Hoops Rumors Originals

Hoops Rumors Community Shootaround 9/11/15

The Timberwolves have named assistant coach Sam Mitchell as interim head coach while Flip Saunders continues to battle cancer, which was first reported by Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports on Thursday. The team still has the hope that Saunders will be able to return to his coaching duties sometime during the coming campaign. The first concern, of course, is with Saunders’ health. But the franchise also has to worry about the coming campaign, which will be an important one, as it needs to determine which of its talented young players are long-term building blocks.

This brings me to today’s topic: How will the absence of Flip Saunders affect the Timberwolves’ 2015/16 season?

The Timberwolves are not expected to be title contenders this season, and the team will need to show marked improvement to even have a shot at a playoff berth in the notoriously difficult Western Conference. Mitchell has previous head coaching experience, having spent four plus seasons as coach of the Raptors from 2004/05 through part of the 2008/09 campaign. Through 345 regular season games Mitchell has compiled a mark of 156-189, and he owns a lackluster 3-8 postseason mark. He was named Coach of the Year back in 2007, when he guided Toronto to a 47-35 regular season record, and secured the Atlantic Division crown.

Advancing to the playoffs would be a huge step for the Wolves as a franchise, but that should be considered a secondary goal in 2015/16. The team’s priority should be to develop the wealth of young talent it possesses on the roster. Mitchell, being a former NBA player, may have an advantage over Saunders in that regard, having had first hand experience regarding what is required to be an NBA player. Mitchell does have the reputation of being more of a staunch disciplinarian than Saunders, and it’s unknown how that may affect the team’s locker room chemistry.

What are your thoughts on the matter? Will the absence of Saunders hamper the team’s development, or will things remain status quo in Minnesota this season? What chance do you give Mitchell of having the interim tag removed from his title and officially becoming the head coach? He is a favorite of owner Glen Taylor after having spent 10 seasons with the franchise as a player, which certainly won’t hurt Mitchell’s cause.

Take to the comments to share your thoughts and opinions on this topic. We look forward to what you have to say.

2015 NBA Draft Grades: Southeast Division

The 2015 NBA Draft is squarely in the rearview and a number of draftees have already provided a taste of what is to come with their summer league play. I held off on my grades until now because I wanted a better context in which to evaluate each team’s selections, with free agency and summer league providing greater perspective. Sometimes, selecting the best available player isn’t the best course of action and it is wiser to nab a player who fits a clear need, which should always be considered when rating how each front office fared in the draft. I’ve already run down my thoughts on the Atlantic and Central Divisions, and next up is a look at the Southeast Division:

Atlanta Hawks

Team Needs: Depth, scoring.

Draft Picks:

  • No. 50 Overall  Marcus Eriksson, SG, Sweden
  • No. 59 Overall  Dimitrios Agravanis, F, Greece

Atlanta’s haul on draft night amounted to two draft-and-stash players whose NBA futures are murky at best, and Tim Hardaway Jr., whom the team acquired from the Knicks in exchange for the No. 19 overall pick that had been garnered in a swap with the Wizards earlier in the draft. So in essence, the Hawks dealt the No. 15 overall pick in the 2015 draft for 2013’s No. 24 overall choice. While I do think that Hardaway could benefit from a change of scenery, I firmly believe that Atlanta would have done better to hold onto its original pick and simply used it to select Kelly Oubre, who was taken by Washington at No. 15 overall.

Oubre, while he didn’t live up to expectations during his lone season at Kansas, has the potential to be a two-way star in the NBA. Hardaway, while being a nice complementary offensive player, has shown himself to be fairly one-dimensional thus far in his professional career. Hardaway is also a bit of a redundant a piece with Kyle Korver already on the roster, which makes the trade even more of a head-scratcher in my view. I would even go as far as saying that keeping the No. 19 overall pick, Jerian Grant, would have benefited the franchise more than adding the former Knicks shooting guard.

Overall Draft Grade: D. While the Hawks did land a proven commodity in Hardaway, Oubre has the potential to be a far better NBA player. Atlanta would have been better served to simply hold onto their original selection instead of wheeling and dealing in the first round.


Charlotte Hornets

Team Needs: Outside shooting, frontcourt depth

Draft Picks:

  • No. 9 Overall Frank Kaminsky, PF, Wisconsin

It feels as if the Hornets have been searching for a player who can stretch the floor on offense for ages, with outside shooting being one of the team’s main weaknesses for a few seasons running. That’s why I found it a surprise that Charlotte passed on Devin Booker with its pick and instead went with Kaminsky. Sure, Kaminsky is certainly capable of filling up a stat sheet from the outside, but the team could have used a wing player who can shoot much more than a stretch-four. Or, perhaps I should say, another stretch-four, given that the team traded for Spencer Hawes this offseason. The addition of Hawes should have allowed for GM Rich Cho to land an impact player on the wing like Booker, or Duke’s Justise Winslow, who may end up haunting Charlotte if he becomes a two-way star in the league.

Kaminsky is limited athletically, and while he is certainly a fierce competitor who is very skilled offensively, his defensive shortcomings will lower his overall ceiling as a prospect. I’m rooting for “Frank the Tank” to succeed in the league, but I can easily see him becoming a specialist like Steve Novak, and reduced to sporadic minutes in reserve. Which is not what you want out of a top 10 pick, especially given some of the talent still on the board when Charlotte was on the clock on draft night.

Overall Draft Grade: C+. The selection of Kaminsky was puzzling given the presence of Hawes, the team’s greater needs at the wing and center positions, and the availability of Winslow and Booker at the No. 9 spot. Kaminsky is a solid player, but the team could have utilized this pick much more effectively.


Miami Heat

Team Needs: Youth, depth at wing and at center.

Draft Picks:

  • No. 10 Overall Justise Winslow, SF, Duke
  • No. 40 Overall  Josh Richardson, SG, Tennessee

Team president Pat Riley likely stared at his draft board in disbelief when the Heat’s pick was due and he saw that Winslow was still available at No. 10 overall. Winslow had been projected by a number of mock drafts to be a potential top five pick, so landing him where Miami did cannot be considered anything but a steal for the franchise. The former Duke swingman can provide depth for both Dwyane Wade at shooting guard and Luol Deng at small forward, and given the age and injury concerns for both players, that’s a huge boon for the team. There are concerns about Winslow’s ability to hit his outside shots consistently, but his athleticism and defensive abilities should garner Winslow regular minutes as he figures things out.

The addition of Richardson isn’t likely to have much, if any, impact on the coming season for Miami. It’s doubtful that the swingman will make the team’s regular season roster, though his defensive acumen should ensure him a slot on the Heat’s D-League affiliate for 2015/16.

Overall Draft Grade: A+. It’s hard to find any fault with the Heat selecting a player of Winslow’s potential, especially with the 10th overall pick. Fantastic job for Riley, who continues to show why he’s one of the best executives in the game by not overthinking the selection.


Orlando Magic

Team Needs: Depth, outside shooting.

Draft Picks:

  • No. 5 Overall Mario Hezonja, SG, Croatia
  • No. 51 Overall  Tyler Harvey, SG, Eastern Washington

Like Charlotte, it seems as if Orlando has been searching for a player who can light up the scoreboard from the outside for an eternity. The Magic are hoping that Hezonja, whom the team selected over better-known talents like Justise Winslow, Stanley Johnson, Devin Booker, and Frank Kaminsky with the fifth overall pick, will be the bounty of their quest. While Hezonja certainly has the skills and athletic ability to justify such a high selection, there are legitimate concerns regarding his maturity level and ability to accept coaching, which, if true, will hamper the Croatian’s development significantly. But if Hezonja manages to live up to his predraft hype, the Magic landed themselves a potential star who can fill up the rim from anywhere inside the arena.

My concern for Orlando is the high washout rate of European draftees in the NBA, and the risk the franchise took in nabbing Hezonja that high in the first round. While the upside of Hezonja is certainly tantalizing, the team may have been better served to select a more NBA-ready player in Willie Cauley-Stein, Winslow, or Booker at that slot. All of whom would have filled an obvious need for Orlando, and carried less risk while doing so.

I’m a bigger fan of GM Rob Hennigan nabbing Eastern Washington sharpshooter Tyler Harvey toward the bottom of the second round than I am of his selection of Hezonja. Harvey needs development as a player, but he’s a lethal shooter who needs to be accounted for by defenders the moment he crosses the halfcourt line. There are concerns with his level of athleticism, but he is a smart and savvy player who has the potential to become a solid contributor off of the bench for Orlando in a few seasons.

Overall Draft Grade: B+. I’ll give Hennigan credit for taking a gamble on the upside of Hezonja, but there were a number of players who could have filled the team’s needs at No. 5 overall who didn’t possess as many question marks about their NBA future.


Washington Wizards

Team Needs: Small forward, depth.

Draft Picks:

  • No. 15 Overall  Kelly Oubre, SF, Kansas*
  • No. 49 Overall  Aaron White, F, Iowa

*Acquired from Hawks in exchange for the No. 19 overall pick and two future second-rounders.

The Wizards entered the draft needing to land themselves a wing player who would complement their starting backcourt tandem of John Wall and Bradley Beal, as well as to replace Paul Pierce, who signed a free agent deal with the Clippers this offseason. Washington made a smart trade with Atlanta, swapping first-rounders and giving up two future second round picks in exchange for the opportunity to land Oubre.

The swingman out of Kansas was a disappointment during his lone season with the Jayhawks, never coming close to delivering on the preseason hype that his impending arrival in Lawrence wrought. Oubre’s freshman campaign had a rocky start, with the 19-year-old often looking completely lost on the court and receiving sporadic playing time as a result. But Oubre did turn things around as the season progressed, and Washington landed itself a heck of a talent outside of the lottery. Oubre’s defense is more NBA-ready than his offense is, and he’ll learn the hard way that it takes more than athleticism to be an effective scorer in the pros. But I do expect Oubre to develop into a starter, and possibly a future All-Star, though it often won’t be a smooth ride. But full credit is due to the Wizards’ front office, who made a solid deal on draft night to land themselves a player who fits their needs perfectly.

Overall Draft Grade: A+. Great move by GM Ernie Grunfeld to move up in the first round via trade and to land Oubre at No. 15 overall. He fits an obvious team need, and Oubre has the potential to be a two-way star in a few seasons.

Poll: 2003 NBA Draft Take Two (Pick No. 17)

Drafting players is far from an exact science, and many a GM has been second-guessed for his draft night decisions. I’m willing to bet that every team executive has at least one pick that he would like a mulligan for. While life, and the NBA, doesn’t allow for such opportunities, we at Hoops Rumors decided it would be fun to give our readers a second take at picking players, complete with the benefit of hindsight.

We are in the process of taking you on a journey back to June of 2003, and revisiting a draft that saw the likes of LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Dwyane Wade, and Chris Bosh available to potentially change the fortunes of a few struggling franchises. Wade was the first of that group to win an NBA championship, though James and Bosh would later join him in Miami and go on to win multiple titles together years later, while Melo is still seeking his first trip to the NBA Finals. Detroit, which owned the No. 2 overall pick that season, chose to go with Darko Milicic, who didn’t work out so well for the Pistons. Not all picks pan out, but that one is especially painful given the talent that the Pistons passed over to select the big man, who owns career averages of 6.0 points and 4.2 rebounds, and has been out of the NBA since making a single appearance for the Celtics back in 2012/13.

We continue our revisionist history with the Suns, who used the No. 17 pick in 2003 to select Žarko Čabarkapa. Readers, you are now on the clock! Cast your vote for Phoenix’s pick and check back Saturday for the results, as well as to cast your vote for who the Pelicans, or Hornets as they were known at the time,  will select with the No. 18 overall pick. But don’t limit yourself to a simple button click. Take to the comments section below and share your thoughts on the No. 17 overall pick and why you voted the way that you did.

Previous Picks

  1. Cavaliers: LeBron James
  2. Pistons: Dwyane Wade
  3. Nuggets: Carmelo Anthony
  4. Raptors: Chris Bosh
  5. Heat: David West
  6. Clippers: Kyle Korver
  7. Bulls: Mo Williams
  8. Bucks: Chris Kaman
  9. Knicks: Boris Diaw
  10. Wizards: Kirk Hinrich
  11. Warriors: Jose Calderon
  12. Thunder: Josh Howard
  13. Celtics: Leandro Barbosa
  14. Thunder: Kendrick Perkins
  15. Magic: Nick Collison
  16. Grizzlies: Zaza Pachulia
With the No. 17 Overall Pick the Suns Select...
Darko Milicic 22.53% (130 votes)
Steve Blake 20.28% (117 votes)
Luke Ridnour 8.67% (50 votes)
Matt Bonner 8.67% (50 votes)
T.J. Ford 7.80% (45 votes)
Mickael Pietrus 7.45% (43 votes)
Carlos Delfino 4.85% (28 votes)
James Jones 4.68% (27 votes)
Travis Outlaw 3.47% (20 votes)
Jason Kapono 1.91% (11 votes)
Dahntay Jones 1.73% (10 votes)
Keith Bogans 1.39% (8 votes)
Willie Green 1.39% (8 votes)
Žarko Čabarkapa 1.39% (8 votes)
Luke Walton 1.21% (7 votes)
Sasha Pavlovic 1.04% (6 votes)
Marcus Banks 0.87% (5 votes)
Troy Bell 0.52% (3 votes)
Brian Cook 0.17% (1 votes)
Michael Sweetney 0.00% (0 votes)
Jarvis Hayes 0.00% (0 votes)
Reece Gaines 0.00% (0 votes)
Jerome Beasley 0.00% (0 votes)
Total Votes: 577

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Sixers Make Unusual Expenditure On Marshall

Kendall Marshall has the pedigree of having been a former lottery pick, and he averaged 8.8 assists per game in 2013/14. No one will mistake him as a marquee free agent addition, but he just received the largest free agent contract that Sixers GM Sam Hinkie has handed out since taking over the team in 2013.

Most of Hinkie’s free agent additions have been for the minimum salary, and while a few exceptions have emerged, none have received nearly as much as Marshall did on his new four-year, $8MM deal. It’s the sixth-most lucrative deal that Hinkie has handed out. The five players above Marshall on that list were all signed as draft picks. That includes Furkan Aldemir, who signed at midseason last year after having been a draft-and-stash prospect.

Here’s a look at the most expensive signings the Sixers have made in the Hinkie era. Five of the six players shown here are still with the team, with Michael Carter-Williams the lone exception. Joel Embiid is No. 2 here, despite questions about whether he’ll ever play thanks to a persistent foot injury.

  1. Jahlil Okafor — four years, $20,680,472 (rookie scale)
  2. Joel Embiid — four years, $19,981,026 (rookie scale)
  3. Nerlens Noel — four years, $14,329,730 (rookie scale)
  4. Furkan Aldemir — four years, $11,420,610 (draft-and-stash signee)
  5. Michael Carter Williams — four years, $10,083,526 (rookie scale)
  6. Kendall Marshall — four years, $8MM (free agent signee)

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

Poll: 2003 NBA Draft Take Two (Pick No. 16)

Drafting players is far from an exact science, and many a GM has been second-guessed for his draft night decisions. I’m willing to bet that every team executive has at least one pick that he would like a mulligan for. While life, and the NBA, doesn’t allow for such opportunities, we at Hoops Rumors decided it would be fun to give our readers a second take at picking players, complete with the benefit of hindsight.

We are in the process of taking you on a journey back to June of 2003, and revisiting a draft that saw the likes of LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Dwyane Wade, and Chris Bosh available to potentially change the fortunes of a few struggling franchises. Wade was the first of that group to win an NBA championship, though James and Bosh would later join him in Miami and go on to win multiple titles together years later, while Melo is still seeking his first trip to the NBA Finals. Detroit, which owned the No. 2 overall pick that season, chose to go with Darko Milicic, who didn’t work out so well for the Pistons. Not all picks pan out, but that one is especially painful given the talent that the Pistons passed over to select the big man, who owns career averages of 6.0 points and 4.2 rebounds, and has been out of the NBA since making a single appearance for the Celtics back in 2012/13.

We continue our revisionist history with the Grizzlies, who had acquired the pick from Boston in a draft day swap. Readers, you are now on the clock! Cast your vote for Memphis’ pick and check back Friday night for the results, as well as to cast your vote for who the Suns will select with the No. 17 overall pick. But don’t limit yourself to a simple button click. Take to the comments section below and share your thoughts on the No. 16 overall pick and why you voted the way that you did.

Previous Picks

  1. Cavaliers: LeBron James
  2. Pistons: Dwyane Wade
  3. Nuggets: Carmelo Anthony
  4. Raptors: Chris Bosh
  5. Heat: David West
  6. Clippers: Kyle Korver
  7. Bulls: Mo Williams
  8. Bucks: Chris Kaman
  9. Knicks: Boris Diaw
  10. Wizards: Kirk Hinrich
  11. Warriors: Jose Calderon
  12. Thunder: Josh Howard
  13. Celtics: Leandro Barbosa
  14. Thunder: Kendrick Perkins
  15. Magic: Nick Collison
With the No. 16 Overall Pick the Grizzlies Select...
Zaza Pachulia 29.73% (143 votes)
Steve Blake 18.30% (88 votes)
T.J. Ford 9.36% (45 votes)
Luke Ridnour 8.52% (41 votes)
Mickael Pietrus 6.24% (30 votes)
Carlos Delfino 4.99% (24 votes)
Matt Bonner 4.99% (24 votes)
Darko Milicic 4.37% (21 votes)
James Jones 3.74% (18 votes)
Dahntay Jones 1.66% (8 votes)
Willie Green 1.66% (8 votes)
Luke Walton 1.46% (7 votes)
Travis Outlaw 1.25% (6 votes)
Jason Kapono 1.25% (6 votes)
Keith Bogans 1.25% (6 votes)
Jarvis Hayes 0.42% (2 votes)
Troy Bell 0.42% (2 votes)
Michael Sweetney 0.21% (1 votes)
Sasha Pavlovic 0.21% (1 votes)
Marcus Banks 0.00% (0 votes)
Reece Gaines 0.00% (0 votes)
Brian Cook 0.00% (0 votes)
Jerome Beasley 0.00% (0 votes)
Total Votes: 481

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How Teams Without Own Affiliates Used D-League

The disappearance of shared D-League affiliates this season shouldn’t have much of an effect, since the 13 teams that shared the Fort Wayne Mad Ants last season rarely sent players on assignment, argues Chris Reichert of Upside & Motor. The Hawks, as Reichert notes, were the exception.

Atlanta made 11 assignments to the D-League in 2014/15, more than twice as many as any other NBA franchise without a one-to-one NBA affiliate. The Raptors were next in that category, with four, but they’ve started their own D-League team for this season. Still, the Hawks aren’t strangers to the system that will govern their D-League assignments in the months ahead.

The 11 remaining NBA teams without their own D-League affiliate may assign players to the affiliates of other NBA franchises, just as the Hawks did three times last season when the Fort Wayne Mad Ants, the D-League squad Atlanta shared with a dozen other NBA teams, had a full roster. The Hawks used the arrangement to find a home particularly conducive to the development of their players, as Adam Johnson of D-League Digest observes, sending Adreian Payne on two occasions to the affiliate of the Spurs. Hawks coach/executive Mike Budenholzer was a longtime assistant in San Antonio before taking the job in Atlanta, and he’s brought a similar operation with him to his new job. The Hawks also sent John Jenkins to the affiliate of the Jazz, another organization with close ties to the Spurs.

Of course, it won’t always work out that way. Not every NBA team has close similarities with another, Johnson notes. The D-League will ask for volunteers among its ranks to take NBA players on assignments, but if the affiliate that the NBA team making the assignment doesn’t raise its hand, the NBA club has to choose another volunteer or have the destination for its assigned player determined at random if no volunteers emerge.

It’s an imperfect system, but it’s the price NBA teams that haven’t invested in their own D-League outfits must pay. Of course, many of those teams figure to simply decline to participate, given their lack of D-League assignments in the past.

With an assist from the D-League Usage Reports that Eddie Scarito of Hoops Rumors compiled, below is a list of every D-League assignment that the 13 teams without a one-to-one D-League affiliate made last season. Those teams collectively sent players to the one-to-one affiliates of other NBA franchises on six occasions, with the Spurs taking on six such players.

Atlanta Hawks

Brooklyn Nets

Charlotte Hornets

Chicago Bulls

  • None

Denver Nuggets

Indiana Pacers (this year, they’ll have their own affiliate)

Los Angeles Clippers

Milwaukee Bucks

  • None

Minnesota Timberwolves

  • None

New Orleans Pelicans

Portland Trail Blazers

  • None

Toronto Raptors (this year, they’ll have their own affiliate)

 

Washington Wizards

Hoops Rumors Community Shootaround 9/9/15

On Tuesday, the NBA’s Board of Governors unanimously approved changes to how teams qualify for the playoffs and how they will be seeded.

The Board also approved changes to tiebreaker criteria for playoff seeding and determining home-court advantage. Head-to-head results have become the first criteria to break ties for playoff seeding and home-court advantage between two teams with identical regular season records, with the second criteria being if a team won its division. Under the old system, a division winner was awarded the higher seed and received home-court advantage in series between two teams with identical records.

This brings me to today’s topic: What are your thoughts on the new playoff seeding structure?

Will this new seeding structure make for improved playoff matchups, as well as increase the overall importance of regular season contests? Do these new rules penalize teams in weaker divisions since a top four seed would have been guaranteed to divisional champs under the old system? Take to the comments section below to share your thoughts, opinions, and concerns regarding these dramatic changes to the current playoff structure. We look forward to what you have to say on the matter.

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.

Poll: 2003 NBA Draft Take Two (Pick No. 15)

Drafting players is far from an exact science, and many a GM has been second-guessed for his draft night decisions. I’m willing to bet that every team executive has at least one pick that he would like a mulligan for. While life, and the NBA, doesn’t allow for such opportunities, we at Hoops Rumors decided it would be fun to give our readers a second take at picking players, complete with the benefit of hindsight.

We are in the process of taking you on a journey back to June of 2003, and revisiting a draft that saw the likes of LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Dwyane Wade, and Chris Bosh available to potentially change the fortunes of a few struggling franchises. Wade was the first of that group to win an NBA championship, though James and Bosh would later join him in Miami and go on to win multiple titles together years later, while Melo is still seeking his first trip to the NBA Finals. Detroit, which owned the No. 2 overall pick that season, chose to go with Darko Milicic, who didn’t work out so well for the Pistons. Not all picks pan out, but that one is especially painful given the talent that the Pistons passed over to select the big man, who owns career averages of 6.0 points and 4.2 rebounds, and has been out of the NBA since making a single appearance for the Celtics back in 2012/13.

We continue our revisionist history with the Magic, who held the No. 15 overall pick that year. Readers, you are now on the clock! Cast your vote for Orlando’s pick and check back Thursday night for the results, as well as to cast your vote for who the Grizzlies will select with the No. 16 overall pick they had acquired from Boston. But don’t limit yourself to a simple button click. Take to the comments section below and share your thoughts on the No. 15 overall pick and why you voted the way that you did.

Previous Picks

  1. Cavaliers: LeBron James
  2. Pistons: Dwyane Wade
  3. Nuggets: Carmelo Anthony
  4. Raptors: Chris Bosh
  5. Heat: David West
  6. Clippers: Kyle Korver
  7. Bulls: Mo Williams
  8. Bucks: Chris Kaman
  9. Knicks: Boris Diaw
  10. Wizards: Kirk Hinrich
  11. Warriors: Jose Calderon
  12. Thunder: Josh Howard
  13. Celtics: Leandro Barbosa
  14. Thunder: Kendrick Perkins
With the No. 15 Overall Pick the Magic Select...
Nick Collison 22.60% (106 votes)
Zaza Pachulia 19.62% (92 votes)
Steve Blake 13.86% (65 votes)
Darko Milicic 7.68% (36 votes)
Mickael Pietrus 7.25% (34 votes)
Luke Ridnour 5.76% (27 votes)
T.J. Ford 5.12% (24 votes)
Matt Bonner 4.48% (21 votes)
Carlos Delfino 3.20% (15 votes)
Willie Green 2.35% (11 votes)
James Jones 1.71% (8 votes)
Jason Kapono 1.49% (7 votes)
Luke Walton 1.07% (5 votes)
Travis Outlaw 0.85% (4 votes)
Jarvis Hayes 0.64% (3 votes)
Sasha Pavlovic 0.64% (3 votes)
Michael Sweetney 0.21% (1 votes)
Marcus Banks 0.21% (1 votes)
Reece Gaines 0.21% (1 votes)
Troy Bell 0.21% (1 votes)
Dahntay Jones 0.21% (1 votes)
Brian Cook 0.21% (1 votes)
Keith Bogans 0.21% (1 votes)
Jerome Beasley 0.21% (1 votes)
Total Votes: 469

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Hoops Rumors Chat Transcript

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

3:00pm: Tristan Thompson has still yet to sign for this season, but his camp is already thinking about next summer. That’s when agent Rich Paul reportedly believes he’ll have three teams waiting to give Thompson the max if he’s once more on the market. That scenario would be in place if Thompson signs his qualifying offer, a short-term discount that could turn out to be the most lucrative path for him in the long run, as I explained amid Tuesday’s news. Meanwhile, the Cavs are moving on with other business, with training camp less than three weeks away, officially signing draft-and-stash prospect Sasha Kaun today and, as Zach Links of Hoops Rumors reported Tuesday, agreeing to add D.J. Stephens to the camp roster.

We can talk about all of that and more in today’s chat. Click here to join!