Cavaliers Rumors

And-Ones: Simmons, Cuban, McHale

A major reason Kevin McHale was fired by the Rockets on Wednesday was the front office’s belief that he had lost the locker room, Chris Mannix of SI.com relays in response to a reader’s mailbag question. Mannix also notes that McHale’s strength as a coach is not in devising strategies or calling plays, but rather in his ability as a motivator. Houston swingman Corey Brewer has gone on record defending McHale, and emphasized that his former coach did not lose the team, and instead placed the blame for the Rockets’ slow start on the players.

Here’s more from around the league:

  • Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports, with an assist from three NBA scouts, ran down the top 10 hoops prospects for the 2015/16 season, including Ben Simmons (LSU), Skal Labissiere (Kentucky), and Brandon Ingram (Duke). The top of next year’s draft could be filled with more international players than usual, Spears notes. “The top three picks might not be from the United States next year,” an NBA scout told Spears. “Blame AAU basketball in America for that.”
  • Simmons had the opportunity to play overseas this season rather than in college, but the talented forward wanted to get a head start on acclimating to the U.S. as well as the style of basketball played here, Mike DeCourcy of The Sporting News writes. “I felt like it helped me develop my game more,” Simmons says. “I was able to get the chance to experience different teams, different playing styles. For me it was just more going to high school and competing against the best players every day. It helped me mature, living by myself in Orlando while my parents were back home. A lot of different things come into it: new team, new coaches, different style, system, and living in a different country.
  • Mavs team owner Mark Cuban, who isn’t one to mince words, acknowledged that last season’s trade for Rajon Rondo was a risk that didn’t work out as planned for the team, Ben Rohrbach of WEI 93.7 FM relays. “[Expletive] happens, right? There are a lot of risks I’ve taken that have worked out just fine. They’re not all going to work,” Cuban said.
  • Lakers shooting guard Kobe Bryant, speaking about his potential retirement during a radio appearance on SiriusXM, said, “If something changes I’ll come back and play next season. If something doesn’t change this is it for me,” Frank Isola of the New York Daily News relays (Twitter link).

Eastern Notes: Durant, World Peace, Smith

The early season play of rookie Kristaps Porzingis coupled with Carmelo Anthony‘s return to health has given Knicks fans hope, not just for this season, but beyond. Another benefit the franchise may glean from exceeding expectations is that team president Phil Jackson will have a far more appealing product to sell Kevin Durant when he becomes an unrestricted free agent next summer, Stefan Bondy of The New York Daily News opines.

One issue I have with the Knicks potentially adding Durant is that both Anthony and Porzingis are frontcourt players, and unless Anthony shifted to power forward full-time and Porzingis to the pivot, one of the trio would need to come off the bench. Shifting Porzingis to center would also serve to displace Robin Lopez, who the team inked to a four-year, $54MM deal this past summer, which is obviously not an ideal move for New York given its financial commitment to the big man.

Here’s the latest out of the Eastern Conference:

  • Metta World Peace, discussing his relationship with Pacers executive Larry Bird, said that he has tried to rejoin Indiana over the years, but he may have burned too many bridges with his disruptive attitude in his younger days for that to occur, Dave Zarum of Sportsnet.ca relays (Twitter link). World Peace did note that Bird was extremely patient with him during his time with the team, and that Bird would often go out of his way to work with him to improve his game, Zarum adds.
  • Cavaliers shooting guard J.R. Smith is feeling much more comfortable in the flow of the team’s offense, something he credits to his increased playing time, Jason Lloyd of Ohio.com writes. “It’s hard to just run up and down the court four or five times, then just get one spot shot, then come out of the game, then go back in the game. Getting in a rhythm early is the most important thing,” Smith said. “It’s not even so much to shoot, just to feel the ball, get the motion, get the ‘camaraderie’ within the system. I think that’s big, not only for me but for everybody. It’s not from a selfish aspect, but to feel the ball, feel the flow of the offense a little better.
  • The Cavaliers have recalled shooting guard Joe Harris from the Canton Charge, their D-League affiliate, the team announced. You can keep track off all the D-League assignments and recalls made throughout the season here.

Cavs Notes: LeBron, Blatt, Shumpert, Love

The Cavaliers have lost two in a row and are on just their third regular season losing streak since January 15th, observes Jason Lloyd of the Akron Beacon Journal. Still, the rhetoric coming from the team suggests it isn’t treating the matter lightly, with LeBron James questioning the team’s hunger and attention to detail and coach David Blatt calling for more toughness, as Lloyd relays. Iman Shumpert should help add some grit, Lloyd posits, and he’s ahead of schedule as he mends from his wrist injury, with a mid-December return possible, as Chris Haynes of the Northeast Ohio Media Group and the Cleveland Plain Dealer reports. Still, that’s a ways off, Lloyd notes. See more from Cleveland:

  • The attitude of Dion Waiters wore on coaches, executives and other Cavs players and prompted his trade last season, Lloyd writes in the same piece, one that looks back on Cleveland’s choice to pick Waiters instead of Andre Drummond with the No. 4 overall selection in 2012. Drummond doesn’t seem to place blame the Cavs, since they already had other big men, though Cleveland, like others, had questions about Drummond’s motor, Lloyd notes. “Still to this day I don’t have the answer to that,” the Pistons center said about why teams questioned his desire. “I don’t know who started that or how it came about, but I’m pretty sure they’re punching themselves now.”
  • James is more trusting of coach Blatt and his teammates than he was last season, as Jeff Zillgitt of USA Today examines. James is again showing the willingness to accept coaching that he had under Erik Spoelstra in Miami, and Blatt feels more comfortable communicating to him, Zillgitt writes.
  • Kevin Love‘s rejuvenated play this season is prompting many to take a second look at the trade that brought him to Cleveland and sent out Andrew Wiggins, but the value of the deal for the Cavs will likely come down to whether the team delivers a title with Love on the roster, observes Shaun Powell of NBA.com.

Eastern Notes: Rose, Pistons, Heat

Bulls point guard Derrick Rose may be dealing with blurred vision for a few more months, Nick Friedell of ESPN.com relays. Rose has struggled shooting so far, averaging only 12.6 points per game, as Friedell points out. Rose suffered a left orbital fracture during the Bulls’ first training camp practice on September 29th.

“[The doctors] said it could be as long as three months,” Bulls coach Fred Hoiberg said. “But [the vision] has continued to improve, and that’s obviously a positive.”

The news, however, came as a surprise to Rose.

“This is my first time hearing about it,” Rose told reporters, including K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune (Twitter link). “But you kind of have that hope in your mind that it gets well a lot quicker. But for this to be seven or eight [weeks] out and still the same way, I can’t do nothing but live with it. Get the most out of every day, keep putting my deposits in and keep working on my game until my eye gets better.”

Here’s more from the Eastern Conference:

  • While former Knicks shooting guard J.R. Smith is still upset with comments team president Phil Jackson made during the summer about Smith’s personal life, Marc Berman of the New York Post opines that Smith should be grateful that he was traded to the Cavs. After not fitting into the Knicks’ plans, and despite his current shooting woes, Berman writes that the Cavs still see Smith as a capable scoring threat in a reserve role.
  • Pistons point guard Brandon Jennings, who is recovering from a torn left Achilles suffered in January, participated in four-on-four and three-on-three games with teammates and is still on track to return around Christmas, David Mayo of MLive.com reports. “As I told him today, what’s not back right now is his quickness,” Pistons coach Stan Van Gundy said. “It’s going to take some time. Being out and being able to do stuff is one thing, and being able to do it at a speed that you can really do is another.”
  • Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said Beno Udrih should have no problem fitting in with Miami, Shandel Richardson of the Sun Sentinel writes. “He’s got veteran savviness about him,” Spoelstra said. “You saw it the other night. He hasn’t been in a practice. He hasn’t been in a shootaround but he’s played for enough different systems that he can just play basketball. You don’t notice things that you might have because he’s a veteran player. You can throw him in any situation. Guys like that are very valuable with veteran teams.” The Heat acquired Udrih from the Grizzlies in exchange for Mario Chalmers. Spoelstra did not identify a clear-cut role for Udrih, Richardson adds. 

Cavaliers Rumors: Luxury Tax, Varejao, Blatt

The Heat’s recent cost-cutting moves, such as trading Mario Chalmers this week, are a stark contrast to the Cavaliers’ free-spending philosophy, writes Jason Lloyd of The Akron Beacon Journal. While Miami trims salary to avoid a hefty luxury tax bill, Cleveland is facing the second-highest payroll/tax figure in league history. However, Lloyd points out that the Cavs are still years away from having to worry about the repeater tax. No team has ever been in a position to pay it, but the Heat could be if they don’t cut salary by about $5MM more before the season ends.

There’s more news out of Cleveland:

  • Anderson Varejao has become a very expensive insurance policy for the team, writes Marla Ridenour of The Akron Beacon Journal. The veteran has seen his playing time cut because of Cleveland’s influx of talent, but his contract remains hefty. Varejao is making more than $9.6MM this year, and the figure is set to rise above $10.3MM next season, with more than $9.3MM of that guaranteed. The final year of his deal is non-guaranteed at $10MM, but he will get a $4.5MM guarantee if he remains on the roster on August 1st, 2017. “Do I want to play? Yes. But I can’t take it personal,” said Varejao, who missed most of last season with an Achilles injury. “It’s just the beginning of the season. It’s a long season. I’m still getting better. I know I’m not 100% yet.”
  • Varejao’s chance should come later in the season, contends Terry Pluto of The Plain Dealer. With Timofey Mozgov, Tristan Thompson and Kevin Love taking most of the minutes at center and power forward, there hasn’t been much need yet for Varejao, but Pluto expects injuries and slumps to change that equation before the season ends.
  • David Blatt is happy that questions about being a rookie head coach are finally over, writes Chris Haynes of the Northeast Ohio Media Group and the Cleveland Plain Dealer. After more than two decades of coaching overseas, Blatt didn’t like being treated like a newcomer to the profession.

D-League Notes: Harris, Dekker, Patterson

The Raptors‘ D-League affiliate has added swingman Nick Wiggins and power forward Ronald Roberts to its roster, Josh Lewenberg of TSN.ca relays (via Twitter). Wiggins, a native Canadian, was waived by the Wolves during the preseason, and later by the Idaho Stampede, Utah’s affiliate. Roberts was among the final cuts made by Toronto this year. Both players will still remain free to sign with any interested NBA team.

Here’s more news from out of the D-League:

  • The Cavaliers assigned Joe Harris to the Canton Charge, their D-League affiliate, the team announced. This will be the first D-League assignment of the season for both the player and the team. Harris’ assignment was first reported by Chris Haynes of the Northeast Ohio Media Group and the Cleveland Plain Dealer (Twitter link).
  • Rookie combo forward Sam Dekker has been assigned to the Rio Grande Valley Vipers, the Rockets‘ affiliate, Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle tweets. This is Dekker’s first D-League assignment of the young season.
  • The Hawks have assigned Lamar Patterson to the D-League, and he will report to the Austin Spurs as part of the flexible assignment process, Chris Vivlamore of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution relays. This will be Patterson’s first jaunt to the D-League this season.
  • The Raptors have assigned Lucas Nogueira and Bruno Caboclo to the Raptors 905, their D-League affiliate, the team announced.
  • Hornets coach Steve Clifford said that the team is open to sending Aaron Harrison to the D-League at some point this season, but added that Harrison was currently needed with the main squad for Charlotte’s practice sessions, Rick Bonnell of The Charlotte Observer tweets.
  • You can keep track off all the D-League assignments and recalls made throughout the season here.

Central Notes: Drummond, Budinger, Dellavedova

Andre Drummond reiterated his intention to re-sign with the Pistons this offseason when he is eligible to become a restricted free agent, Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports relays. “I love it here. I plan on being here,” Drummond told Spears. Team owner Tom Gores, coach/executive Stan Van Gundy, and Drummond mutually agreed to hold off on signing an extension to allow the team to retain more cap space heading into next offseason in order to make further roster upgrades.

Here’s more from out of the Central Division:

  • Small forward Chase Budinger is attempting to carve out his niche on the Pacers after having been acquired from the Wolves this past summer, writes Candace Buckner of The Indianapolis Star. “I’m still trying to figure that out, it’s still a work in progress,” Budinger said. “My role is still trying to evolve and trying to fit into this system and with this team. I’m still trying to find better ways to be more productive.” The 27-year-old has appeared in nine games this season, averaging just 4.1 points in 15.9 minutes per contest while shooting 41.9% from the field.
  • Cavs point guard Matthew Dellavedova has used his strong playoff showing from a season ago as a springboard to a solid start to the 2015/16 campaign, Chris Fedor of The Northeast Ohio Media Group writes. “I feel confident,” Dellavedova told Fedor. “I think you should always be more confident in your game and that comes through putting in the work. I think it was a great experience for me playing in the playoffs last year and working hard in the offseason by playing with the national team. In a different role than I usually play here with the Cavs, and [I] have just tried to build on that. I think if you work hard that’s what helps with your confidence.
  • The Bulls lead the NBA in building through the draft, with a league-best 10 draftees currently on the roster, Sam Smith of NBA.com notes in his leaguewide rundown. “The franchise always has had a strong belief in building through the draft and developing our own players,” said Bulls GM Gar Forman. “It starts with [owner] Jerry [Reinsdorf], who always has been a strong believer in the draft.

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


Extensions

  • None

Trades

  • Acquired cash from the Trail Blazers in exchange for Mike Miller, Brendan Haywood, Cleveland’s 2020 second-round pick and the better of the 2019 second-round picks that Cleveland owns from the Lakers and Timberwolves.
  • Acquired the rights to 2015 draftees Cedi Osman and Rakeem Christmas, as well Minnesota’s 2019 second round pick, in exchange for the rights to Tyus Jones, the No. 24 overall pick in this year’s draft.
  • Acquired the Lakers’ 2019 second-round pick in exchange for the rights to Christmas.

Waiver Claims

  • None

Draft Picks


Camp Invitees


Departing Players


Rookie Contract Option Decisions

  • None

Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

The homecoming of LeBron James brought about cataclysmic change to a team that was already in flux, as GM David Griffin, just a few months into the job, spent several months transforming a roster midway through a rebuild into one designed to contend immediately. It was a process not without hiccups, with the Rookie of the Year award of Andrew Wiggins standing in sharp contrast to the disappointing, injury-marred campaign of Kevin Love, for whom the Cavs surrendered the 2014 No. 1 overall pick. Still, as the team entered the 2015 offseason, it was clear that Griffin and company had found the pieces necessary for the team to win the championship that has eluded Cleveland for decades, so long as the team could get through a postseason with better health than the Cavs had this past spring. The task this summer was to retain those players.

Nine Cavs became free agents July 1st, and none more prominent than James. Love, Tristan Thompson, J.R. Smith, Iman Shumpert and Matthew Dellavedova were the other rotation players from last season who hit the market. It wasn’t easy, and it wasn’t cheap, but the Cavs re-signed every one of them. The first of the deals came with the player whose future in Cleveland appeared most in doubt.

Love always insisted that he was committed to the Cavs for the long term from the time he arrived via trade, but rumors persisted all season. The Lakers and, at times, the Celtics were the teams most prominently mentioned in connection with the power forward from UCLA whose performance fell off in his first season with Cleveland. Doubts even surfaced about Cleveland’s own willingness to re-sign Love for the max. James and Love didn’t immediately hit it off on the court or off, with James going so far as to send social media messages, like his “fit-out”/”fit-in” tweet, that spoke to the issues between them. The two nonetheless resolved whatever differences they had in an offseason meeting, and on July 1st, the opening day of free agency, Love and the Cavs reached agreement on a five-year max deal.

The same day, the Cavs were reportedly close to a deal with another talented power forward, but the team’s back-and-forth with Thompson proved to be the most persistent offseason storyline in the NBA. Love’s five-year deal gave the Cavs more leverage than they otherwise would have had, and their power to match all offers also loomed large. Initial reports indicated that James wouldn’t talk about re-signing until Thompson did, but James quietly re-signed shortly after the July Moratorium on another two-year max deal with a player option — giving him the continued opportunity to influence the Cavs’ decision-making and catch the wave of the rising salary cap.

Thompson’s options dwindled along with the number of teams with cap room to give him the max offer he sought, but with agent Rich Paul reportedly having heard that he would have multiple max offers to choose from if Thompson were to hit unrestricted free agency next season, it seemed like Thompson would sign his qualifying offer to go that route, particularly given the rise in the salary cap that made it less of a sacrifice than such a move normally is. However, Thompson and Paul stunned the NBA when they let the qualifying offer expire on October 1st, and while Thompson said he was prepared to hold out all season, it seemingly took only a slight concession from the Cavs to reel him in shortly before opening night.

Thompson’s negotiation wasn’t the only one that took an unusually long time. Smith languished in free agency until striking a deal in late August that will give him a salary of about $1.4MM less than what he would have made if he’d picked up his player option. Again, the Cavs had more leverage the longer Smith waited, as the pool of suitors with cap flexibility shrunk, and the team’s deals with Shumpert, in particular, along with Dellavedova, Mo Williams and Richard Jefferson gave Cleveland plenty of other options on the wing. Smith did guarantee himself about $800K more over the life of his two-year deal than he would have seen in one season had he exercised his option, but that did little to help him save face, and the Cavs wound up with some much-needed tax relief as Smith signed for less than what he surely intended.

The Cavs wisely back-loaded their deal with Shumpert, so even though he’s making $40MM over four years, his salary is slightly less than $9MM this season. Cleveland is in line to pay more than $170MM combined in taxes and payroll, a figure that the team’s decision to keep camp invitee Jared Cunningham into the regular season exacerbates. It explains why the Cavs essentially punted on Brendan Haywood‘s unusually valuable contract, flipping it to Portland for little more than the power to create a trade exception. That exception still allows the Cavs to acquire an eight-figure salary at some point between now and the end of next July, though it’s not quite as powerful a trade chip as the Haywood contract was. The Cavs, with their soaring tax penalties in mind, would prefer not to use the exception until the summer, when a higher salary cap and tax line kick in, but it remains an insurance policy should the team hit a bumpy patch, as Chris Haynes of the Northeast Ohio Media Group and the Cleveland Plain Dealer explained to us.

The Cavs explored bargain options to fill out the roster, as the lure of playing with LeBron and competing for a championship proved attractive to free agents. Williams suggested that he essentially allowed the Cavs to name their price for his return, ultimately signing for the majority of the taxpayer’s mid-level exception. The rest of that exception went to longtime draft-and-stash prospect Sasha Kaun, the only rookie on this year’s Cavs. Cleveland, with near-term success the top priority, traded out of the first round, shipped the rights to second-rounder Rakeem Christmas to the Pacers, and decided against signing second-rounders Cedi Osman or Sir’Dominic Pointer.

Still, the team’s core is young enough that essentially skipping a draft shouldn’t be a problem, as David Zavac of SB Nation’s Fear the Sword suggested to us. One recent draft pick, Dellavedova, impressed in the Finals, but he came back at the value of his qualifying offer, with the Cavs again benefiting from the power of restricted free agency, a power they won’t have if they continue to focus almost exclusively on the present.

Minimum-salary veterans Jefferson and James Jones help populate a bench that coach David Blatt was reluctant to turn to in the playoffs last season, but depth will be a key as LeBron ages and with Shumpert and Kyrie Irving still out with injury. A revamped bench won’t make up for major injuries come postseason time, like the ones to Irving and Love last spring, but as the Spurs have shown in recent years, minutes management can help limit the risk of injury and exhaustion for top players. Proper management of the well-stocked roster is seemingly the last hurdle for these Cavs, and for as much as Griffin has done in the past year and a half, it falls on Blatt and the players to deliver a title.

Eddie Scarito contributed to this post. The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of it.

Cavaliers Rumors: Cunningham, Jefferson, Mozgov

The early-season success of journeyman Jared Cunningham may show how much Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert is willing to spend to chase an NBA title, writes Jason Lloyd of The Akron Beacon Journal. Cunningham, who is with his fifth NBA franchise in four seasons, signed in September for the minimum salary of $981,348. However, Cleveland’s luxury tax situation means Cunningham will cost the team nearly $5MM if he remains on the roster through January 10th, when all contracts become guaranteed. If coach David Blatt and GM David Griffin want to keep Cunningham, Lloyd believes Gilbert would approve it. Lloyd notes that Cunningham has passed Joe Harris in the rotation, although Harris’ roster spot seems secure because this season’s contract is guaranteed for $845,059. However, if the roster gets back to full health, it’s unlikely either will see much playing time.

There’s more this morning out of Cleveland:

  • Cunningham has found a supporter in NBA veteran Richard Jefferson, according to Spencer Davies of Amicohoops.net. The 35-year-old Jefferson, who signed with Cleveland as a free agent in August, is now with his seventh team. “There’s a mentality that’s involved in the NBA,” Jefferson said. “There’s a mentality of a guy who’s trying to survive. There’s a mentality of a guy who’s comfortable and is just a vet and works consistently.”
  • Jefferson, who came close to NBA titles with the Nets and Spurs, tells Davies in the same piece that his decision to join the Cavs offers his best shot at a ring before he retires. Jefferson said the disappointment of losing to the Warriors last season is driving the team to get back to the NBA Finals. “You’ve been to the mountaintop without accomplishing your goal,” he said. “I think the next year that allows everyone to kind of focus a little bit more.”
  • If the trend continues, Timofey Mozgov will have to make his contract push three quarters at a time, according to Chris Haynes of The Northeast Ohio Media Group and The Cleveland Plain Dealer. With the Cavaliers employing a smaller lineup late in games, the starting center has gotten playing time in the fourth quarter in just one of the team’s first six contests. Mozgov, who is making $4.95MM in the final season of his three-year deal, is trying to be patient with the situtation. “It’s still hard for you win or lose,” he said of his fourth-quarter absences. “You want to play anyway, but it’s a long season and we have a lot of things to do so you’ve got to be smart about it.”

And Ones: Love, Kidd, Morris, D-League

Kevin Love and LeBron James didn’t get along during the 2014/15 campaign, Love’s first with the Cavaliers, and much of the discord stemmed from Love arriving to the team out of shape, which frustrated James immensely, Jason Lloyd of The Akron Beacon Journal writes. Love, who was an unrestricted free agent this offseason, says that he always intended to re-sign with Cleveland, and he approached James shortly after the NBA Finals to let LeBron know that he wanted to play a larger role in the team’s offense, Lloyd relays. “More than anything I just wanted to see what he thought about where the team was going and what we wanted to accomplish,” Love said. “It was always ‘we’ or ‘us.’ It was never like, ‘You need to tell me this.’ Never.

Many within the Cavs’ organization believe that James, who loves challenges, has taken Love on as his own special project this season, and his primary goal is to build up Love’s confidence, Lloyd adds. “Some of the finer points and perhaps things people overlook is how he influences his teammates and how he influences the flow of the game just by recognizing what helps other guys function better when he trusts in something or someone on the court,” coach David Blatt said of James. “Bron also understands this is a long season and the more he empowers those around him, the better it’s going to be going down the line.

Here’s more from around the league:

  • Jason Kidd‘s move from the Nets to the Bucks was certainly a wise one given Milwaukee’s much brighter future outlook, Mike Mazzeo of ESPN.com writes. For his part, Kidd enjoys the challenge of developing and coaching the team’s younger players, Mazzeo notes. “Coaching is hard no matter what — whether you’re coaching veterans or young guys,” Kidd said. “Being able to use certain vocabulary with the older guys — they get it and they can go out and execute it. Sometimes with the younger guys, you have to show them on video or walk through it and then have them do it. So you might have to spend a little more time teaching, but that’s fun. That’s why I like being in Milwaukee, to help put these young guys in a position to have success.
  • Pistons combo forward Marcus Morris said that he has learned from his negative experience of being traded away from his twin brother, Markieff Morris, after inking a contract extension with the Suns, David Mayo of MLive.com writes. “This is the NBA. I let relationships overcome business. That will never happen again,” Morris said. “I’m learning from it. My brother’s learning from it. We’re going to continue to grow.
  • The Clippers have assigned Branden Dawson and C.J. Wilcox to the D-League, Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders tweets. Since Los Angeles does not possess its own affiliate, both players are going to the Bakersfield Jam, the Suns‘ affiliate, Pincus adds.