Hoops Rumors Originals

More Players Become Eligible For Vet Extensions

There’s been a run on veteran extensions of late. Four players have signed such deals within the past six months after only two had signed them since the 2011 lockout that begat the existing collective bargaining agreement. Zach Randolph, Tony Parker, Anderson Varejao and Rudy Gay all agreed to forfeit free agency, where the rules would have allowed them to sign for more money over a greater amount of time. Players who sign veteran extensions can tack no more than three years on their existing deals, and they can earn raises of no more than 4.5%. Free agents can re-sign with their teams for five seasons and raises of up to 7.5%. That’s why LaMarcus Aldridge put an end to extension talk this past summer even as he pledged to remain with the Blazers for the long term. It would harm him financially to sign an extension, and ostensibly, the Blazers would like to keep him for as long as possible. No such restrictions are in place for rookie scale extensions, which is why teams and players continue to strike those deals at a prolific rate.

Randolph, Varejao and Gay fall into the sweet spot that makes veteran extensions, usually anathema for players who seek to maximize their earning potential, advantageous for them. All three are veterans who wouldn’t command the maximum salary in free agency and were on contracts that paid them at or above their market value. There’s no bottom floor for the value of an extension, so Randolph and Gay were free to negotiate within the broad range of their existing player-friendly salaries all the way down to the minimum. Neither was about to sign for the minimum, but both found a middle ground with their teams that saw them agree to pay cuts over the next few years. Varejao’s existing contract pays him a nearly $9.705MM salary this season that was likely in line with what his market value was to have been at the time he signed his extension, which predated his torn Achillies, so the slight raises the extension calls for suit him fine.

Parker is a different case, as he gave up the chance to command a maximum-salary deal in free agency this coming summer for a discount that ties him to the Spurs until he’s 36 years old, meaning he’s unlikely ever to see that maximum money. It was a clear self-sacrifice that owes its only explanation to the point guard’s comfort with the Spurs, and indeed a player’s comfort with his team often helps drive an extension. Varejao has never played for any team other than the Cavs, Randolph has blossomed in Memphis like never before, and the Kings helped revive Gay’s career. Age, which seemingly would have been a motivating factor for Parker not to sign his extension, was conversely a likely reason why Randolph and Varejao signed theirs, since Randolph, 33, and Varejao, 32, probably wouldn’t have merited five-year deals were they to have hit free agency.

The timing of the recent spate of veteran extensions is counterintuitive, since the lockout prevented several would-be extension-eligibles from even considering the idea for much of this year. Players become eligible for veteran extensions three years after they sign their contracts. Those who signed long-term contracts in 2011 became eligible for veteran extensions in 2014, but because the lockout pushed the typical July flurry of signings into December, those players only became eligible this month. Here’s a look at the players who’ve become eligible for extensions in the past few weeks, along with the date that they became eligible:

In addition, Russell Westbrook becomes extension-eligible on January 19th, while Kevin Love can sign an extension starting January 25th. It’s almost certain that neither will agree to one, however, since they’re likely to command maximum salaries in free agency. That’s not the case for a pair of Nuggets who’ll become extension-eligible later this season, with Danilo Gallinari set to cross the threshold on January 25th, and Wilson Chandler poised for extension-eligibility on March 18th. Grizzlies trade candidate Kosta Koufos becomes eligible for an extension on January 25th.

The new group of players eligible for veteran extensions joined fewer than two dozen who had been eligible before December. Here’s the complete list of veteran extension-eligible players as it currently stands, sorted by team. The names from the above list are repeated below and mixed with the names of the players who had already been eligible for veteran extensions:

RealGM was used in the creation of this post.

Hoops Rumors Originals

This week’s original analysis generated by the Hoops Rumors staff..

  • Once, Jeff Green was to have been one of the anchors of a fast-rising Thunder team full of youthful talent.  Now, he’s a trade candidate for the Celtics, as Chuck Myron writes.
  • Eddie Scarito ran down the playing time that this year’s second-rounders are getting.
  • Eddie gave us the 2015/16 salary rankings for shooting guards and point guards.
  • Wondering how the Corey Brewer trade worked financially?  Chuck has you covered.
  • Here’s how you can follow specific players on Hoops Rumors.
  • Chuck hosted the live chat on Christmas Eve.
  • More than 30% of you felt that Josh Smith‘s best fit was in Houston.
  • Look back on all of the trades that have gone down so far this season.

Trade Candidate: Jeff Green

Once, Jeff Green was to have been one of the anchors of a fast-rising Thunder team full of youthful talent. The then-SuperSonics acquired Green the same night that the Celtics took him fifth overall in the 2007 draft, and Seattle paired the 6’9″ combo forward with No. 2 overall pick Kevin Durant. Soon, Russell Westbrook and James Harden followed, but the Thunder traded Green back to the Celtics in 2011. The deal doesn’t receive the caustic criticism that Oklahoma City’s subsequent Harden trade does, but Green has proven an eminently more valuable commodity than Kendrick Perkins, the principal figure headed the other way in that swap.

NBA: New York Knicks at Boston CelticsGreen has never blossomed into the sort of star that Durant, Westbrook and Harden are, as maddening inconsistency has plagued much of his time in Boston. That issue cropped up again this week, as he scored a season-low four points against the Magic on Tuesday before notching 22 points on Friday. Still, Tuesday marked the first time all season that Green had scored in single digits, compared to 14 such occasions last season. His 18.8 points per game are a career high, and they make him far and away Boston’s leading scorer, as he outpaces Jared Sullinger, the team’s No. 2 scorer, by 5.5 PPG. Green is putting up that number on almost precisely as many shot attempts per night as he saw last season, when he scored 16.9 PPG. It’s an improvement that seems chiefly the result of career bests in free throws attempted per game (4.7) and 83.5% free-throw shooting percentage, plus, as Basketball-Reference shooting data shows, similar gains in his mid-range shooting. He’s shooting more three-pointers than ever while making only 32.6%, so correction in that area would only enhance his best season to date.

The Celtics are looking for him to create offense now more than ever, and his productive response to that responsibility adds up to fortunate timing for the David Falk client, who can hit free agency at season’s end if he turns down a $9.2MM player option. That decision isn’t necessarily a slam dunk even if Green keeps playing as well as he is, since executives with rosters that aren’t quite as barren as the one the Celtics have will no doubt have reservations about whether Green can produce at the same efficiency without the ball in his hands as much. This season’s 15.8 PER is his best figure to date, and it’s the only time his PER has been better than 15.0, the mark of an average player. Those same executives who’ll have those questions if he hits free agency this summer are surely asking them now as Green appears the next most likely pillar to go via trade in Boston’s reconstruction.

The Lakers reportedly made an offer to the Celtics that would have sent Green as well as Rajon Rondo to L.A., and the Clippers, Pelicans and Grizzlies have apparently asked the C’s about their willingness to trade Green. The report about that trio of teams, which said Boston wasn’t interested in moving Green, conflicts with an earlier dispatch indicating that the Celtics were shopping him in hopes of landing a first-round pick. It’s reminiscent of the mixed messages that emanated from Boston for more than a year leading up to the Rondo trade, as president of basketball operations Danny Ainge batted down persistent Rondo rumors until one of them finally came true. Green seems an odd fit for the Celtics in the long term, since he’s 28 and he’ll have the chance to leave as a free agent years before the team figures to have a reasonable shot at contending again. There’s reason for loyalty to come into play, as the Celtics lavished him with a four-year, $36.24MM deal the summer after he missed the entire 2011/12 with a heart ailment, and Green has spoken of his affection for the team in refuting rumors that he wanted out. Still, Falk is not known to advise his clients to make concessions to any team.

The Celtics can capitalize on Green’s sterling performance this season with a trade that adds to their stockpile of draft picks or with a swap that packages Green and some of those picks for a star. It seems as though the route of acquiring additional picks would be easier for Boston to pursue, given Ainge’s inability to find a star to pair with Rondo, but the Celtics, in line to make as many as 11 extra picks between now and 2018, aren’t hurting for draft assets.

An alternative path, which would involve the Celtics receiving recent draft picks on team-friendly contracts rather than future picks, would be tough to swing with the Clippers, Grizzlies or Pelicans. There’s little budding talent on any of those rosters, save for Anthony Davis, whom New Orleans won’t be giving up. The Lakers have Julius Randle, this year’s No. 7 overall pick, and perhaps it would be somewhat fitting if Ainge gave up Green in a deal that brought back another player with a medical question mark, as Randle is expected to miss the season with a broken leg. Yet the Lakers apparently refused to part with Randle in a Rondo trade, so it would be tough to see the Lakers giving him up for Green.

Green is chiefly playing small forward these days, and there’s no shortage of teams that need a starting-caliber solution at that position, just as there’s no shortage of small forwards in Boston, where James Young, this year’s 17th overall pick, is buried on the bench. The Suns, Hawks, Nets, Hornets, Bulls, Pistons and Sixers, as well as the teams mentioned above, would all probably count Green as an upgrade over the players they have at the position now. Ultimately, there’s a strong chance that where he ends up this season will come down to the willingness of one of those teams to part with a first-round pick, and a reasonably attractive one at that. Teams have shown a reluctance to part with first-rounders at the trade deadline the past couple of years, but given the seller’s market at Green’s position and his performance this season, it wouldn’t be at all surprising to see one change hands in exchange for him soon.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Playing Time For 2014 Second-Rounders

The stock value of the highly-touted 2014 NBA draft class has taken a dip thanks to numerous injuries and the overall underwhelming play of the group. Hoops Rumors’ Chuck Myron previously looked at the playing time that the first round draft picks were receiving as rookies, which saw only five out of the 30 opening-round selections logging more than 20 minutes on a nightly basis.

This lack of playing time holds true for the men selected in the second round of the draft as well. Only one player, K.J. McDaniels, is logging more than 20 minutes per contest, but in all fairness he is doing so for the Sixers, who are more about rebuilding through the draft than they are about trying to snag a playoff berth this season. But the early-season success of McDaniels doesn’t necessarily represent a huge surprise, and is something that I predicted in his pre-draft prospect profile. If McDaniels’ solid play continues he will likely make the Sixers regret only inking him to a one-year deal, setting the rookie up to become a hot commodity as a restricted free agent after the season.

McDaniels’ agent Mark Bartelstein will also be able to cash in on the decision to pass on Philadelphia’s original four-year offer. In regards to his client signing a one-year deal, Bartelstein had said, “The 76ers have a philosophy that they’re adhering to, and we totally respect that, but it doesn’t fit for K.J. and us. I just totally disagree with the idea of doing a four-year deal that includes a structure of two non-guaranteed years. We think K.J. is going to be a good player, and it came down to doing a one-year deal and letting the market determine his value. There’s no hard feelings. The Sixers’ philosophy has worked for them. It just doesn’t work for us.”

Out of the 30 second-rounders chosen this year, 13 of them either didn’t sign NBA contracts or make it out of training camp on an NBA roster. Though there are some players like Thanasis Antetokounmpo and Semaj Christon who opted to head to the D-League, and others such as Louis Labeyrie and Vasilije Micic are considered “draft and stash” prospects who will play overseas for the time being. A number of the others will pin their NBA hopes on potentially snagging a 10-day contract after January 5th when the league begins allowing such arrangements, though most will more than likely have to wait until the Summer League begins to try and rekindle any NBA interest in their services.

Here’s a look at how many minutes each second-round pick is playing, ranked by minutes per game, with their respective draft positions in parentheses and additional notes where appropriate:

More than 20 minutes per game

Between 15-20 minutes per game

  • No players

Between 10-15 minutes per game

  • Spencer Dinwiddie, Pistons (No. 38) — 12.4: Has only appeared in seven games
  • Jerami Grant, Sixers (No. 39) — 12.3: Has appeared in 12 games
  • Nick Johnson, Rockets (No. 42) — 11.1: Has appeared in 15 games
  • Jordan Clarkson, Lakers (No. 46) — 11.0: Has appeared in 15 games
  • Cory Jefferson, Nets (No. 60) — 10.4: Has appeared in 14 games
  • Joe Harris, Cavs (No. 33) — 10.3: Has appeared in 23 games

Between 5-10 minutes per game

  • Cameron Bairstow, Bulls (No. 49) — 10.4: Has only appeared in seven games
  • Johnny O’Bryant III, Bucks (No. 36) — 8.5: Has only appeared in four games
  • Cleanthony Early, Knicks (No. 34) — 7.7: Has only appeared in seven games, Out for at least a month due to injury
  • Russ Smith, Pelicans (No. 47) — 6.5: Has only appeared in four games
  • Markel Brown, Nets (No. 44) — 5.4: Has only appeared in seven games

Fewer than 5 minutes per game

Haven’t appeared in an NBA game yet

  • Damien Inglis, Bucks (No. 31) — Out indefinitely with a broken right foot

Not on an NBA roster

  • Thanasis Antetokounmpo (No. 51)
  • Alec Brown (No. 50)
  • Semaj Christon, (No. 55)
  • Nemanja Dangubic (No. 54)
  • DeAndre Daniels (No. 37)
  • Alessandro Gentile (No. 53)
  • Nikola Jokic (No. 41)
  • Louis Labeyrie (No. 57)
  • Jordan McRae (No. 58)
  • Vasilije Micic (No. 52)
  • Lamar Patterson (No. 48)
  • Walter Tavares (No. 43)
  • Xavier Thames (No. 59)

2015/16 Salary Rankings: Shooting Guards

Hoops Rumors is in the process of ranking the cap hit for each NBA player by position. I previously ran down the point guard, shooting guard, small forward, power forward, and center salaries for the 2014/15 season. I’ve also begun looking ahead to the 2015/16 campaign with a rundown of the cap hits for the point guards. Next on the agenda will be a look forward at the salaries for shooting guards already inked to deals for next season.

All told, NBA teams have committed a total of $305,799,701 in cap hits so far for next season to the men charged with lighting up the scoreboards around the league. The average hit for the two spot so far for 2015/16 is a respectable $4,853,964, with Kobe Bryant of the Lakers topping the list with an impressive $25MM coming his way. Though it should be noted that the list and rankings will change greatly depending on how the free agent market develops next summer.

I also should add that teams won’t necessarily pay out every dollar listed here. There are quite a few players who have non-guaranteed or partially guaranteed contracts. Some of those players will be sweating it out until the January 2015 deadline. That’s when teams must waive players with no specific guarantee date written into their contracts to avoid having to guarantee their salaries for the rest of that season.

Most salaries align with cap hits, but that’s not the case for players like Jeremy Lin , who’s receiving close to $15MM from the Lakers during the 2014/15 season even though his cap hit was little more than half that amount, because of the contract he signed through the Gilbert Arenas Provision. In addition, incentive clauses that a player either triggers or fails to meet can leave a player with more or less money than his cap hit reflects. Still, the purpose of this list is to show the relative pay scale by position, which is why all contracts are included in this post.

The league’s shooting guards are listed below, in descending order of cap hit for next season:

      1. Kobe Bryant (Lakers) $25,000,000
      2. Dwyane Wade (Heat) $16,125,000 [Player Option]
      3. James Harden (Rockets) $15,756,438
      4. Eric Gordon (Pelicans) $15,514,031 [Player Option]
      5. Klay Thompson (Warriors) $15,501,000
      6. Andre Iguodala (Warriors) $11,710,456
      7. DeMar DeRozan (Raptors) $10.1MM
      8. Alec Burks (Jazz) $9,463,484
      9. Lance Stephenson (Hornets) $9MM
      10. Monta Ellis (Mavs) $8,720,000
      11. O.J. Mayo (Bucks) $8MM
      12. Avery Bradley (Celtics) $7,730,337
      13. Arron Afflalo (Nuggets) $7.5MM [Player Option]
      14. Kevin Martin (Wolves) $7,085,000
      15. J.J. Redick (Clippers) $7,085,000
      16. J.R. Smith (Knicks) $6,399,750 [Player Option]
      17. Jodie Meeks (Pistons) $6,270,000
      18. Kyle Korver (Hawks) $5,746,479
      19. Bradley Beal (Wizards) $5,694,674
      20. Courtney Lee (Grizzlies) $5,675,000
      21. Victor Oladipo (Magic) $5,192,520
      22. Tony Allen (Grizzles) $5,168,539
      23. Dion Waiters (Cavs) $5,138,430
      24. Corey Brewer (Rockets) $4,905,000 [Player Option]
      25. Ben Gordon (Magic) $4.5MM
      26. C.J. Miles (Pacers) $4,392,225
      27. Jared Dudley (Bucks) $4,250,000 [Early Termination Option]
      28. Vince Carter (Grizzlies) $4,088,019
      29. Bojan Bogdanovic (Nets) $3,425,510
      30. Evan Turner (Celtics) $3,425,510
      31. Quincy Pondexter (Grizzlies) $3,382,023
      32. Anthony Morrow (Thunder) $3,344,000
      33. Ben McLemore (Kings) $3,156,600
      34. Randy Foye (Nuggets) $3,135,000
      35. Jeremy Lamb (Thunder) $3,034,356
      36. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope (Pistons) $2,891,760
      37. Nik Stauskas (Kings) $2,869,440
      38. C.J. McCollum (Blazers) $2,525,160
      39. Evan Fournier (Magic) $2,288,205
      40. Tony Wroten (Sixers) $2,179,353
      41. Kent Bazemore (Hawks) $2MM
      42. Giannis Antetokounmpo (Bucks) $1,953,960
      43. James Young  (Celtics) $1,749,840
      44. Zoran Dragic (Suns) $1,706,250
      45. Gary Harris (Nuggets) $1,587,480
      46. Jordan Adams (Grizzles) $1,404,600
      47. Alan Anderson (Nets) $1,333,484 [Player Option]
      48. Brandon Rush (Warriors) $1,270,964 [Player Option]
      49. Reggie Bullock (Clippers) $1,252,440
      50. Andre Roberson (Thunder) $1,210,800
      51. P.J. Hairston (Hornets) $1,201,440
      52. Archie Goodwin (Suns) $1,160,160
      53. C.J. Wilcox (Clippers) $1,159,680
      54. Garrett Temple (Wizards) $1,100,602
      55. E’Twaun Moore (Bulls) $1,015,421
      56. Toure’ Murry (Jazz) $1MM
      57. Allen Crabbe (Blazers) $947,276
      58. Troy Daniels (Rockets) $947,276
      59. Ricky Ledo (Mavs) $947,276
      60. Hollis Thompson (Sixers) $947,276
      61. Markel Brown (Nets) $845,059
      62. Joe Harris (Cavs) $845,059
      63. Nick Johnson (Rockets) $845,059

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

Following Specific Players On Hoops Rumors

The majority of players who were signed this past offseason became eligible to be traded on December 15th. This will pave the way for numerous potential deals between now and the February trade deadline. In addition to methods of keeping track of your favorite teams as they continue to mold their rosters, Hoops Rumors also provides ways to easily follow the latest on all of your favorite players. If you want to stay up to date on Ray Allen‘s or Jermaine O’Neal‘s continued free agency, you can find Allen’s page right here and  O’Neal’s here. For intel on where a potential trade candidate like Deron Williams might end up, go here.

Every player we’ve written about has his own rumors page. You can find any player by using our search box (located in the right sidebar); by clicking his tag at the bottom of a post in which he’s discussed; or, by simply typing his name in your address bar after hoopsrumors.com, substituting dashes for spaces. For example, Allen’s page is hoopsrumors.com/ray-allen.

You can also set up an RSS feed for any of our player pages by adding /feed to the end of the page URL, like this: hoopsrumors.com/ray-allen/feed. Entering that URL into the reader of your choice should enable you to get updates whenever we write about Allen. It works for teams, too. If you’re a Mavericks fan, you can enter hoopsrumors.com/dallas-mavericks/feed into your reader and stay on top of all the latest from Dallas.

In addition to players and teams, there are a number of other subjects you can track by clicking on the tags that we use at the bottom of posts. You can keep tabs on news related to next year’s draft right here. Items related to the NBA D-League, including assignments and recalls, can be found on this rumors page or in our tracker as well. Any news that has to do with potential rises in the salary cap for next year and beyond can be found here. Again, you can set up a feed with any of these pages by adding /feed to the end of the URL.

You can also follow any specific player or team by using the free Trade Rumors app for iOS and Android devices. The Trade Rumors app brings together content from our three sites: MLB Trade Rumors, Hoops Rumors, and Pro Football Rumors. You can easily scroll left to right and click on the image of the article you want to read. The Trade Rumors app is highly customizable. You can add feeds for any of the 92 MLB, NBA, and NFL teams, as well as for any of the thousands of players in our archives, by using the settings icon up top for iOS and the pencil icon up top for Android. You can create a multi-sport experience tailored to your specific interests, or you can limit your app entirely to one sport by removing the others.

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

2015/16 Salary Rankings: Point Guards

Hoops Rumors is in the process of ranking the cap hit for each NBA player by position. I previously ran down the point guard, shooting guard, small forward, power forward, and center salaries for the 2014/15 season. Next on the agenda will be a look forward at the salaries for point guards for the 2015/16 campaign.

All told, NBA teams have committed a total of $364,309,784 in cap hits so far for next season to the men who facilitate the offenses around the league. The average hit for the one spot so far for next season is a respectable $6,281,203, with Chris Paul of the Clippers topping the list for the second straight year with an impressive $21,468,696 coming his way. Though it should be noted that the list and rankings will change greatly depending on how the free agent market develops next summer.

It should also be noted that teams won’t necessarily pay out every dollar listed here. There are quite a few players who have non-guaranteed or partially guaranteed contracts. Some of those players will be sweating it out until the January 2015 deadline. That’s when teams must waive players with no specific guarantee date written into their contracts to avoid having to guarantee their salaries for the rest of that season.

Most salaries align with cap hits, but that’s not the case for players like Jeremy Lin , who’s receiving close to $15MM from the Lakers during the 2014/15 season even though his cap hit was little more than half that amount, because of the contract he signed through the Gilbert Arenas Provision. In addition, incentive clauses that a player either triggers or fails to meet can leave a player with more or less money than his cap hit reflects. Still, the purpose of this list is to show the relative pay scale by position, which is why all contracts are included in this post.

The league’s point guards are listed below, in descending order of cap hit for next season:

    1. Chris Paul (Clippers) $21,468,696
    2. Deron Williams (Nets) $21,042,800
    3. Derrick Rose (Bulls) $20,093,064
    4. Russell Westbrook (Thunder) $16,744,218
    5. Kyrie Irving (Cavs) $15,856,500
    6. John Wall (Wizards) $15,851,950
    7. Eric Bledsoe (Suns) $13,500,000
    8. Tony Parker (Spurs) $13,437,500
    9. Ricky Rubio (Wolves) $12.7MM
    10. Ty Lawson (Nuggets) $12,404,595
    11. Kyle Lowry (Raptors) $12MM
    12. Kemba Walker (Hornets) $12MM
    13. Stephen Curry (Warriors) $11,370,786
    14. Jrue Holiday (Pelicans) $10,595,507
    15. Mike Conley (Grizzlies) $9,388,426
    16. Brandon Jennings (Pistons) $8,344,479
    17. George Hill (Pacers) $8MM
    18. Jeff Teague (Hawks) $8MM
    19. Goran Dragic (Suns) $7,500,000 [Player Option]
    20. Jose Calderon (Knicks) $7,402,812
    21. Isaiah Thomas (Suns) $6,912,869
    22. Greivis Vasquez (Raptors) $6.6MM
    23. Jarrett Jack (Nets) $6.3MM
    24. Shaun Livingston (Warriors) $5,543,725
    25. Darren Collison (Kings) $5,013,559
    26. Mario Chalmers (Heat) $4.3MM
    27. Damian Lillard (Blazers) $4,236,287
    28. Devin Harris (Mavs) $4,053,446
    29. Raymond Felton (Mavs) $3,950,313 [Player Option]
    30. Dante Exum (Jazz) $3,777,720
    31. Patrick Mills (Spurs) $3,578,947
    32. Marcus Smart (Celtics) $3,431,040
    33. D.J. Augustin (Pistons) $3MM
    34. Jerryd Bayless (Bucks) $3MM
    35. Kirk Hinrich (Bulls) $2,854,940 [Player Option]
    36. Brian Roberts (Hornets) $2,854,940
    37. Luke Ridnour (Magic) $2,750,000
    38. Trey Burke (Jazz) $2,658,240
    39. Elfrid Payton (Magic) $2,505,720
    40. Shelvin Mack (Hawks) $2,433,333
    41. Michael Carter-Williams (Sixers) $2,399,040
    42. Steve Blake (Blazers) $2,170,465 [Player Option]
    43. Jordan Farmar (Clippers) $2,170,465 [Player Option]
    44. Ramon Sessions (Kings) $2,170,465
    45. Beno Udrih (Grizzlies) $2,170,465
    46. Zach LaVine (Wolves) $2,148,360
    47.  Dennis Schröder (Hawks) $1,763,400
    48. Pablo Prigioni (Knicks) $1,734,572
    49. Tyler Ennis (Suns) $1,662,360
    50. Shabazz Napier (Heat) $1,294,440
    51. Isaiah Canaan (Rockets) $947,276
    52. Ray McCallum (Kings) $947,276
    53. Phil Pressey  (Celtics) $947,276
    54. Nate Wolters (Bucks) $947,276
    55. Jordan Clarkson (Lakers) $845,059
    56. Spencer Dinwiddie (Pistons) $845,059
    57. Erick Green (Nuggets) $845,059
    58. Russ Smith (Pelicans) $845,059

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

Poll: Best Fit For Josh Smith?

Pistons coach and president of basketball operations Stan Van Gundy pulled quite a stunner on Monday when he waived Josh Smith. Smith won’t come off waivers until Wednesday, but it’s likely that he won’t be without a team for long. Numerous franchises have reportedly expressed interest in signing Smith, including the Clippers, Rockets, Mavericks, Heat, Lakers, Grizzlies, and Kings. While Houston is currently rumored to be the favorite to obtain Smith’s services, the veteran forward is apparently in high demand despite only averaging 13.1 points on 39.1% shooting this season, with both numbers being below his career averages of 15.4 PPG and 45.6%.

The competition to ink Smith is most certainly due to the price tag he can be had for, which will be more than likely for the league-minimum salary, or not much more than that, which is all that most of the teams linked to Smith have to offer the big man. Detroit had garnered little to no interest in its efforts to deal Smith prior to its decision to release him, when his price tag would have been $13.5MM for this season, and whose contract ran for two more seasons at the same rate.

While Smith was clearly not performing up to his contract this year, which according to Hoops Rumors’ 2014/15 Salary Rankings, was good for the ninth highest cap hit amongst small forwards in the league, he’ll be a bargain at around the league-minimum for whichever franchise signs him. But which team would be the best fit for Smith?

One of the biggest issues with Smith’s production in Detroit was its insistence on trying to make him a small forward in an oversize frontcourt, a spot that Smith clearly was not suited to play. On his next team, if his coaches are wise, he’ll more than likely go back to his natural power forward position, though he can also provide some minutes at the three as well in a pinch.

Smith has been a starter for 758 of the 781 career games that he has appeared in, though this trend isn’t necessarily going to continue with his next team. Here’s a quick rundown of the starting power forwards on the teams reported to be in the hunt for Smith:

The quandaries for Smith when making the decision on which team to sign with is how to best market himself for next season and which circumstance would allow him to best rebuild his value. Does he try and chase a ring with a contending team? Or does he try to maximize his playing time, as well as have the best opportunity to put up numbers? Out of the teams listed, Smith would only be a clear upgrade as a starter for the Kings, Heat, and Lakers. Miami is the only one of those three that has a realistic shot at the playoffs, mainly because the Heat reside in the much weaker Eastern Conference, which should give Pat Riley‘s squad the edge amongst that group if Smith chooses the playing time route.

If Smith wants to join a contending team, as has been mentioned as being one of his criteria, then relocating to Texas may be his wisest decision. Smith is close friends with Dwight Howard and Rajon Rondo, who have each campaigned for their respective teams to ink the veteran, and joining the Rockets or the Mavs would certainly be appealing for him as a result of those relationships. Both of those franchises have realistic shots to go deep into the playoffs, but Houston would also offer Smith a much better opportunity to log significant minutes with Motiejunas currently penciled in as the starter.

So where do you think the best fit for Smith to land would be? Cast your votes and sound off below in the comments section to expand on why you believe this would be the best situation for Smith.

Which Team Is The Best Fit For Josh Smith?
Rockets 29.93% (695 votes)
Lakers 19.55% (454 votes)
Mavericks 16.58% (385 votes)
Heat 14.04% (326 votes)
Kings 7.45% (173 votes)
Another Team 5.73% (133 votes)
Clippers 4.18% (97 votes)
Grizzlies 2.54% (59 votes)
Total Votes: 2,322

2014/15 NBA Trades

The 2014/15 regular season saw three trades go down within the first two months. More will surely follow, and as the movement continues and the details stack up, we’ll track it all in this post. As we did with the trades from this past offseason and the 2013/14 season, we’ll log all NBA trades as they become official, updating this post with each move.

This post is a simple, easy-to-digest account of the assets that each team acquired in every swap this season, with a link to a full story on each trade embedded in the date. For up-to-the-minute news on trades as well as other roster moves as the offseason continues, follow our transactions-only feeds via RSS and Twitter.

Bookmark this page and refer to it throughout the season, or find it anytime on the right sidebar under “Hoops Rumors Features.” The trades are listed in reverse chronological order, with the latest on top:

February 19th

February 19th

  • The Rockets get K.J. McDaniels.
  • The Sixers get Isaiah Canaan and the less favorable of Minnesota’s and Denver’s 2015 second-round picks.

February 19th

February 19th

  • The Rockets get Pablo Prigioni.
  • The Knicks get Alexey Shved, Houston’s 2017 second-round pick and Houston’s 2019 second-round pick.

February 19th

February 19th

  • The Pelicans get Ish Smiththe rights to Latavious Williams, Philadelphia’s 2015 second-round pick (top-55 protected) and $801K cash.
  • The Thunder get the less favorable of Sacramento’s 2016 second-round pick (top-55 protected) and New Orleans’ 2016 second-round pick.

February 19th

February 19th

February 19th

February 19th

February 19th

  • The Sixers get JaVale McGeethe rights to Chu Chu Maduabum and Oklahoma City’s 2015 first-round pick (top-18 protected).
  • The Nuggets get Cenk Akyol.

February 19th

February 10th

  • The Timberwolves get Adreian Payne.
  • The Hawks get Minnesota’s 2017 first-round pick (top-14 protected).

February 10th

January 15th

January 13th

January 12th

January 9th

  • The Suns get Brandan Wright.
  • The Celtics get Minnesota’s 2015 first-round pick (top-12 protected).

January 7th

  • The Sixers get Jared Cunningham, $300K cash and the rights to Cenk Akyol.
  • The Clippers get the rights to Serhiy Lishchuk.

January 7th

  • The Cavaliers get Timofey Mozgov and the less favorable of Chicago’s 2015 second-round pick and Portland’s 2015 second-round pick.
  • The Nuggets get Memphis’ 2015 first-round pick if it falls anywhere from No. 6 to No. 14 and Oklahoma City’s 2015 first-round pick (top-18 protected).

January 5th

December 24th

December 19th

  • The Rockets get Corey Brewer and Alexey Shved.
  • The Timberwolves get Troy Daniels, Sacramento’s 2015 second-round pick as long as it’s within the top 49 picks (via Rockets), Houston’s 2016 second-round pick (top-45 protected), and $1MM cash (via Rockets).
  • The Sixers get Ronny Turiaf, Houston’s 2015 second-round pick, and the rights to Serhiy Lishchuk.

December 18th

December 11th

  • The Sixers get Andrei Kirilenko, Jorge Gutierrez, Brooklyn’s 2020 second-round pick, the right to swap Cleveland’s 2018 second-round pick with Brooklyn’s 2018 second-round pick, and $1MM cash.
  • The Nets get Brandon Davies.

Trade archives:

How The Corey Brewer Trade Worked Financially

The Rockets, Wolves and Sixers appear to have pulled off a rare feat with their trade Friday night. Most NBA teams spend the majority of the season over the cap, so swaps that involve as many as three teams, as Friday’s trade did, usually need to have at least part of the transaction fall within the matching guidelines the NBA sets forth for “simultaneous” trades. Occasionally, as with the Rajon Rondo trade, some elements of deals are “non-simultaneous,” allowing teams to use and create trade exceptions, as the Celtics did last week. But ordinarily at least some salary matching has to come into play. Not so with the Corey Brewer trade.

Friday’s trade allowed the teams to use trade exceptions, the minimum-salary exception, and cap space to avoid salary matching. The trade exception that gained the most notoriety was the one the Rockets used to absorb Brewer. Houston had reportedly been targeting Brewer for several weeks as a player that it wanted to absorb into that exception, which GM Daryl Morey and his staff appeared eager to use. It was an asset left over from the Jeremy Lin trade that allowed the team to trade for a player, or players, who made up to $100K more than Lin’s $8,374,646 cap hit this season. The Rockets had until the one-year anniversary of the Lin trade to use it, but they chose not to hesitate quite so long.

Brewer’s $4,702,500 salary fit within that exception, but it left a sizable chunk. The deadline for the remainder of the exception didn’t change; Houston could have saved it up until the Lin trade anniversary. However, using the rest of it before the end of December 19th meant the team could flip not just Brewer, but another player in a trade at the league’s February 19th deadline that aggregates their salaries, since there’s a two-month window following a trade in which teams may not aggregate the salaries of the newly acquired players in a subsequent trade. Aggregating player salaries is similar to but not quite the same as packaging players in a trade, and there are ways to package players without aggregating their salaries. However, it’s complicated and often difficult to do so, so Morey and company decided to avert that potential stumbling block.

The Sixers under GM Sam Hinkie have proven willing participants when other teams need help making a transaction, as long as Hinkie and company can reap at least one second-round pick from the affair, as they did in this trade. Morey, Hinkie’s former boss, found a player on his protege’s roster who both fit within the remainder of the Lin exception and gives the Rockets another option at backup point guard, the role Lin had played for the team prior to the trade that allowed the Rockets to create the exception in the first place. Hinkie allowed Morey to fold Alexey Shved‘s $3,282,057 salary into the exception along with Brewer, leaving but a $390,089 stub that’s worth less than the rookie minimum-salary, meaning the Rockets have, for all practical purposes, used up the exception.

In so doing, Hinkie also helped facilitate another three-way trade that involved the Timberwolves, just as he did when Minnesota sent Kevin Love to Cleveland, which happened to have been the deal that brought Shved to Philadelphia. This time, the Sixers took in Ronny Turiaf, who’s out for the season and whom the team reportedly intends to waive. His $1.5MM salary represented a sunk cost for the Timberwolves, since he’s on an expiring contract and isn’t expected to be healthy enough to play until his contract expires at season’s end. However, he comes as a savings to Philadelphia, since he makes less than half of what Shved does. So, the deal represents a net gain of cap space for the Sixers, even though that might be a wash if Philadelphia falls short of the league’s $56.759MM team salary floor and has to distribute the difference among the players on its roster at season’s end. It matters not for salary matching purposes that Shved’s pay is so much greater than Turiaf’s, nor that the Sixers didn’t have any trade exceptions. Salary matching and trade exceptions are the concern of teams over the cap, a threshold that Philadelphia is nowhere near.

The Timberwolves wound up the beneficiary of Philadelphia’s cap space and Houston’s trade exceptions in that they allowed Minnesota to create new trade exceptions for Brewer and Turiaf, each one equivalent to their respective salaries. Wolves coach/president of basketball operations Flip Saunders couldn’t otherwise have shed so much salary while taking in only the $816,482 one-year veteran’s minimum salary of Troy Daniels, whom Minnesota can accommodate via the minimum-salary exception. Conversely, the Rockets created a new trade exception equal to the salary for Daniels. It’s not nearly as valuable as the Lin exception that Houston employed, but it’s an asset nonetheless.

Saunders also accomplished another order of business in this trade. The team had been carrying 16 players based on a hardship exception to the 15-man regular season roster limit that the league granted because of the prolonged absences of Ricky Rubio, Nikola Pekovic, Kevin Martin and Turiaf. The Wolves had used the ability to add a 16th player to sign Jeff Adrien. Relinquishing Turiaf meant that the team would no longer be eligible for that extra roster spot, which requires that no fewer than four players be expected to miss a significant amount of time. So the trade, in which the Wolves gave up two players and acquired one, allowed Saunders to remove Turiaf’s contract, which he was otherwise prepared to waive, without Turiaf’s salary sticking on Minnesota’s books and without having to relinquish Adrien, who rebounded at an impressive rate in nine games prior to the trade, racking up 4.6 boards in just 11.6 minutes per game. That translates to 14.2 rebounds per 36 minutes.

The deal didn’t work perfectly for the Rockets, who wound up having to release Francisco Garcia to satisfy the 15-man limit. Garcia apparently refused to go to the Wolves, as was his right, since he held a de facto no-trade clause by virtue of having re-signed with the Rockets to a one-year contract in the offseason. Agreeing to the trade would have nixed his Bird rights, but those are gone anyway, since the right to veto a trade didn’t give him the right to block Houston from waiving him. His departure completes a trifecta of sorts for the Rockets, who handed out three fully guaranteed one-year contracts for the minimum salary in the offseason only to waive all three. Those deals were with Ish Smith, who’s now a member of the Thunder, Adrien, whom Houston let go at the end of the preseason, and Garcia.

Plenty was familiar about the Brewer trade, which involved former Rockets cohorts Morey and Hinkie, and Saunders, who’s twice involved the Sixers in three-team deals in the space of four months. Yet this was an unusual trade that required flexibility and creativity on all sides. Now, it’s up to Morey to see whether Brewer and Shved work better as complements to Houston’s rotation or as fodder for the acquisition of a third star player, Saunders to use his new trade exceptions in a way that furthers Minnesota’s rebuilding efforts, and Hinkie to continue to seek ways to maximize Philly’s league-leading cap space and turn his stockpile of second-round picks into better than second-rate assets.

Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ and the Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.