Kevin Martin will hurt too much, and believes the team could again win 60 games this season.
- Doc Rivers hasn't been with the Clippers for long, but the onus is on him to convert the team's potential into accomplishment, as Zach Harper of CBSSports.com examines.
Comparing Salaries For No. 1 Overall Picks
This week, No. 1 overall pick Anthony Bennett finally signed his rookie-scale contract with the Cavaliers. Barring a significant surprise, he'll make the standard 120% of his scale amount, so his salary will undoubtedly be $5,324,280, as our salary chart for first-round picks shows.
That's a far cry from what a No. 1 pick can earn on his second contract. Blake Griffin is entering the first season of a maximum-salary extension this year, a deal made even more lucrative when Griffin met the Derrick Rose Rule criteria for a higher max. The money gets better still when a No. 1 pick hits unrestricted free agency for the first time, as Dwight Howard's new four-year $87,591,270 max deal demonstrates.
Not every No. 1 overall pick fulfills his promise, of course, but even players who become serviceable, if not superstars, can earn eight-figure salaries, like Andrew Bogut and Andrea Bargnani. Of course, few top picks have ever panned out as poorly as Greg Oden, who's managed to play only the equivalent of one season since the Trail Blazers picked him first in 2007. Unless he suffers yet another injury, he'll be back on the court this season with the Heat, but only at the minimum salary.
Kenyon Martin will make the minimum this year, too, but part of that has to do with his advanced age. At 35, he's not the player he once was. K-Mart doesn't engender much sympathy when compared to Tim Duncan, however. Duncan is two years older and in the midst of a three-year, $30MM contract he signed last summer.
At least Martin is still playing. Michael Olowokandi and Yao Ming, No. 1 picks who entered the league after Duncan did, saw their careers come to premature ends. Allen Iverson, the No. 1 pick a year before the Spurs drafted Duncan, finally appears ready to give up the ghost, as he's reportedly set to announce his retirement, more than three years since his last NBA game.
It's been an active summer for No. 1 overall picks on the market, as Davis, Oden, Howard, Martin and Elton Brand have all signed new deals. John Wall signed a maximum-salary extension that will kick in for 2014/15, and the Raptors traded Andrea Bargnani, their top pick seven years ago, to the Knicks.
Here's every No. 1 overall pick since 1996, along with their 2013/14 salaries:
- 2013: Anthony Bennett, $5,324,280
- 2012: Anthony Davis, $5,375,760
- 2011: Kyrie Irving, $5,607,240
- 2010: John Wall, $7,459,925
- 2009: Blake Griffin, $16,441,500
- 2008: Derrick Rose, $17,632,688
- 2007: Greg Oden, $1,027,424
- 2006: Andrea Bargnani, $11,862,500
- 2005: Andrew Bogut, $14,000,000
- 2004: Dwight Howard, $20,513,178
- 2003: LeBron James, $19,067,500
- 2002: Yao Ming, $0 — Retired in 2011.
- 2001: Kwame Brown, $2,945,901
- 2000: Kenyon Martin, $1,399,507
- 1999: Elton Brand, $4,000,000
- 1998: Michael Olowokandi, $0 — Hasn't played since 2006/07 season
- 1997: Tim Duncan, $10,361,446
- 1996: Allen Iverson, $0 — Will reportedly announce retirement soon.
ShamSports was used in the creation of this post.
Extension Candidate: Luol Deng
Luol Deng fits the profile of the rare veteran eligible for a contract extension who might actually sign one. He could be overlooked among the impressive potential class of free agents next summer if he allows his contract to expire, which may make it difficult to secure a long-term deal. Still, he remains a valuable player for the Bulls, the only NBA club he's ever suited up for. Those are conditions that generally favor extension talks, and indeed, Chicago GM Gar Forman says he's begun to discuss an extension for Deng, even though Deng's agent, Herb Rudoy, denies any such conversations have taken place.
The 27-year-old delivers on both ends of the floor, often using his 7-foot wingspan to help him shut down the opposing team's best wing player in Tom Thibodeau's vaunted defense while averaging 16.0 points per game for his career on the other end. He exceeded that mark slightly in 2012/13, when he poured in 16.5 PPG, and added a new wrinkle last season, averaging a career high 3.0 assists per game in the absence of the injured Derrick Rose. He's incorporated the three-pointer into his arsenal since Thibodeau has been his coach, knocking down 35.8% of his 3.1 long-range attempts per game the past three seasons, even though he had an off year from behind the arc in 2012/13.
Last season ended in frightening fashion for Deng, who fell ill and had a spinal tap to test for meningitis. The spinal tap caused a life-threatening infection, knocking him out of the playoffs but thankfully subsiding so he could recover this summer. It was a rare absence from the court for Deng, who not only led the league in minutes per game the past two seasons, but appeared in 89.1% of his team's regular season and playoff games the last four years. Deng has shown durability in the face of taxing minutes and Thibodeau's demanding defensive schemes, and, at 28, he doesn't show signs of slowing down anytime soon.
The South Sudanese native shows up to play, but the emergence of Jimmy Butler last season might have helped fuel Chicago's exploratory talks with the Wizards about swapping Deng for the No. 3 pick and Emeka Okafor. Forman and executive VP of basketball ops John Paxson may also have been influenced by statistics that say the Bulls were better when Deng was off the court last season than when he was on it. Chicago outscored its opponents by 0.9 points when Deng wasn't on the floor, and the team was outscored by 0.2 points when Deng was playing, per NBA.com. Even though Deng played nearly 75% of the 3,966 regular season minutes he possibly could have, that still leaves about 1,000 minutes when he wasn't on the floor, indicating a sample size large enough for study. Of course, the stat isn't infallible — it doesn't account for the other four guys on the floor with him, nor does it factor in the lineups other teams are countering with. Still, it suggests that Deng isn't a linchpin for the team's success. Indeed, the same measurement shows the Bulls were better off without Deng on the floor in 2011/12, too.
Executives around the league have pegged Deng's market value at anywhere between $11MM and $14MM. Deng is entering the final season of a somewhat backloaded six year, $71.06MM contract that he signed under the old collective bargaining agreement. He'd be limited to a five-year deal from the Bulls in free agency under the current CBA, and he can only tack on three extra years via an extension. Just as he couldn't match the length of his current deal, he'd also be hard-pressed to equal his $14.215MM salary for this season. Productive players in their prime don't often take significant paycuts, so that might drive Rudoy and Deng away from the bargaining table in hopes that Deng can land a deal worth closer to $14MM than $11MM in free agency.
Chicago's willingness to entertain the idea of trading Deng for a package headlined by the No. 3 pick in a weak draft may show that the team isn't going to consent to an extension for Deng unless it involves a hefty reduction in salary. News of extension talks came out a day after the trade rumor, which might simply mean the Bulls are trying to offer an olive branch to a long-tenured part of their team. Weeks later, Forman said conversations about an extension were continuing, perhaps with the Bulls hoping that Deng would become anxious and accept the guarantee of long-term money rather than play out the season and risk serious injury or a decline in performance. That doesn't seem likely in this case, given Deng's track record of durability, as well as his consistency. Some of the trappings of what makes veteran extensions happen are there with Deng and the Bulls, but I don't think they're enough for a deal.
Atlantic Rumors: Rondo, Rivers, Pierce, Celtics
Training camps are still about six weeks from opening, but some Nets and Knicks are already gearing up in preparation for another crosstown battle. Nets players are organizing voluntary workouts this week in Los Angeles, with Deron Williams and Paul Pierce the driving forces, Josh Newman of SNY.tv reports via Twitter. Meanwhile, Raymond Felton expects the entire Knicks roster to get together for workouts shortly after Labor Day, the point guard tells Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com (Twitter link). Here's more as the offseason starts to dwindle away:
- Pierce tells Gary Washburn of the Boston Globe that Rajon Rondo's presence wasn't the force that prompted Doc Rivers to leave the Celtics, and says his goal is to outlast his contemporaries in the NBA, naming Tim Duncan, Kobe Bryant, Dirk Nowitzki and Nets teammate Kevin Garnett among those he hopes will precede him in retirement.
- A source familiar with the Celtics tells Washburn that the team is in dire need of an assistant coach who can form a strong relationship with Rondo. The C's are reportedly targeting an ex-player for the coaching staff, with James Posey a leading candidate, and fellow Globe scribe Baxter Holmes identifies Walter McCarty as another possibility. Boston is also seeking at least one more front office executive to assist GM Danny Ainge, Holmes adds (All Twitter links).
- Nerlens Noel and Michael Carter-Williams of the Sixers plus Kelly Olynyk of the Celtics are three Atlantic Division rookies among the five draftees from this June whom HoopsWorld's Bill Ingram believes could outperform their draft position.
New Contracts With Player Options
Player options are by far the most common type of option in contracts handed out to NBA veterans. Every rookie-scale contract contains a pair of team options, but the collective bargaining agreement requires that those options be part of the deal. When teams and players can freely negotiate the terms of their contracts, clubs almost always eschew team options in favor of non-guaranteed seasons.
When players hold leverage, they sometimes have an alternative to player options, too. Five-year deals may contain an early-termination option, which functions slightly differently from a player option. Perhaps the primary incentive for a player to obtain an ETO rather than a player option is tied to trade kickers. The money in the ETO season of a contract is counted toward the bonus a player may be paid if he’s traded, while the salary in a player option year is not.
Chris Paul is the lone player to have received an ETO so far this summer. Details on Nikola Pekovic‘s five-year contract are still emerging, so perhaps he’ll have one, too. Paul and Pekovic are the only players to sign five-year contracts this year, so no one else is eligible for an ETO.
By contrast, 23 of this summer’s deals include a player option, according to Mark Deeks of ShamSports. I wouldn’t be surprised to see a few more, as a team’s willingness to include a player option can enhance even a minimum-salary offer. It’s a tool that teams may use to woo unsigned veterans with credible track records who are reluctant to settle for the minimum. For instance, Luke Adams of Hoops Rumors recently speculated that Antawn Jamison could wind up with a two-year minimum-salary deal with a player option in the second season.
It’s clear that some front offices embrace player options more readily than others. The Bobcats, Nets and Timberwolves have each handed out three contracts with player options, while the Rockets, Knicks and Clippers gave out two new deals with player options. That leaves 16 teams that didn’t sign anyone to a deal with a player option.
Here’s the complete list of this summer’s contracts that include player options, along with the amount of the option and the season it’s for:
- Dwight Howard, Rockets: $23,282,457 (2016/17)
- Al Jefferson, Bobcats: $13,500,000 (2015/16)
- David West, Pacers: $12,600,000 (2015/16)
- Monta Ellis, Mavericks: $8,720,000 (2015/16)
- Kevin Martin, Timberwolves: $7,377,500 (2016/17)
- J.R. Smith, Knicks: $6,399,750 (2015/16)
- Gerald Henderson, Bobcats: $6,000,000 (2015/16)
- Chase Budinger, Timberwolves: $5,000,000 (2015/16)
- Corey Brewer, Timberwolves: $4,905,000 (2015/16)
- Andrei Kirilenko, Nets: $3,326,235 (2014/15)
- Josh McRoberts, Bobcats: $2,771,340 (2014/15)
- Mo Williams, Trail Blazers: $2,771,340 (2014/15)
- Eric Maynor, Wizards: $2,106,720 (2014/15)
- Nate Robinson, Nuggets: $2,106,720 (2014/15)
- Darren Collison, Clippers: $1,985,500 (2014/15)
- Metta World Peace, Knicks: $1,661,550 (2014/15)
- Chris Andersen, Heat: $1,448,490 (2014/15)
- Andray Blatche, Nets: $1,437,506 (2014/15)
- Francisco Garcia, Rockets: $1,316,809 (2014/15)
- Nick Young, Lakers: $1,227,985 (2014/15)
- Anthony Morrow, Pelicans: $1,145,685 (2014/15)*
- Alan Anderson, Nets: $1,063,384 (2014/15)
- Byron Mullens, Clippers: $1,063,384 (2014/15)
*—The money in Morrow’s player option is only 50% guaranteed, according to ShamSports. It’s fully guaranteed as long as any of a specific set of injuries doesn’t cause him to miss 30 or more games this season or, providing Morrow opts in, 15 of the first 30 games in 2014/15.
ShamSports was used in the creation of this post.
Jarvis Varnado To Remain With Heat
A report from Italy this weekend indicated that power forward Jarvis Varnado was close to an agreement with Italy's Sidigas Avellino, but Varnado still expects to take part in training camp with the Heat, agent Mitch Frankel tells Ira Winderman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Twitter link). Miami's brass is pleased with the improvements the 25-year-old is making to his game, Frankel says. Sportando's Emiliano Carchia hears from a source close to Varnado who says that though the Italian team made an offer, the two sides aren't nearing a deal.
Varnado is under a non-guaranteed contract for the minimum salary with the Heat for the coming season. The deal becomes partially guaranteed for $250K if he isn't waived on or before October 29th, but Winderman has heard from agents who've been told the Heat plan to carry only 13 players during the season. The team has 13 guaranteed deals on the books, so that would make Varnado a longshot to make the team. Still, Frankel characterized any dialogue he might have about his client with international teams as routine business for players without guaranteed deals (Twitter link).
The Heat wield the final decision on where Varnado will play this season, regardless of how negotiations proceed between Varnado and any foreign club. Miami signed Varnado to his deal in late January after first inking him to a pair of 10-day contracts. The Mississippi State alum also spent time with the Celtics last season.
Overseas Rumors: Varnado, Smith, Martin, Leslie
The international free agent market is still hot, and plenty of players with NBA ties are doing business with clubs from overseas. Here's the latest:
- Sidigas Avellino is close to an agreement with Heat big man Jarvis Varnado, the print edition of the Italian newspaper La Gazzetta Dello Sport reports, according to Sportando's Enea Trapani. Varnado is on a non-guaranteed contract with Miami, and with rumors that the Heat will only carry 13 players this year, he appears to be on shaky ground.
Earlier updates:
- Nolan Smith was expected to join the Celtics in training camp, but he's signed to play with Cedevita Zagreb, the Croatian team announced on its website (translation via Sportando's Emiliano Carchia).
- Cartier Martin is mulling the idea of playing in China, agent Andy Miller tells J. Michael of CSNWashington.com. Martin has spent parts of the last four seasons with the Wizards, but it doesn't look like the team plans to re-sign him.
- Former second-round draft pick Travis Leslie has signed with JSF Nanterre of France, the team announced (Twitter link; hat tip to Carchia). Leslie played 10 games with the Clippers in 2011/12. He signed a 10-day contract with the Jazz last season, but he didn't appear in a game for Utah. This week Nanterre also signed Deshaun Thomas, whom the Spurs drafted 58th overall in June).
- One-time Kings and Rockets small forward Tyler Honeycutt has officially signed his deal with Ironi Nes Ziona of Israel, Carchia tweets. Sportando contributor David Pick reported a few days ago that the two sides had agreed to a deal.
