Thompson Says Durant Not To Blame For His Slow Start
Warriors shooting guard Klay Thompson denied a suggestion that his early season struggles were a result of the team’s offseason addition of Kevin Durant, Ethan Sherwood Strauss of ESPN.com relays. “Not at all,” Thompson said when asked if his cold spell had anything to do with Durant. “I struggled last year for the first 20 games, and Kevin wasn’t here. So it has nothing to do with Kevin. So last year I struggled, then I went on a tear, so it’s just like any other season. Obviously we have different players, but I’m still getting the shots I always got before he was here, so it’s not on Kevin at all.” Thompson, who made 42.5% of his three-point shots during the 2015/16 campaign, has shot only 19.6% from beyond the arc through the Warriors’ first six outings.
First Durant Matchup Comes Early For Thunder
Gordon Hayward put up 28 points today in his first game of the season after breaking a finger in early October, writes Jody Genessy of The Deseret News. Hayward, who wore a splint on his left ring finger, shot just 6 of 17 from the field as the Jazz won at New York. He was relieved to be back on the court. “I think naturally you lose a little bit. It’s what happens when you can’t play for a month,” Hayward said. “You can do all of the drills you want, all of the working out you want, but there’s nothing like five-on-five. There’s nothing like game atmosphere. … That’s why I did so much work, so I’d try not to lose so much of it.”
There’s more news from the Northwest Division:
- Nuggets coach Michael Malone is relieved to have Gary Harris back in the lineup, relays Christopher Dempsey of The Denver Post. The third-year guard, who started 76 games last season, returned to the court Saturday. He had been out of action with a groin strain he suffered in Denver’s first preseason game. “If we can have Gary Harris out there for 15 or 20 minutes I think that helps us,” Malone said of easing him back into the linup. “Whether he starts or comes off the bench, it doesn’t really matter because of his ability to play both ends of the floor.”
- Trail Blazers reserve guard Shabazz Napier got his first meaningful playing time of the season in Friday’s win over the Mavericks, writes Joe Freeman of The Oregonian. Napier, who was acquired from the Magic in a summer trade, saw nearly nine minutes of action, with three points, two assists and two rebounds. Napier had an impressive preseason, but is stuck behind the backcourt trio of Damian Lillard, C.J. McCollum and Evan Turner. “It was one of those games, similar to last year, when you play a guard-oriented team,” said Portland coach Terry Stotts. “It was a [good] matchup for him.”
- The Thunder should be happy that they got their first game against Kevin Durant out of the way early, writes Berry Tramel of The Oklahoman. With the Durant distraction in the past, Tramel says the players can now focus on playing their style of basketball, which emphasizes defense to make up for an ineffective offense. Even with Russell Westbrook‘s individual brilliance, Oklahoma City ranked 28th in the league in points per possession through its first five games, yet had a 4-1 record.
Santa Cruz Warriors Make Cuts
- The Santa Cruz Warriors, Golden State’s D-League affiliate, have waived Maurice Creek, Damontre Harris and Rasean Simpson, according to D-League Digest (Twitter link).
Durant Concentrates On 'Moving Forward'
New coach Luke Walton has the Lakers loving basketball, and it was enough to get the better of his former team Friday night, writes Baxter Holmes of ESPN.com. L.A. adopted “I love basketball” as its new slogan after Metta World Peace said it in during a game this week. It sums up the youthful enthusiasm that Walton has promoted since the Lakers hired him away from the Warriors this summer. “They’re in there laughing, having fun, and that’s the way you should feel like when you put that much effort into something,” Walton said. “That’s why it’s so much fun at the end of the day, because it wasn’t easy and guys are dead tired in there.”
Offseason In Review: Golden State Warriors
Hoops Rumors is breaking down the 2016 offseason for all 30 NBA teams, revisiting the summer’s free agent signings, trades, draft picks, departures, and more. We’ll evaluate each team’s moves from the last several months and look ahead to what the 2016/17 season holds for all 30 franchises. Today, we’re focusing on the Golden State Warriors.
Free agent signings:
- Kevin Durant: Two years, $54.275MM. Maximum salary contract. Second year player option.
- Zaza Pachulia: One year, $2.898MM.
- Ian Clark: One year, minimum salary.
- James McAdoo: One year, minimum salary.
- Anderson Varejao: One year, minimum salary.
- David West: One year, minimum salary.
Camp invitees:
- Elgin Cook: One year, minimum salary ($50K guaranteed). Waived.
- Cameron Jones: One year, minimum salary ($50K guaranteed). Waived.
- JaVale McGee: One year, minimum salary ($250K guaranteed).
- Phil Pressey: One year, minimum salary ($35K guaranteed). Waived.
- Elliot Williams: One year, minimum salary ($250K guaranteed). Waived.
- Scott Wood: One year, minimum salary ($50K guaranteed). Waived.
Trades:
- Acquired the draft rights to Patrick McCaw (No. 38 pick) from the Bucks in exchange for cash ($2.4MM).
- Acquired the Mavericks’ own 2019 second-round pick (protected 31-55) in exchange for Andrew Bogut and the Warriors’ own 2019 second-round pick.
Draft picks:
- 1-30: Damian Jones. Signed to rookie contract.
- 2-38: Patrick McCaw. Signed for two years, minimum salary. Fully guaranteed.
Departing players:
Other offseason news:
- Lead assistant Luke Walton left to become Lakers’ head coach.
- Exercised 2017/18 team option on Kevon Looney.
- Stephen Curry and Andre Iguodala eligible for veteran contract extensions.
- Promoted Bob Myers from general manager to president of basketball operations/GM. Hired former NBA player Willie Green as assistant coach/player development and former head coach Mike Brown as assistant coach.
Check out our salary cap snapshot for the Golden State Warriors right here.
For the first 103 games of their 2015/16 season, just about everything played out in storybook fashion for the Warriors. They set a new regular-season record by finishing with 73 wins, breezed past the Rockets and Trail Blazers in the postseason, recovered from a 3-1 deficit to knock off the Thunder in the Western Conference Finals, and then built a 3-1 lead in the NBA Finals against LeBron James and the Cavaliers.
Of course, everyone knows what happened next, if only based on the ensuing memes. The Warriors’ 3-1 lead evaporated, with the Cavs completing an improbable comeback to prevent Golden State from winning its second consecutive title.
It would be easy to assume that the Warriors’ offseason approach, which saw the team relentlessly pursue – and land – the summer’s best available free agent was heavily motivated by those last three games. After all, if the Dubs had won another championship after establishing a new record for wins in a regular season, there would seemingly be little incentive to make major changes to their roster.
However, Golden State’s pursuit of Kevin Durant actually began well before July 1, and well before the team’s Finals loss to the Cavaliers. According to reports, Draymond Green and other members of the Warriors were in contact with Durant throughout the 2015/16 season, engaged in recruitment efforts and urging him to consider the possibility of playing the club.
For Durant, that Finals loss may have provided the extra push he needed – it’s hard to imagine him leaving Oklahoma City for the Bay Area if the Warriors were coming off two straight titles – but from Golden State’s perspective, it was the plan all along. The franchise ultimately executed that plan to perfection, signing Durant to a two-year, maximum-salary deal that includes an opt-out after the first year to allow him to re-up for a larger salary.
Although the signing may have dealt a blow to competitive balance in the NBA, it’s hard to criticize the Warriors for pushing to add as much talent as their roster as possible, and the team deserves credit for making a strong pitch to Durant, who also considered the Celtics, Heat, Clippers, Spurs, and – of course – the Thunder. The front office’s desire to continue getting better even in the midst of a record-setting season is admirable.
If there’s any downside to the approach, it probably relates to the team’s handling of its complementary players. With Durant entering the mix, that meant that just about anyone else unwilling to sign for the minimum salary was expendable, including young role players like Harrison Barnes and Festus Ezeli. Guys like Barnes and Ezeli were surely aware of the recruitment efforts for Durant last season, and while that probably wasn’t the reason for their underwhelming Finals performances, they played that series knowing that the team was ready to cut them loose a couple weeks later. Unless you’re a star-level player like Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson, or Green, your roster spot in Golden State isn’t safe.
Of course, given the nature of free agency (particularly after this year’s salary cap increase), some of those complementary players like Barnes are getting star-level contracts as well, so it’s in the Warriors’ best interests to use that money on the players who deserve it most. And when your roster starts with Curry, Thompson, Green, and Durant, it gets a little easier to bring aboard role players at a discount, making the loss of mid-level players easier to stomach.
Among the veterans willing to sign at a reduced rate this summer? Zaza Pachulia, whose signing reportedly irritated rival executives as much as – or more than – the Durant deal, since the Warriors got him at such a below-market price. It was an interesting decision for Pachulia, who was coming off a strong year in Dallas and looked well-positioned to land one last big contract at age 32. It’s also an interesting move for the Warriors, who will essentially be replacing Andrew Bogut with Pachulia, having dumped Bogut in a cost-cutting trade to make room for Durant.
Pachulia is a very good rebounder, screener, and rebounder, all traits that will come in handy in Golden State. But he lacks the rim-protecting abilities of Bogut and Ezeli, as does David West, another veteran big man who was willing to join the Warriors on a minimum-salary deal as he seeks a ring. The club did well to add productive veterans like Pachulia and West without having much financial flexibility, and both players look like excellent values on the surface. But with Bogut, Ezeli, and Marreese Speights gone, the only rim protectors on the roster are Green and JaVale McGee, who isn’t expected to play much.
The Warriors’ most effective lineup features Green at center anyway, so the team should be able to mask its defensive deficiencies around the rim most of the time. But it’s an area to watch as the season goes on — it’s possible Golden State will be targeting a shot-blocking center at the trade deadline or on waivers late in the season.
One player who could significantly help the Warriors fill the void created by the departures of their former centers is Damian Jones, the team’s first-round pick back in June. The former Vanderbilt center is still recovering from a pectoral injury, and the team likely doesn’t expect a ton out of him in his rookie season, but general manager Bob Myers acknowledged in September that athletic bigs like Jones are “always at a premium.” With Curry and Durant on track to sign massive new contracts next July, having an inexpensive center like Jones under contract through 2020 could be a boon for the franchise in future seasons, so it’s encouraging that his injury isn’t a foot or knee issue that would have a greater risk of becoming chronic.
The Warriors are also high on their other 2016 draftee, second-round pick Patrick McCaw, who just turned 21 last month. With a veteran-heavy roster, Golden State likely won’t count on McCaw to play a major role right away, but the team should be involved in enough blowouts that he’ll get some fourth-quarter run in the coming weeks and months.
When NBA.com ran its annual survey of NBA general managers, 83.3% of the survey’s respondents said that the Warriors had the best offseason of any team in 2016. The addition of Durant makes me inclined to agree. However, if we want to nitpick a team that features a pair of former MVPs and two more All-NBA stars, it’s worth noting that the Durant signing cost the club a little depth. Pachulia and West were nice value signings, and the Warriors added a pair of promising rookies, but overall, the supporting cast looks a little thinner this year than it did in 2015/16, and the team has fewer movable assets to accommodate a potential in-season trade.
Nonetheless, the Warriors shouldn’t need a wealth of depth to win 60+ games, given their star talent, and they may not need much depth to make another extended playoff run either. By locking up the best available free agent on this year’s market, the Dubs ensured that they’re a huge favorite to return to the NBA Finals, and they’ll remain a perennial title contender for as long as their new “Big Four” stays intact.
Salary information from Basketball Insiders used in the creation of this post. Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
NBA D-League Affiliate Players For 2016/17
Throughout the offseason, and in the weeks leading up to the start of the regular season, NBA teams are permitted to carry 20 players, but that total must be cut down to 15 in advance of opening night. However, up to four players waived by teams before the season can be designated as affiliate players and assigned to their D-League squads.
The players have some say in the decision — if they’d prefer to sign with a team overseas, or if they get an opportunity with another NBA club, they’re free to turn down their team’s request to have them play in the D-League. Most NBA and international teams have fairly set rosters by late October though, so having the opportunity to continue playing in the same system is appealing to many of those preseason cuts. Especially since they’ll maintain NBA free agency while they play in the D-League.
There are a few other rules related to D-League affiliate players. A player whose returning rights are held by a D-League team can’t be an affiliate player for another club, which is why undrafted free agents from the current year are commonly signed and assigned. Additionally, an affiliate player must have signed with his team during the current league year, which explains why we often see players signed and quickly waived in the days leading up to the regular season. And, of course, not every NBA team has a D-League affiliate, so clubs like the Hawks, Nuggets, or Clippers have no place to send affiliate players.
With all that in mind, here are the NBA D-League affiliate players to start the 2016/17 season:
Austin Spurs (San Antonio Spurs)
Canton Charge (Cleveland Cavaliers)
Delaware 87ers (Philadelphia 76ers)
Bogut Explains Decision To Join Mavs Over Rockets
Andrew Bogut wasn’t a free agent this summer, but he did have some agency when it came to deciding his new team. Multiple reports throughout the offseason indicated that the Warriors could have sent Bogut to a number of different teams in a salary-shedding trade to clear cap room for Kevin Durant. Golden State reportedly allowed the former first overall pick to pick his destination from a list of clubs that included the Mavericks, Rockets, and the Sixers, and Bogut chose Dallas.
According to Tim MacMahon of ESPN.com, Bogut viewed the Mavericks as the best fit for him, and wanted to land with a team he could potentially re-sign with in 2017. The veteran center cited culture, coaching, and his agent’s familiarity with the Mavs as reasons why Dallas made more sense than Houston, per MacMahon.
“I’m not saying Houston has a bad culture by any means, but my agent (David Bauman) has a familiarity here,” Bogut said. “I’ve known a lot of players that have been pretty happy here when they were here. Richard Jefferson was one of them. And then the city — I like the city, so it all made sense.
“Rick Carlisle is also one of the best coaches in the league,” Bogut continued. “He knows how to get the best out of his players. He’s very, very smart and makes great adjustments. He’s a guy you want to play for. Obviously, [Mike] D’Antoni is a pretty good coach, too, but probably not suited for my style of play. I would have probably had to drop about 20 pounds to play in his system. They play a tough system, get up and down the court.”
Bogut, who is in a contract year, said back in September that he would have asked for a buyout if he ended up with a team besides the Mavs. However, he clarified those comments today, walking them back slightly by saying a buyout would have been “an option” and not necessarily something he would have forced. As MacMahon details, Bogut also said he was referring to “a different team, not Houston,” when he talked about that option. The Sixers were likely the club in question.
JaVale McGee Has $250K Partial Guarantee
- According to Marks, Matt Costello got $31.5K guaranteed from the Grizzlies, Lamar Patterson received a $100K guarantee from the Kings, and JaVale McGee has a $250K partial guarantee from the Warriors. Marks indicates that McGee’s guarantee will increase to $500K if he’s still under contract through December 1.
McGee Elated At Landing Roster Spot
- JaVale McGee is overjoyed at landing the 15th and final roster spot on the Warriors to start the regular season, Monte Poole of CSNBayArea.com relays. “I’m just happy, blessed, to have this chance,” McGee told Poole. “I’m starting to figure out what the coaches want from me, and I’m starting to execute it. Everything is going well.”
2016/17 NBA Over/Unders: Pacific Division
The 2016/17 NBA regular season gets underway just a couple days from now, which means it’s time to start getting serious about predictions for the upcoming campaign. With the help of the lines from offshore betting site Bovada.lv, we’re running through the predicted win totals for each of the NBA’s 30 teams, by division, and having you weigh in on whether you think those forecasts are too optimistic or too pessimistic. Having looked at the Atlantic, Northwest, Central, Southwest, and Southeast divisions so far, we’re moving on to the Pacific today…
Golden State Warriors
- 2015/16 record: 73-9
- Over/under for 2016/17: 66.5 wins
- Offseason in review: Added Kevin Durant, Zaza Pachulia, David West, Damian Jones, Patrick McCaw, JaVale McGee. Lost Harrison Barnes, Andrew Bogut, Festus Ezeli, Marreese Speights, Leandro Barbosa, Brandon Rush.
How many games will the Warriors win?
-
Over 66.5 67% (311)
-
Under 66.5 33% (151)
Total votes: 462
(App users, click here for Warriors poll)
Los Angeles Clippers
- 2015/16 record: 53-29
- Over/under for 2016/17: 53.5 wins
- Offseason in review: Added Marreese Speights, Alan Anderson, Raymond Felton, Brandon Bass, Brice Johnson. Lost Jeff Green, Cole Aldrich, C.J. Wilcox, Pablo Prigioni.
How many games will the Clippers win?
-
Over 53.5 62% (228)
-
Under 53.5 38% (140)
Total votes: 368
(App users, click here for Clippers poll)
Sacramento Kings
- 2015/16 record: 33-49
- Over/under for 2016/17: 34 wins
- Offseason in review: Added Arron Afflalo, Anthony Tolliver, Garrett Temple, Matt Barnes, Ty Lawson, Georgios Papagiannis, Malachi Richardson, Skal Labissiere. Lost Rajon Rondo, Marco Belinelli, Seth Curry, James Anderson, Quincy Acy.
How many games will the Kings win?
-
Under 34 58% (226)
-
Over 34 42% (163)
Total votes: 389
(App users, click here for Kings poll)
Phoenix Suns
- 2015/16 record: 23-59
- Over/under for 2016/17: 30 wins
- Offseason in review: Added Jared Dudley, Dragan Bender, Marquese Chriss, Leandro Barbosa. Lost Mirza Teletovic, Jon Leuer, Ronnie Price, Chase Budinger.
How many games will the Suns win?
-
Over 30 53% (192)
-
Under 30 47% (173)
Total votes: 365
(App users, click here for Suns poll)
Los Angeles Lakers
- 2015/16 record: 17-65
- Over/under for 2016/17: 24.5 wins
- Offseason in review: Added Luol Deng, Timofey Mozgov, Brandon Ingram, Jose Calderon. Lost Kobe Bryant, Roy Hibbert, Brandon Bass, Ryan Kelly.
How many games will the Lakers win?
-
Over 24.5 66% (325)
-
Under 24.5 34% (168)
Total votes: 493
(App users, click here for Lakers poll)
Previous voting results:
- Boston Celtics (52.5 wins): Under (54.59%)
- Toronto Raptors (50.5 wins): Over (54.63%)
- New York Knicks (38.5 wins): Over (71.41%)
- Philadelphia 76ers (23.5 wins): Under (54.62%)
- Brooklyn Nets (20.5 wins): Under (60.74%)
- Utah Jazz (49 wins): Under (68.72%)
- Portland Trail Blazers (45.5 wins): Over (69.92%)
- Oklahoma City Thunder (43.5 wins): Over (65.71%)
- Minnesota Timberwolves (40.5 wins): Over (50.11%)
- Denver Nuggets (37 wins): Under (68.81%)
- Cleveland Cavaliers (56.5 wins): Over (66.5%)
- Detroit Pistons (44.5 wins): Over (55.03%)
- Indiana Pacers (44.5 wins): Over (73.06%)
- Chicago Bulls (38.5 wins): Over (61.9%)
- Milwaukee Bucks (34.5 wins): Over (67.48%)
- San Antonio Spurs (58.5 wins): Under (57.4%)
- Houston Rockets (44 wins): Over (52.76%)
- Memphis Grizzlies (42.5 wins): Over (59.69%)
- Dallas Mavericks (38.5 wins): Over (69.71%)
- New Orleans Pelicans (37 wins): Under (70.9%)
- Atlanta Hawks (43.5 wins): Over (59.84%)
- Charlotte Hornets (42.5 wins): Under (62.22%)
- Washington Wizards (42.5 wins): Over (51.6%)
- Orlando Magic (37.5 wins): Over (54.42%)
- Miami Heat (34.5 wins): Under (61.45%)
