Bucks Notes: Ellis, Kohl, Skiles, Cap Room

Scott Skiles told Charles F. Gardner of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel yesterday that he would be returning to Milwaukee next season for the final year of his contract, quieting speculation that the Bucks could seek a new coach. Here are the rest of the latest updates out of Milwaukee:

  • One reason the Warriors were willing to send Monta Ellis to Milwaukee was because he wouldn't give Golden State a "firm commitment" that he wanted to be there long-term, tweets Gery Woelfel of the Racine Journal Times.
  • "Rumors still persist" that Herb Kohl would be open to selling his majority share of the Bucks and becoming a minority owner, according to Woelfel (on Twitter).
  • Bringing back Skiles for 2012/13 makes sense for both the Bucks and the coach, says Michael Hunt of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  • The Bucks will have room under the cap this summer to make "at least one substantial roster upgrade," Hunt adds within his piece. I think that might depend on whether or not the team re-signs Ersan Ilyasova.

Odds & Ends: Chandler, Jackson, Kidd, Cavs

The latest news and notes from around the NBA on Tuesday night:

  • The Nuggets' official website notes that Wilson Chandler is recovering successfully from his recent hip surgery. Chandler signed a five-year deal with the Nuggets in March after returning from his stint in China.
  • MySanAntonio.com's Buck Harvey wonders how Stephen Jackson's career would have differed had he remained with the Spurs the entire time.
  • The Bay Area News Group's Marcus Thompson speculates that the Warriors may look at Jason Kidd as an option at backup point guard this offseason.
  • Fox Sports Ohio's Sam Amico compares the Cavaliers' current roster and financial flexibility to that of the rest of the Eastern Conference lottery teams.

Pacific Notes: Thompson, Lakers, Warriors

The Lakers and Clippers are tipping off their playoff series this weekend, but the rest of the Pacific Division is turning its attention to the offseason. Here's the latest news from the West Coast:

  • Among the free agents on Sacramento's roster, Jason Thompson is the most likely to return, writes Jason Jones of the Sacramento Bee. Jones says the Kings will likely extend a qualifying offer that will allow them to retain the right to match any other offer the power forward receives this summer.
  • Lakers executive VP of player personnel Jim Buss acknowledges how great a player Chris Paul has been for the Clippers, but isn't looking back with regret on the team's failed CP3 trade before the season, according to comments he made to 710 ESPN's Mason & Ireland show (via Dave McMenamin of ESPNLosAngeles.com).
  • If the Warriors get to keep their first-round pick, they'll have four total selections in the draft, but if that's the case, new GM Bob Myers says the team is unlikely to keep them all, notes Marcus Thompson II of the Bay Area News Group. 

Assessing The 2011/12 Waiver Claims

The vast majority of players placed on waivers go unclaimed and become free agents, but this year, there have been more waiver claims than usual, including a pair of players claimed after their previous teams waived them using the amnesty clause. Last month, Luke Adams provided a rundown on how teams can claim players off waivers, so now let's take a look at how this season's waiver claims have worked out.

  • The most prominent example is Jeremy Lin, who was twice claimed off waivers this season after originally being let go by the Warriors. The Rockets claimed him December 11th, waived him a couple weeks later, and the Knicks made their claim December 27th. Left knee surgery will likely keep him out for the rest of the season unless the Knicks make a deep playoff run, but he'll wind up averaging 14.6 PPG and 6.2 APG, not too shabby for a player twice on the NBA scrapheap. 
  • Knicks GM Glen Grunwald struck gold with yet another waiver claim in Steve Novak, whom they picked up December 21st. Novak’s rise coincided with Lin’s, as he broke loose for 19 points in Lin’s first start, and has kept up his consistent long-range bombing even without Lin on the floor. He led the league in three-point percentage at 47.2%, but his shooting has never been in question. The difference this year was that he did enough in other phases of the game to warrant significant playing time.  A career 4.9 PPG scorer, he averaged 10.4 PPG in 21.7 MPG beginning with that 19-point game on February 6th. We can only imagine how much better the Spurs would have been had they not waived him December 19th.
  • Waiver claims are so infrequent that teams will sometimes agree to terms with players before they clear waivers. That’s what appeared to happen in March, when J.J. Hickson was dressed in Warriors gear and ready for a shootaround with Golden State when word hit that the Blazers had claimed him. We’ll never know how it would have worked out for him with the Warriors, but Hickson has thrived since joining  Portland on March 21st, more than tripling the scoring average he put up in the first half of the season with the Kings (15.1 PPG to 4.7 PPG). He averaged 17.6 PPG and 10.6 RPG as a starter over the final eight games, and will be a sought-after commodity this summer, particularly if the Blazers fail to extend a qualifying offer, making him an unrestricted free agent.
  • Chauncey Billups warned teams not to claim him when the Knicks amnestied him before the season, hoping he could sign with a contender as a free agent, but the Clippers claimed him anyway December 12th. It all worked out, as the Clippers became the sort of contending team Billups wanted to play for anyway when they traded for Chris Paul a few days later. Billups slid over to shooting guard and adjusted smoothly to his new position, averaging 15.0 PPG before going down with a season-ending Achilles’ tendon tear on February 6th.
  • The Kings had much less success with claiming an amnestied player, saddling themselves on Dec. 17th with Travis Outlaw for $12MM over the remaining four years of his contract. He was even less of a factor in Sacramento than he was for the Nets before they waived him, averaging just 4.3 PPG in 12.8 MPG, his worst numbers since he was a rookie in 2003/04.
  • The Warriors tried to replace Jeremy Lin when they claimed Ish Smith, another backup point guard, off waivers from the Grizzlies on December 16th. Smith was there for only six games and 63 total minutes before the Warriors put him back on waivers on January 14th. He went unclaimed this time, and was signed as a free agent February 2nd by the Magic, with whom he’s played the rest of the season.  
  • The Blazers quietly let go of backup big man Chris Johnson at the trade deadline, and amid rumors the Celtics were interested, the Hornets snapped him up off waivers March 19th. Depleted as the Hornets were along the front line this year, Johnson still only saw 82 total minutes over seven games before New Orleans put him back out on waivers April 18th. He remains unsigned since.
  • Rod Higgins, the president of basketball operations for the Bobcats, gave son Cory Higgins quite a present on Christmas Day when the team claimed him off waivers from the Nuggets.  The undrafted 22-year-old rookie from Colorado stayed on the Bobcats roster the entire season, averaging 3.9 PPG in 11.1 MPG.

Warriors Notes: Jamison, Draft, Barron

The latest news regarding the Golden State Warriors on Thursday evening:

  • The Bay Area News Group's Marcus Thompson suggests the Warriors may have interest in free-agent forward Antawn Jamison this summer. He cited Jamison's closeness with new Golden State GM Bob Myers and willingness to come off the bench as reasons he could be a fit.
  • Thompson also notes (via Twitter) that if the Warriors lose tonight, the likelihood of keeping their first-round pick in June's draft will come down to a coin-flip on Friday. Utah owns Golden State's pick unless it falls in the top seven slots.
  • Sportando reports that journeyman center Earl Barron, released by the Warriors earlier this season, has signed a contract in Puerto Rico.

Odds & Ends: Vujacic, Lee, Love, Wall

In a tweet, ESPN.com's Marc Stein says that the Raptors have no interest in former Net and Laker, Sasha Vujacic. Here are the rest of the evening's updates:

Warriors Notes: Lottery Pick, Jackson, Myers

Tuesday was an eventful day for the Warriors both on the court, where they lost to the Hornets on a last-second basket, and off the court, where they announced a front-office shakeup, including the promotion of Bob Myers to general manager. Here's the latest out of Golden State as the team's season winds down….

  • The Warriors' loss last night was crucial for the team's chances of keeping its lottery pick, as Marcus Thompson of the Bay Area News Group outlines.
  • The new GM confirmed to Tim Kawakami of the San Jose Mercury News that Mark Jackson will return next season to coach the Warriors. "He’s good," Myers said of Jackson’s long-term status. "He’s done a great job."
  • Myers was in line to replace Larry Riley as the Warriors' GM in "a few years," but it only took 12 months to make the change. According to Thompson, who explains the reasoning behind the front office changes, Myers proved to co-owner Joe Lacob that he was ready to take the reins now

Myers Wants To Retain Brandon Rush

J. Michael Falgoust of USA Today tweets that Warriors GM Bob Myers will aggressively try to keep guard Brandon Rush, who is set to become a restricted free agent this summer. The fourth-year player and former lottery pick is averaging career highs in points (9.7), three-point shooting percentage (44.7%), and overall field goal percentage (49.8%) this season. 

Rush has only managed one start in 64 games but has still earned a consistent spot in Mark Jackson's rotation, as evidenced by his 26.6 MPG average. Golden State owns his Bird Rights, and I would expect them to retain him barring a scenario where another team decides to wildly overpay for him. In my opinion, a role-player like Rush could garner a contract offer from anywhere between what he's currently making ($2.9 MM) and around the mid-level exception or slightly above it at most. 

Warriors Name Bob Myers General Manager

The Warriors have promoted Bob Myers to the general manager position, the team announced today in a press release. Larry Riley, who had spent the last year as the team's GM, will remain in the organization as the team's director of scouting.

Myers joined the Golden State front office last April as the team's assistant general manager after serving for over a decade as an agent. Warriors co-owner and CEO Joe Lacob praised Myers in the team's statement, calling the 37-year-old the ideal person for the job.

"We’re extremely pleased to announce Bob’s promotion as we conclude the 2011/12 season," said Lacob. "We are confident that he is the right person to guide our Basketball Operations Department into the long-term future and, similarly, through a very important time for this franchise as we begin to prepare for next season. As we acknowledged a year ago, we think his potential as a young executive in this business is outstanding and that intuition was certainly confirmed during his first year with the organization."

Warriors Rumors: Robinson, Jackson, Jenkins

Last night's comeback victory over the Timberwolves didn't help the Warriors chances of keeping their first-round draft pick, since it must be in the top seven or it goes to the Jazz. The win left them with the eighth-worst record in the league, as our draft order tracker shows. Here's the latest from the team by the bay:

  • Nate Robinson's minimum-salary contract expires at the end of the season, and his future with the team beyond that looks uncertain, writes Marcus Thompson II of the Bay Area News Group.
  • Despite the team's lackluster season and failure to make good on first-year coach Mark Jackson's promise of a playoff berth, some key players have Jackson's back, writes Derek Page of HoopsWorld.
  • Matt Steinmetz of CSNBayArea.com says fans shouldn't fret over the team losing its pick, and believes, with Stephen Curry and Andrew Bogut returning from injury, there's enough talent on the roster to make the playoffs next season. 
  • Monte Poole of the Bay Area News Group thinks rookie point guard Charles Jenkins, who has an unguaranteed minimum-salary contract for next year with the Warriors, could be more valuable to the team than any player in the draft besides Anthony Davis.
  • Jenkins, averaging 6.0 APG this month, still isn't satisfied with his performance, promising "drastic change" to his game next season, Thompson notes.
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