Hoops Rumors Originals

Hoops Rumors Community Shootaround 11/19/15

The Rockets fired coach Kevin McHale on Wednesday and installed J.B Bickerstaff as the interim coach for the remainder of the season. GM Daryl Morey said that he has not lost faith in the team’s ability to contend, and cited the lack of time to dally in the rugged Western Conference as reasoning for making the coaching move at this time. Team owner Leslie Alexander, who purchased the club in July of 1993, ripped the performance of the Rockets, saying the team has never played quite so poorly in his time as owner.

Houston was 4-7 this season under McHale, and though the team did not look particularly well-prepared or motivated this campaign under the former coach, it’s difficult to place the full blame on McHale’s shoulders for the franchise’s subpar start. The roster doesn’t appear to be well-balanced, and the team’s defense was woeful, a by-product of GM Daryl Morey stockpiling offensive-minded players.

This brings me to today’s topic: Who is to blame for the Rockets’ current woes?

Do you feel that Houston will be a better club now that it is out from under McHale’s tutelage? Or are you of the opinion that the players are at fault, and the team would have been better served by making some roster moves instead? How much fault do you place in the lap of Morey, who is the architect of the current roster? Take to the comments section below to share your thoughts and opinions on the subject. We look forward to what you have to say.

2015/16 Salary Cap: Sacramento Kings

The NBA’s salary cap for 2015/16 has been set at $70MM, which is an 11% increase from this past season, and the luxury tax line will be $84.74MM. The last cap projection from the league had been $67.1MM, and the projection for the tax line had been $81.6MM.

With the October 26th cutoff date to set regular season rosters now past, we at Hoops Rumors are in the process of running down the current salary cap commitments for each NBA franchise for the 2015/16 campaign. Here’s the cap breakdown for the Sacramento Kings, whose regular season roster can be viewed here:

  • 2015/16 Salary Cap= $70,000,000
  • 2015/16 Luxury Tax Line= $84,740,000
  • Fully Guaranteed Salary Commitments= $71,771,237*
  • Partially Guaranteed Salary Commitments= $255,000
  • Non-Guaranteed Salary Commitments= $645,059
  • Total Salary Cap Commitments= $72,671,296
  • Remaining Cap Room= -$2,671,296
  • Amount Below Luxury Tax Line= $11,544,304

*Note: This figure includes the $882,630 due Wayne Ellington, who was waived via the stretch provision, plus the $25,000 owed to Marshall Henderson, and the $30,000 due Vince Hunter, both of whom were waived.

Cap Exceptions Available:

  • Room Exception= $2,814,000

Cash Available to Send Out In Trades= $3,400,000

Cash Available to Receive Via Trade= $3,400,000

Last update: 11/19/15 @ 9:00pm

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

Offseason In Review: Golden State Warriors

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 Gerald Wallace and Chris Babb from the Celtics in exchange for David Lee. Babb was subsequently waived.
  • Acquired Jason Thompson from the Sixers in exchange for Wallace, $1MM in cash, and the right to swap Golden State’s 2016 first-round pick with the lesser of the 2016 first-round picks that the Heat and the Thunder owe Philadelphia.

Waiver Claims

  • None

Draft Picks

  • Kevon Looney (Round 1, 30th overall). Signed via rookie exception to rookie scale contract.

Camp Invitees


Departing Players


Rookie Contract Option Decisions

  • None

Kyle Terada/USA Today Sports Images

Teams that win 67 regular season games and the NBA championship usually have little room to improve. The 2015 offseason and the start of the 2015/16 season provide strong evidence that the Warriors are the exception to the rule.

Golden State has started 12-0 in spite of the absence of Steve Kerr, who was perhaps the team’s most significant offseason addition in 2014. That Luke Walton, who was no better than third in command last season behind Kerr and former top assistant Alvin Gentry, has been able to pilot the Warriors without a hiccup thus far is testament to the system Kerr put in place but more so to the Warriors front office, a collaborative group with GM Bob Myers in the lead role. Myers, the reigning Executive of the Year, delivered an encore performance as the team accomplished the two most critical player personnel tasks it faced this past summer.

The first was to secure Draymond Green for the long term. Little doubt existed, even amid rumors that tied him to his home-state Pistons, that the B.J. Armstrong client would remain with the Warriors, by dint of Golden State’s ability to match all competing bids in his restricted free agency. The questions were whether he would sign directly with the Warriors or with another team on an offer sheet, and just how close he would come to the maximum salary. Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports raised the notion that the Warriors would prefer that if he signed for the max, he do so via offer sheet, thus absolving themselves of first-hand blame if Green were to end up making more than Thompson, who conceded to slightly less than the max on the extension he signed in 2014.

The Warriors wound up avoiding such a thorny scenario when Green somewhat surprisingly agreed to a deal with the Warriors that totals some $12MM less than the max over five years. Green was willing to take a discount to help keep the team together in the face of a mounting tax bill, as Marcus Thompson of the Bay Area News Group heard shortly before the start of free agency, but apparently the former 35th overall pick and the Warriors had their differences about just how much he should sacrifice. Regardless, Green’s value continues to escalate. He’s shooting 40.4% on 3-pointers after last season’s career-best 33.7% mark, and he’s suddenly become the team’s leader in assists, with 6.9 per game, almost double last season’s average of 3.7. Time will tell if those numbers are sustainable, but the 25-year-old has shown vast improvement with each passing year, and it looks like that trend will continue. He’s no longer the colossal bargain he was when he was making the minimum salary, but the Warriors are probably still underpaying him.

The opposite was true for the man Green replaced in the starting lineup last season. An offseason David Lee trade seemed inevitable as he disappeared from the rotation. If his sudden re-emergence in the Finals cast any doubt on that idea, it vanished mere hours after the Warriors won the title, when Marc Stein of ESPN.com reported that the Warriors and Lee’s reps had agreed to work together to find a new home for him. ESPN’s Zach Lowe reported shortly thereafter that the team’s cut of gate receipts from its run to the Finals were vast enough that the team would see fit to trade him and take a lesser salary in return rather than simply trading him into another team’s cap space and taking no salary back. That was fortuitous for the Warriors, since apparently no one made them an offer that would have taken his entire salary of almost $15.494MM off their hands. The Knicks and Lakers reportedly considered trading for the Mark Bartelstein client, but ultimately it was the Celtics who did so in a deal that took nearly full advantage of the salary-matching cushion and cleaved about a third of Lee’s salary from Golden State’s books. That was only step one, however.

It seemed almost obvious in the immediate wake of the deal that the Warriors would waive Gerald Wallace, whom they acquired in the Lee trade, and spread his salary via the stretch provision, a tool they couldn’t use with Lee because he signed his deal prior to the 2011 collective bargaining agreement. Stretching Wallace would have pushed the majority of his salary, and the associated tax burden, off to future seasons, when the tax threshold will be higher in accordance with the rising cap. Instead, the Warriors clung to Wallace and deftly flipped him to the Sixers in a trade that achieved the dual ends of lowering the payroll and adding a productive player. Essentially, the Warriors parlayed Lee into Jason Thompson through a pair of moves that saved Golden State nearly $8.6MM in salary and an estimated $22.1MM in luxury tax payments. The collateral costs were minimal: $1MM in cash to the Sixers plus a pick swap that only comes into play if the Heat or the Thunder end up with a better record than the Warriors do. Chris Babb came in the deal with the Celtics, but his salary was non-guaranteed and he didn’t make the Warriors out of training camp.

The primary benefit was financial, as Golden State has yet to find much of a need for Thompson in its already-stacked rotation, even though Andrew Bogut missed time with a concussion. Still, Thompson is at the ready, and while he lacks the offensive pop of Lee, the ex-King was a double-figure scorer three times with Sacramento and can capably perform should the need arise. He ultimately represents an insurance policy with a more sensible premium for Golden State. His salary also makes him a handier trade chip if such an opportunity presents itself.

The Warriors weren’t quite as frugal when they brought back Leandro Barbosa for $2.5MM this season. Clearly, Myers and company wanted to keep as much of last season’s roster as possible, even if it meant shelling out more than what it was worth for a 32-year-old who was out of the league for much of 2013/14, the season before he first joined Golden State. Barbosa saw just 14.7 minutes per game in the regular season and 10.9 in the playoffs last year. It’s possible that the Pelicans, reportedly likely to have interest thanks to Gentry, drove up his price, but even so, the Warriors might have found a better use for the roughly $1.5MM difference between what they’re spending on Barbosa and what they would be shelling out on a minimum-salary deal. That $1.5MM triggers an estimated $5.625MM in extra taxes.

First-round pick Kevon Looney, by contrast, costs only slightly more than the veteran’s minimum this season, so it made sense for the Warriors to keep their pick and use it on a player who would sign this year rather than going the draft-and-stash route. Looney is expected to miss about half the season after August hip surgery, but the Warriors nonetheless have a prospect they can develop once he gets healthy, and Green is a conspicuous reminder of how players drafted with a pick in the 30s can blossom.

The Warriors mastered the elusive art of building a championship roster. The task that began this summer is to sustain it, and they’ve so far proven just as adept.

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

Hoops Rumors Community Shootaround 11/18/15

Nuggets small forward Wilson Chandler underwent successful surgery on Tuesday to repair a labral tear in his right hip. Chandler initially suffered the injury during the preseason and he will be out of action for the remainder of the 2015/16 campaign. Despite the swingman missing approximately 133 games since 2011 due to hip injuries, Chandler, who signed a four-year, $46.5MM renegotiation and extension with Denver back in July, recently told Christopher Dempsey of The Denver Post that he isn’t contemplating retirement.

The 28-year-old has been a versatile and productive player when his health has allowed, but Chandler is rapidly approaching the age of 30, and his health isn’t likely to improve as time passes. Which brings me to the question/topic of the day: Will Wilson Chandler return to form and reward Denver for extending his deal?

Do you think Chandler is done in the NBA as a productive starter? Or are you more optimistic about his ability to make a full recovery and return to action as a valuable team asset? Take to the comments section below to share your thoughts and opinions on the matter. We look forward to what you have to say.

Submit Your Questions For Hoops Rumors Mailbag

In addition to our regular weekly chat, which Chuck Myron facilitates every Wednesday, we have a second opportunity for you to hit us up with your questions in our weekly mailbag feature, which is posted every Saturday.

Have a question regarding player movement, free agent rumors, the salary cap, the NBA draft, or the top storylines of the week? You can e-mail them here: hoopsrumorsmailbag@gmail.com. Feel free to send emails throughout the week, but please be mindful that we may receive a sizable number of questions and might not get to all of them.

If you missed out on any past mailbags and would like to catch up, you can view the full archives here.

2015/16 Salary Cap: Portland Trail Blazers

The NBA’s salary cap for 2015/16 has been set at $70MM, which is an 11% increase from this past season, and the luxury tax line will be $84.74MM. The last cap projection from the league had been $67.1MM, and the projection for the tax line had been $81.6MM.

With the October 26th cutoff date to set regular season rosters now past, we at Hoops Rumors are in the process of running down the current salary cap commitments for each NBA franchise for the 2015/16 campaign. Here’s the cap breakdown for the Portland Trail Blazers, whose regular season roster can be viewed here:

  • 2015/16 Salary Cap= $70,000,000
  • 2015/16 Luxury Tax Line= $84,740,000
  • Fully Guaranteed Salary Commitments= $47,479,873*
  • Partially Guaranteed Salary Commitments= $200,000
  • Non-Guaranteed Salary Commitments= $1,695,245
  • Total Salary Cap Commitments= $49,375,118
  • Remaining Cap Room= $20,624,882
  • Amount Below Luxury Tax Line= $34,418,299

*Note: This figure includes the $3,083,181 due Mike Miller, who agreed to a buyout.

Cap Exceptions Available:

  • Room Exception= $2,814,000

Cash Available to Send Out In Trades= $3,325,000

Cash Available to Receive Via Trade= $3,400,000

Last update: 11/18/15 @ 8:30pm

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

Hoops Rumors Chat Transcript

4:04pm: We hosted the weekly live chat.

3:00pm: All five Southwest Division teams made the playoffs last season, but three of them have strugged so far this year. The Grizzlies, at 6-6, have already pulled off a trade and the Rockets have fired coach Kevin McHale less than a month into the season. Yet the 1-10 Pelicans, who have the league’s worst record aside from the winless Sixers, haven’t given into panic, with a hardship signing of Jimmer Fredette the team’s only November transaction. The question is just how long they can keep losing without making a bold move.

Hoops Rumors Community Shootaround 11/17/15

In a recent column, Matt Moore of CBSSports.com opined that the Thunder would be better off as a team if Enes Kanter was utilized as a starter, rather than coming off the bench as he has been. Moore acknowledged that Steven Adams has earned the right to start, but the defensive shortcomings of Kanter would be better masked playing alongside the team’s starters. The CBS scribe also opined that playing Kanter alongside Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant early in games could overwhelm opponents on the offensive end, while still allowing coach Billy Donovan to use Adams, who is an excellent defender, during crunch time.

Now it’s time for the question/topic of the day: Who should the Thunder start at center?

Do you agree with Moore’s assertion that beginning the game with Kanter on the court would improve the Thunder, provided Adams was utilized in the proper spots? Or do you think the team is fine as is, and Adams should remain the one who is jumping for the opening tip? Take to the comments section below to share your thoughts and opinions on the subject. We look forward to what you have to say.

2015/16 Salary Cap: Phoenix Suns

The NBA’s salary cap for 2015/16 has been set at $70MM, which is an 11% increase from this past season, and the luxury tax line will be $84.74MM. The last cap projection from the league had been $67.1MM, and the projection for the tax line had been $81.6MM.

With the October 26th cutoff date to set regular season rosters now past, we at Hoops Rumors are in the process of running down the current salary cap commitments for each NBA franchise for the 2015/16 campaign. Here’s the cap breakdown for the Phoenix Suns, whose regular season roster can be viewed here:

  • 2015/16 Salary Cap= $70,000,000
  • 2015/16 Luxury Tax Line= $84,740,000
  • Fully Guaranteed Salary Commitments= $73,710,254*
  • Partially Guaranteed Salary Commitments= $0
  • Non-Guaranteed Salary Commitments= $845,059
  • Total Salary Cap Commitments= $74,555,313
  • Remaining Cap Room= $4,555,313
  • Amount Below Luxury Tax Line= $9,632,776

*Note: This figure includes the $777,778 due Michael Beasley, who was waived via the stretch provision.

Cap Exceptions Available:

  • Room Exception= $2,814,000

Cash Available to Send Out In Trades= $3,400,000

Cash Available to Receive Via Trade= $3,400,000

Last updated: 11/17/15 @ 6:00pm

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

Offseason In Review: Milwaukee Bucks

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


Trades


Waiver Claims

  • None

Draft Picks

  • Rashad Vaughn (Round 1, 17th overall). Signed via rookie scale exception to rookie scale contract.

Camp Invitees


Departing Players


Rookie Contract Option Decisions


Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

The Bucks entered this past offseason riding high after increasing their win total from an anemic 15 during the 2013/14 campaign to a respectable 41 victories last season, and Milwaukee earned itself a playoff berth as a result. Despite being eliminated in the first round of the 2014/15 postseason by the Bulls, the future is certainly brighter than it has been for Milwaukee basketball in quite some time.

The biggest move for the Bucks this offseason, and perhaps one of the summer’s most surprising developments, was Milwaukee landing free agent big man Greg Monroe. The former Piston accepted a three-year max deal from the Bucks, passing on similar offers from the Lakers, Knicks and Blazers in order to do so. Milwaukee has not traditionally been viewed as a free agent destination over the years, but with the franchise landing one of the top free agents of the offseason, that perception may need to change. Monroe isn’t necessarily a franchise-level talent, and he’s not quite at the level of Marc Gasol and LaMarcus Aldridge, both of whom were also free agents this summer, but he is a player who could aid in vaulting the Bucks toward the upper echelon of the Eastern Conference when combined with the rest of the young talent assembled. There were reports that the Bucks had also interest in Robin Lopez and Brook Lopez, but landing Monroe was a far more exciting move for the team given his age and potential.

Milwaukee didn’t limit itself to throwing cash at just Monroe. The team also re-signed restricted free agent Khris Middleton to a five-year, $70MM deal, and agreed to an extension with John Henson that will keep him in the fold through the 2019/20 campaign. Middleton is certainly one of the league’s success stories, having gone from a second-round pick in 2012 to a max player. While I certainly can see Middleton’s value on both ends of the court, he is a player who has never averaged more than 13.4 points per contest in his career, which makes this deal a bit of a risk for Milwaukee if he is at his plateau talent-wise. But Middleton’s value does extend beyond the numbers in the box score, and with the salary cap set to increase next season, his deal has the opportunity to look better over time.

Signing Henson to an extension was a solid move for the team, though his career averages of 8.1 PPG and 5.5 RPG are more fitting for a reserve than someone who will be paid an average annual salary of $11MM per season over the life of the extension. On the plus side for Milwaukee is that Henson’s deal is front-loaded, and his salary will decrease each season. The 24-year-old would have likely commanded a higher salary if he hit the open market, considering the league’s propensity to overpay big men, so Milwaukee did well for itself with this decision to lock down the center through 2019/20.

The Bucks were active on the trade front during the offseason, executing a series of minor deals that cleared valuable salary cap room for the team’s other dealings but provided little in the way of a return for the team. Monroe rendered center Zaza Pachulia unnecessary, so the Bucks essentially gave him away to the Mavs, who were in desperate need of a big man after DeAndre Jordan spurned them. Milwaukee also parted ways with Jared Dudley, shipping him to the Wizards for another heavily protected second-rounder, and the Bucks cut ties with Ersan Ilyasova, a solid stretch four whom they sent to the Pistons in exchange for two veterans they subsequently waived.

The only player acquired via trade this summer who still remains on the roster is point guard Greivis Vasquez, who cost the Bucks the Clippers’ 2017 first round pick and the rights to Norman Powell, the No. 46 overall pick in this year’s draft. Vasquez certainly fills a need for the team behind starter Michael Carter-Williams, and his outside shooting should prove vital to any success that Milwaukee hopes to achieve this season. While surrendering a first round pick may not sit well with some of the team’s fans, it was likely to be a late first-rounder given the Clippers’ expected success over the next few seasons, and Vasquez is likely to prove more valuable than any player who would have been selected that late in 2017’s draft.

Speaking of the draft, the Bucks did extremely well for themselves when they nabbed UNLV freshman shooting guard Rashad Vaughn with the No. 17 overall pick. Vaughn is a project who isn’t ready to defend NBA-caliber players, and he isn’t likely to contribute anything of significance in 2015/16. But he is also a player who has the potential to develop into a top-10 scorer in the league, and he may turn out to be one of the steals of the draft if the team shows patience in bringing him along. The sky is the limit for Vaughn, and he, alongside the team’s other young talents, should form a solid young core for the Bucks as they move into their new arena in the near future.

The opening of the arena has been pushed back to the 2018/19 season, but the new building should aid the team in future free agent pursuits, as well as ensure that the Bucks remain in Milwaukee, where they should be, well into the future. In fact, the arena-to-be has already aided the team, with Monroe noting to David Aldridge of NBA.com that he took the team’s new facility into account when making his free agent choice this summer. “When I signed, it wasn’t all the way done yet, but now, they have a new stadium coming,” Monroe said. “And I saw how the fans were. We played there, been coming there for years now, multiple times a year in the division. I know what kind of fan base they have. And I talked to a couple of my former teammates in Detroit who played here before, and they had nothing but great things to say about the city and the organization. So with all of that combined, I just definitely felt I made the right decision.”

Milwaukee also made a number of front office decisions over the summer that will shape the organization moving forward. The team inked GM John Hammond to a one-year extension that will keep him in the fold through the 2016/17 campaign. Team co-owner Wesley Edens told Charles F. Gardner of The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel that he felt it important to align the end of Hammond’s contract with that of coach Jason Kidd, whose deal also expires after the 2016/17 season is complete. The Bucks also hired longtime NBA executive Rod Thorn as a special consultant, and he is expected to work closely alongside Hammond. Thorn most recently served as the NBA’€™s president of basketball operations, a job in which he oversaw the league’s day-to-day business under commissioner Adam Silver.

The addition of Monroe this offseason was huge for the franchise, not just because of what he can provide on the court, but for the perception of the franchise as a viable destination for free agents. The retention of Middleton was equally important, and the team did well to re-sign the young wing. The return of Jabari Parker, who missed all but 25 games of his rookie campaign, and the continued development of the roster’s younger players, including star-in-waiting Giannis Antetokounmpo, give the Bucks an extremely bright future in the improving Eastern Conference. Milwaukee’s roster does lack athleticism beyond the Greek Freak, which could slow the team’s growth somewhat, and it’s an issue that the team may need to address via the trade market if it becomes a glaring issue. But for now, it’s a good time to be a fan of Milwaukee basketball, given the team’s solid direction and growing collection of talent.

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