Atlantic Notes: Turner, Raptors Picks, Holmes

A strong case can be made that soon-to-be free agent Evan Turner was the most valuable player on the Celtics last season, and his raw numbers don’t show his value the way advanced metrics do, particularly regarding his defense, contends Chris Forsberg of ESPNBoston.com. Turner, whom the Nets are reportedly fond of as a potential free agent target, has a habit of making eye-catching statements, as Forsberg details. Still, he appeared genuine when he spoke Thursday of his affection for coach Brad Stevens, who’s away from the Celtics to tend to a player he coached at Butler University who was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, notes Steve Bulpett of the Boston Herald.

“That guy’s lucky to be able to have coach; guys that played for him are lucky to be able to have a coach like that,” Turner said, referring to Stevens’ willingness to leave the Celtics to be with his ex-player in a moment of need. “It just speaks volumes, and I’m blown away by it. I’m lucky to play for him. That says a lot about his character, and obviously it puts him in a higher stature than I already have him.”

See more on the Celtics amid our look around the Atlantic Division:

  • Celtics president of basketball operations Danny Ainge understands the frustration that some of the team’s players are going through as they deal with a lack of playing time on a deep roster, as he explained to Bulpett for a separate piece. David Lee spoke up this week about his dissatisfaction with his removal from the rotation.
  • The Raptors have one extra first-round pick in each of the next two drafts, and a source who spoke with Ryan Wolstat of the Toronto Sun indicated that the Raptors don’t plan to add four rookies to the roster in the next two years, a signal that the club will trade one or more of those picks. However, the Raptors aren’t willing to make those selections available for cheap, and multiple other sources told Wolstat that the team would be unlikely to swap one of the picks for a stopgap player on a short-term deal. The team strongly prefers to keep its picks through the end of the season because of the rising value of rookie deals around the league, Wolstat adds.
  • Richaun Holmes looks like a find for the Sixers, as his athleticism, his performance in the pick-and-roll, and his shot-blocking have been impressive despite his shortcomings as a defensive rebounder, observes Derek Bodner of Philadelphia magazine. Philadelphia has Holmes, the 37th pick in last year’s draft, on a four-year deal worth about $4.2MM. Holmes, whose stock surged during the lead-up to the draft, spoke with Zach Links of Hoops Rumors in April.

Suns Sign Lorenzo Brown To 10-Day Deal

FRIDAY, 12:22pm: The signing is official, the Suns announced (Twitter link).

THURSDAY, 1:44pm: The Suns plan to sign Lorenzo Brown to a 10-day contract, reports Shams Charania of Yahoo Sports (on Twitter). He’ll ostensibly go into one of the two roster spots the team will reportedly open today with the release of Bryce Cotton and Cory Jefferson.

Brown, 25, has made a total of 55 appearances in two NBA seasons, averaging 3.4 points, 1.8 rebounds, and 2.4 assists to go along with a slash line of .375/.155/.656. He was in training camp with the Timberwolves this year, but Minnesota waived him prior to the regular season. Brown’s deal with the Wolves included a $75K partial guarantee, giving the player some breathing room financially this season.

The point guard has been playing for the Pistons affiliate in the D-League. Brown made 16 appearances for the Drive this season and notched 16.4 points, 5.3 rebounds and 6.1 assists on 47.8% shooting.

Eddie Scarito contributed to this post.

Lakers Have Longstanding Interest In DeRozan

The Lakers appear poised to become one of the teams to make a play for DeMar DeRozan in free agency this summer, given their long-held interest in the native of nearby Compton, California, writes Ryan Wolstat of the Toronto Sun. Speculation that DeRozan would seek to play close to home has existed for quite some time, and it’s not surprising that the Lakers, who’ve struggled to field competitive rosters the past few years, would want to add a 26-year-old who’s currently the NBA’s 11th-leading scorer at 22.6 points per game. A source close to DeRozan who spoke recently with Brian Lewis of the New York Post confirmed the widely held assumption that the shooting guard will turn down his player option of slightly more than $10MM for next season, and the Nets are also expected to pursue him in free agency this summer.

Still, despite DeRozan’s ties to Southern California, he’s also fond of Toronto and has shown no hesitation to express his affection for the city and the Raptors organization. The source who spoke to Lewis cited DeRozan’s loyalty to the Raptors, and with next month’s All-Star Game set for Toronto, DeRozan again paid homage Thursday to the only NBA city he’s ever represented, as Wolstat points out.

“I think I’m just excited for being in Toronto and people really getting a chance to see what Toronto is like,” DeRozan said. “The city, the culture, really, to put us on the main stage and let this city get the credit that it deserves that I feel like it never got.”

The Raptors have close to $70MM in guaranteed salary committed for next season against a projected $89MM cap, and they have fellow wing players DeMarre Carroll and Terrence Ross signed to long-term deals, but they hold DeRozan’s Bird rights and can exceed the cap to re-sign him. DeRozan won’t necessarily be the No. 1 priority for the Lakers, with the team no doubt eager to make a pitch to Kevin Durant, this summer’s top free agent prize. DeRozan is No. 8 in the latest edition of the Hoops Rumors Free Agent Power Rankings.

The rising salary cap and the impending retirement of Kobe Bryant, which will allow the Lakers to remove his massive $26.25MM cap hold from the books next summer, will help give them no shortage of flexibility to sign multiple marquee free agents in the offseason. They have only about $23MM in guaranteed salary, not counting a $3.135MM player option for Brandon Bass and cap holds much smaller than Bryant’s. DeRozan will be eligible for a max deal with a salary of a projected $24.9MM for next season.

Contract Guarantee Recap

Thursday was the final day for NBA teams to waive players who had any non-guaranteed salary without it becoming guaranteed, and few took advantage of the opportunity to retain flexibility. Only six players hit waivers this week, meaning dozens of others have their full-season salaries locked in.

Below is a team-by-team look at what each team did with contracts that included non-guaranteed salary entering this week. Note that the salaries listed are the amount the team pays. Some of those players are veterans of more than two seasons who are on minimum-salary contracts that are partially funded by the league, so they earn more than the figure listed. Also, note that not all the salary that was partially guaranteed is listed. That’s because most of the players with partial guarantees had already earned more than those amounts by virtue of sticking on their respective rosters as long as they had.

Bucks

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Bulls

Cavaliers

Celtics

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Clippers

Grizzlies

Hawks

Heat

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Hornets

Jazz

Kings

Knicks

Lakers

Magic

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Mavericks

  • Kept JaVale McGee ($1,270,964 — $750K had been partially guaranteed)

Nets

Nuggets

Pacers

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Pelicans

Pistons

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Raptors

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Rockets

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Sixers

Spurs

Suns

Thunder

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Timberwolves

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

Trail Blazers

Warriors

Wizards

  • No non-guaranteed contracts

The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.

Grizzlies Sign Elliot Williams To 10-Day Contract

FRIDAY, 10:16am: The signing is official, the team announced via press release.

THURSDAY, 12:58pm: The Grizzlies are expected to sign Elliot Williams to a 10-day contract, reports Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). It’ll necessitate a corresponding move, since Memphis already has 15 players on its roster. Ryan Hollins joined the club just last week, while James Ennis has a partially guaranteed contract. JaMychal Green does, too, though he’s an unlikely candidate to hit waivers. All salaries for this season become fully guaranteed if not waived by 4:00pm Central today.

Memphis will become the fourth team to sign Williams to a 10-day contract in the past two seasons, since he had 10-day deals with the Jazz, Hornets and Pelicans last year, as our 10-day Tracker shows. He didn’t end up sticking for the balance of the season with any of those three teams, though he was back with Charlotte for the preseason before the Hornets again let him go. The five-year NBA veteran who was the 22nd overall pick in 2010 joined the D-League affiliate of the Warriors in early November, and he’s put up impressive numbers in 16 appearances for that club, averaging 28.1 points, 7.1 rebounds, 5.8 assists and 2.9 turnovers in 40.9 minutes per game.

The 26-year-old has also canned 36.1% of his 3-pointers in the D-League this season, a key stat for Memphis, which lacks outside shooting, but Williams is just a 31.2% shooter from behind the arc over the course of his NBA career. The Grizzlies, at a disappointing 19-18, begin a key six-game homestand Friday.

Nets Interested In Nicolas Batum, Evan Turner

The Nets are fond of soon-to-be free agents Nicolas Batum and Evan Turner, NetsDaily tweets, also confirming earlier reports of the team’s interest in Mike Conley and DeMar DeRozan. Brooklyn only has about $45MM in guaranteed salary committed for next season against a projected $89MM cap, and without a 2016 first-round pick thanks to the 2013 Kevin Garnett/Paul Pierce deal, making improvements via free agency will be that much more important to the Nets. Still, questions remain about Brooklyn’s ability to attract marquee talent to a franchise that’s experienced declines in winning percentage three years in a row.

Batum is in the midst of a career year, having taken to Charlotte in his first season there after the Trail Blazers dealt him to the Hornets over the summer. It’s no surprise to see the Nets have interest in the 27-year-old who’s averaging 16.3 points, 6.5 rebounds and 5.2 assists in 34.8 minutes per game, especially since Bojan Bogdanovic and Rondae Hollis-Jefferson are the team’s only wing players with fully guaranteed contracts for next season. Still, re-signing Batum will no doubt be a high priority for Charlotte, and the Bouna Ndiaye client has said that his fondness for Hornets coach Steve Clifford, who signed an extension this fall, “could be a big factor” in his decision.

Turner is a more surprising object of Brooklyn’s interest. He started most of the season for the Celtics last year, but he’s made only four starts this season, including the past three games as he’s filled in for an injured Avery Bradley. The former No. 2 overall pick has failed to live up to his draft position since joining the NBA in 2010, and he signed with Boston in 2013 for just $6.704MM over two years. The rising salary cap and a better performance with the Celtics than he gave the Pacers before signing his last contract should push the David Falk client’s price tag higher this summer, but compared to Batum, he’ll likely be much more obtainable.

Complicating matters is the unsettled situation in the Nets front office, where GM Billy King is on a contract that expires at season’s end. NetsDaily has countered a European report indicating that owner Mikhail Prokhorov wants CSKA Moscow team president Andrey Vatutin to succeed King. Nets CEO Brett Yormark, who’s apparently a major proponent of recruiting John Calipari back to the organization in a role that would likely include player personnel power, has begun to speak more often about the team’s basketball operations, as NetsDaily has also pointed out.

Nuggets Waive Kostas Papanikolaou

FRIDAY, 7:46am: The team still hasn’t publicly announced the move, but Papanikolaou’s release did take place Thursday before his salary would have become fully guaranteed, according to the RealGM transactions log.

THURSDAY, 11:49am: The Nuggets are releasing Kostas Papanikolaou for the second time this season, league sources tell Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). Denver will be on the hook for $350K to him pursuant to his partial guarantee, providing he clears waivers, though the team will avoid paying most of his prorated one-year veteran’s minimum salary of about $800K if it formally releases him by the close of business today, as expected. The Nuggets had him on a non-guaranteed deal over the summer after bringing him in via the Ty Lawson trade, but they waived him at the start of training camp, only to re-sign him November 5th when injuries had depleted their frontcourt.

The 6’8″ combo forward struggled in international play over the summer, averaging just 1.8 points per game for the Greek national team at the Eurobasket tournament, but he put up somewhat better numbers with Denver. He posted 2.6 points and 1.5 rebounds in 11.3 minutes per contest over 26 appearances for the Nuggets, including a string of six starts from December 22nd through 30th.

Denver has better health across its roster than it did when Papanikolaou signed, with fellow combo forward Wilson Chandler‘s season-ending hip injury and a sprained right ankle for Emmanuel Mudiay the only injuries currently listed. Offing Papanikolaou would leave Denver with 14 fully guaranteed contracts and an open roster spot. The team could circle back to hot D-League prospect Erick Green, whom the Nuggets waived to sign Papanikolaou in November, though that’s just my speculation.

Grizzlies Keep James Ennis, Cut Ryan Hollins

4:18pm: The Grizzlies announced via a press release that Hollins has been waived.

1:35pm: The Grizzlies will waive Ryan Hollins today, a source tells Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports (on Twitter), but they’ll hold on to James Ennis, reports Ronald Tillery of The Commercial Appeal (All Twitter links here). Memphis needs a roster spot for Elliot Williams, who’s reportedly set to sign a 10-day contract with the team, so it appears that Hollins, who just signed last week, will depart. Ennis, who had already earned more than the partial guarantee on his salary by virtue of remaining under contract as long as he has this season, will see his full $845,059 one-year veteran’s minimum take, since today is the final day for NBA teams to waive non-guaranteed salary before it becomes fully guaranteed.

The details of the contract Hollins signed December 29th remain unclear, but Bobby Marks of Yahoo’s “The Vertical” offered a hint, tweeting that he’ll see about $96K for his time on the Memphis roster. That indicates that Hollins was on a non-guaranteed deal, just like the contract the Grizzlies had him on during the preseason and the one he signed with the Wizards in late November. Memphis waived him before opening night, and Washington cut him loose last month, so his latest release from the Grizzlies represents the third time he’s hit waivers in less than three months.

Ennis came to Memphis in early November via the Mario Chalmers trade, and he’s already gone on D-League assignment six times since then. He’s logged only 27 minutes at the NBA level with the Grizzlies so far, but Memphis apparently thinks he can grow into a productive player, since the team’s interest in keeping him for next season was the reason why it chose Ennis over Hollins today, according to Chris Herrington of The Commercial Appeal (Twitter link). Ennis’ contract covers 2016/17 with a non-guaranteed salary. The combo forward was the 50th overall pick in the 2013 draft.

Suns Waive Bryce Cotton

4:13pm: The Suns have officially announced that Cotton has been waived.

7:51am: The Suns are waiving point guard Bryce Cotton, reports Shams Charania of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). The move will formally take place in advance of the close of business today, just as with the team’s release of Cory Jefferson, writes Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic. Today is the last chance that NBA teams have to cut non-guaranteed contracts before they become guaranteed for the rest of the season. Cotton, like Jefferson, is on a one-year, minimum-salary deal that’s non-guaranteed. The Suns, who’ll be left with 13 players, are expected to fill their two openings with players on 10-day contracts, according to Coro, and Charania points out that Cotton and Jefferson are eligible to sign such deals with the Suns.

Cotton joined the Suns on November 25th, after Bledsoe had missed a game with a sore right knee and Brandon Knight was feeling less than 100% about his left ankle, on which he’d undergone surgery in April, Coro notes. Phoenix kept Cotton around even as Bledsoe and Knight became healthy, and when Bledsoe tore the meniscus in his left knee last week, an injury that knocked him out for the season, it seemed Cotton’s chances of remaining on the roster had improved, but it appears the Suns will let him go anyway. Cotton’s release is poised to leave the Suns with just two point guards, at least temporarily.

Phoenix coach Jeff Hornacek used Cotton in only three games, and he totaled four points, three assists, five steals and five turnovers in 33 combined minutes. The 23-year-old who went undrafted out of Providence in 2014 was with the Spurs D-League affiliate before signing with the Suns, so he could go back to them, seek an overseas deal or try to find another NBA job. He’ll nonetheless see a prorated portion of his Suns salary worth 44/170ths of the one-year veteran’s minimum, since he has been with Phoenix for 44 days. That’ll come to $218,721, a figure that will stick on Phoenix’s books.

Which player do you think has a better chance to end up back in the NBA, Cotton or Jefferson? Leave a comment to share your thoughts.

Cavaliers To Retain Jared Cunningham

The Cavaliers have decided to keep Jared Cunningham past 4:00pm Central today, when his non-guaranteed contract would become fully guaranteed, league sources told Chris Haynes of the Northeast Ohio Media Group and the Cleveland Plain Dealer. That means his full $981,348 salary will stick on Cleveland’s books, unless the team trades him between now and the February 18th trade deadline. It would cost the Cavs about four times as much in tax penalties if they don’t offload salary by the final day of the regular season.

Cleveland was already in line to pay more than $170MM in payroll and taxes before they decided to keep Cunningham for opening night. He’s already incurred about 43% of his salary by virtue of sticking around to this point, causing the estimated bill to rise, and keeping Cunningham for a full season would entail an outlay of about $175MM if the Cavs don’t make any more moves this season. That would be the second highest amount any team has ever spent in a single season, behind the Nets, who shelled out about $190MM in 2013/14.

An injury to Joe Harris that’s poised to keep him out two to three months, as Dave McMenamin and Haynes reported, seems likely to foil the team’s apparent attempt to clear his fully guaranteed salary via trade. The Cavs made Harris available on the market in part because they wanted to keep Cunningham, according to Jason Lloyd of the Akron Beacon Journal, but it appears that Cunningham will stick anyway. The former 24th overall pick impressed during the preseason, and he’s developed a tight bond with LeBron James off the court, as Lloyd noted.