Odds & Ends: Dwight, Shved, Hornets, Boykins

Dwight Howard opened up this weekend about his parting with the Magic, in advance of Orlando's meeting with the Lakers last night, and he talked about his willingness to change teams if that's what the pursuit of a championship requires. John Denton of Magic.com interprets that comment to mean D12 might be willing to leave the Lakers as a free agent next summer, but it seems more logical that Howard was referring to his departure from the Magic. Either way, there's plenty of room for pessimism about this year's Laker team, which takes an 8-9 record on the road for seven of its next eight games. Here's more from around the Association:

  • Injuries to other Timberwolves have thrust rookie Alexey Shved into a prominent role, and the Russian guard is surprised at how quickly NBA success has come, writes Ray Richardson of the St. Paul Pioneer Press.
  • Wolves coach Rick Adelman believes Shved will eventually become a mainstay in the backcourt alongside Ricky Rubio, as Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune documents. 
  • HoopsWorld's Steve Kyler, who noted earlier that the Hornets are not shopping Ryan Anderson, says the team isn't looking for an immediate solution to its troubles this season, preferring an approach predicated on draft picks and cap space (Twitter link).
  • Earl Boykinslinked to the Mavericks last week before they signed Derek Fisher, has been working out in Denver and is in great shape as he awaits interest from teams, according to Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link).
  • DaJuan Summers, who last played in the NBA with the Hornets in 2011/12 and was a training camp invitee of the Bobcats, has signed to play with the Maine Red Claws of the D-League, tweets Chris Forsberg of ESPNBoston.com, who notes the Red Claws let go of Brian Cusworth.

Lakers May Pursue Ryan Anderson In Gasol Deal

MONDAY, 6:44pm: The Hornets say they don’t have any interest in trading Anderson, tweets HoopsWorld’s Steve Kyler, who adds that the team is “absolutely thrilled” with him. Anderson says he’s enjoying New Orleans, and is confident the team will improve once Eric Gordon and Anthony Davis are back (Twitter link).

SATURDAY, 4:27pm: Lakers coach Mike D’Antoni‘s desire for a stretch four who can make three-pointers and leave the post work to Dwight Howard is what’s prompting the team to consider trading Pau Gasol, and the “name that keeps coming up” is Ryan Anderson, according to Mitch Lawrence of the New York Daily News. Anderson, who played with Howard in Orlando, precisely fits the definition of a stretch four, but he’s ineligible to be traded until later in the season, since he inked a new deal this offseason in a sign-and-trade transaction that sent him to the Hornets.

A move wouldn’t be imminent anyway, since the Lakers are waiting to see how the team runs with a healthy Steve Nash, Lawrence writes. Most offseason signees are eligible to be traded beginning December 15th, but because Anderson received a raise of better than 20% and re-signed via Bird Rights with the Magic, who were over the cap, I believe he can’t be traded until January 15th, even though he went to New Orleans in the sign-and-trade. According to Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ, the restrictions apply to the first trade after the sign-and-trade, and not the sign-and-trade itself.

Either way, the Hornets will be free to trade Anderson at some point this season, one that hasn’t gone as planned for New Orleans, with injuries to Eric Gordon and Anthony Davis. Anderson has been a bright spot, as most of his numbers have been largely on par with those from last season, when he won the Most Improved Player of the Year award. His field goal percentage and three-point percentages are both at career highs this year, even as he’s taking more shots than ever.

Still, with a healthy Davis, who seems better suited at power forward than center, clearly the centerpiece of the team, it’s difficult to see where Anderson and his four-year, $34MM contract fit on the Hornets. Gasol, a more natural fit at center than Davis, could make sense, even with Robin Lopez around. New Orleans would have to give up much more salary to absorb Gasol’s $19MM deal, however.

The Lakers have also been linked to Josh Smith, but Hawks GM Danny Ferry, who cleared a lot of cap room this past summer, is reluctant to bring aboard Gasol’s sizable contract even though it expires after next season, Lawrence reports.

Lakers Recall Robert Sacre

The Lakers have recalled Robert Sacre from the D-League, according to Arash Markazi of ESPNLosAngeles.com (Twitter link). The 7'0" rookie averaged 7.7 points and 9.7 rebounds in 27.0 minutes over three games with the Los Angeles D-Fenders after being sent down on Wednesday.

Sacre, taken with the final pick of this summer's NBA draft, has appeared in eight games for the big club so far this season, but he's totaled just 19 minutes and scored only two points. He had a much greater impact in the preseason, when he started in place of an injured Dwight Howard and put up 6.5 PPG and 4.8 RPG in 24.7 minutes of work per night.

The Lakers still have fellow rookie and second-round pick Darius Johnson-Odom assigned to the D-Fenders, as our list of this year's D-League comings and goings shows. Players with two or fewer years of experience can be shuttled back and forth as often as their teams like.

Odds & Ends: Allen, Wizards, Gasol, Blazers

Monday afternoon linkage..

  • Despite their offseason additions, it's clear that the Celtics are still missing Ray Allen, Shams Charania of RealGM writes.  The C's have been careful not to burden Jason Terry with the responsibility of being Allen's replacement, but it's clear that he falls short in areas where Allen would shine.  “It’s obvious they miss Allen. His shooting, his scoring. Terry is not the consistent shooter Ray was," one longtime advance scout and former assistant coach said.
  • Wizards owner Ted Leonsis wrote an open letter to fans expressing support for the team's young players on his personal blog.  While Leonsis says the club will look into making trades in order to help the club improve, he says the team "also must develop cohesion, chemistry and structure around a system with so many new and young players in the rotation."
  • One hopeful Heat fan asked Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel if Miami could swing a trade for the Lakers' Pau Gasol.  Such a deal would require Chris Bosh to make the number work and Bosh has proved to be far more willing to play the center position than Gasol.
  • Bobcats coach Mike Dunlap offered up support for Blazers coach Terry Stotts, saying he's the perfect man for their "re-shaping" period, tweets Chris Haynes of CSNNW.com.  The Bobcats are one game under .500 while Portland sits at 7-10.

Lakers Notes: Gasol, Blake, Howard

Pau Gasol is having one of his worst seasons in years and the problems have been ongoing since 2011, writes Matt Moore of CBSSports.com.  The Lakers are now 3-4 in the Mike D'Antoni era and the big man is being pegged by many as the team's weak link.  Despite his struggles, the Lakers can certainly move Gasol and get a solid return, but they may not get a piece in return that will help improve their club.  They may not have a choice in the matter, however, as Gasol is clearly not buying into the system.  Here's more on Gasol and the Lakers..

  • More bad news in Los Angeles as the Lakers announced that Steve Blake will have laproscopic surgery to repair a torn abdominal muscle.  The injury will keep him out of action for at least 6-8 weeks and the Lakers may need to look for outside help as fellow guard Steve Nash remains sidelined.
  • It's slim pickins on the one-guard front as the best available point guards are players like Mike Bibby, Earl Boykins, Walker Russell, Jonny Flynn, and Coby Karl, tweets Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports.  We learned earlier today that Bibby is working to stay in basketball shape and is hoping to make a return.
  • Trading Gasol for a power forward who fits better next to Dwight Howard would be a great idea in theory, but the Lakers don't know that Howard will be with them beyond this season, tweets Marc Stein of ESPN.com.
  • Trading Gasol to the Raptors for Andrea Bargnani and Jose Calderon is a deal that would make sense for both teams, writes Sam Smith of Bulls.com.  Bargnani's style is well-suited for D'Antoni's offense while Calderon would be a great backup for the aging Nash.
  • Despite mounting pressure on Gasol, Howard also has to elevate his level of play, writes Kevin Ding of The Orange County Register.

Pacific Notes: Gasol, Howard, Curry

The latest news and notes around the Pacific Division on Sunday evening:

  • Eddie Johnson of HoopsHype writes that the Lakers are beginning to accept the reality that Pau Gasol is not a long-term fit for Mike D'Antoni's system. However, Johnson notes that Gasol's age and contract make it difficult to move him.
  • As pleased as Dwight Howard seems to be as a member of the Lakers, he refuses to talk about whether he'll remain in L.A. when his contract is up next summer, notes Mike Bresnahan of the Los Angeles Times.
  • Marcus Thompson of the San Jose Mercury News writes that a newly healthy Stephen Curry is seeing a spike in his production this season.

Offseason In Review: Los Angeles Lakers

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

Trades and Claims

Draft Picks

  • Darius Johnson-Odom (Round 2, 55th overall). Signed via minimum salary exception.
  • Robert Sacre (Round 2, 60th overall). Signed via minimum salary exception.

Camp Invitees

Departing Players

Rookie Contract Option Decisions

  • None

It's certainly been a wild first month of the season for the Lakers, with coach Mike Brown's firing, the team's flirtation with Phil Jackson, the lengthy interim tenure of Bernie Bickerstaff and the ultimate arrival of Mike D'Antoni as the new man in charge. None of it might have happened, however, without the expectations that the offseason foised upon this year's Lakers. The summer already seemed enough of a success when L.A. became the surprise destination for free agent Steve Nash, but the trade for Dwight Howard made others in the league throw up their arms in disgust a yet another Lakers coup.

The Howard trade was hailed by most as an upgrade for the center position, and Andrew Bynum's renewed knee problems certainly support that theory. Still, at the time, Howard's own health problems made it a gamble. GM Mitch Kupchak and company swapped the younger Bynum, coming off his best statistical season by far, for a player coming off major back surgery who had just submarined his coach and put his team through an eight-month-long media firestorm. It seemed like Bynum could eclipse Howard as the league's best center if he kept improving, and the Lakers knew exactly what they were getting with the player they'd nurtured since he joined the team in 2005 as the youngest player in NBA history.

Still, Howard's superior basket protection makes sense given the team's acquisition of Nash, a defensive liability. That he's already established as the league's best center also gives Howard an edge on a squad that's built to win now, before Nash and Kobe Bryant decline. And since both Howard and Bynum are due to hit free agency in 2013, nothing's guaranteed beyond this season. Howard seems ecstatic about his new surroundings, despite the team's slow start, but even though the Lakers could give him an extra year on his next contract, Howard's track record suggests the Lakers must take nothing for granted.

The move that transformed the Lakers from a team adrift back into contention was the sign-and-trade that brought Nash aboard. That, too, was not without risks, since Nash will be making $9.7MM as he turns 41 in the final season of the three-year, fully guaranteed deal. His is the only contract on the Lakers' books for 2014/15, as executive vice president Jim Buss admitted in October that the team has been strategically clearing his books for the summer of 2014, when LeBron James can opt out of his deal with the Heat. Nash, though, was still going strong last season, when he turned 38, posted double-figure assists and tied a career high by shooting 53.2% from the field. He's a clear upgrade at the point, where Ramon Sessions struggled in the playoffs and left a void when he turned down his player option for 2012/13. The team used the trade exception left over from the Lamar Odom deal to faciliate the sign-and-trade for Nash, who'll make precisely the $8.9MM value of that exception in the first year of his contract.

Having beaten out the Knicks and Raptors for Nash, the Lakers convinced Jordan Hill to turn down overtures from the Timberwolves despite only being able to bring him back for the $3.6MM he would have earned in a team option the Lakers weren't even responsible for declining. The Rockets turned the option down before they traded Hill to L.A. at last season's trade deadline, when Hill's acquisition took a back seat to the deal that brought in Sessions. Hill, a former lottery pick who seemed on his way out the league, showed his value as an offensive rebounder in the playoffs, giving the Lakers the reliable big man off the bench they lacked after trading Odom.

The Lakers made another well-received move when they convinced Antawn Jamison, the second-leading scorer for the Cavs last season, to sign for the minimum, well below market value, particularly since the Lakers still had their taxpayer's mid-level exception available. By this time, L.A.'s status as a contender, if not title favorite, made them an attractive destination for free agents like Jamison who were chasing a ring and willing to make a monetary sacrifice to go after it. Jamison struggled at the start of the season playing small forward, but has improved since D'Antoni began using him in his usual capacity as a stretch four, though the change appears to have pushed Hill out of the rotation.

Right after the Howard trade, the Lakers once more relied on their title chances to convince a free agent to sign for less than he could have made elsewhere. They allocated a little less than half of their mid-level exception to pry Jodie Meeks away from more lucrative offers from the Bucks and Wizards. It's somewhat ironic that he'll be making more money than Jamison, since Meeks was benched and saw his minutes cut by more than half in the playoffs last year with the Sixers. Still, Meeks, who made 38.3% of his three-point shots the last two seasons,  gives the Lakers some of the outside shooting they've lacked.

The day they signed Meeks, the team also finalized its deal with former second-round pick Devin Ebanks after making him wait for more than a month after their agreement on his qualifying offer was reached. The Lakers were holding out in case Ebanks needed to be signed-and-traded in a deal for Howard. If the team had signed him right away, Ebanks couldn't have been traded until December 15th. Last season's opening night starter at small forward could have ditched the agreement and signed with another team, but the Lakers had the right to match offers for the restricted free agent, and there was no serious talk of another team getting involved.

The Ebanks signing allowed the Lakers to become the first team in NBA history to sign two players to qualifying offers in the same offseason, since they'd inked Darius Morris to his qualifying offer in July. That move has paid unexpected dividends with Nash and Steve Blake out with injury this year, as Morris has temporarily inherited the starting point guard job.

The Lakers are sitting on the remaining $1.59MM of their taxpayer's mid-level exception, giving them the flexibility to sign one of the remaining free agents on the market. If that's going to happen, it would make sense for them to do so by January 10th, when the exception begins to prorate down. Even though the bench, despite the additions of Jamison and Meeks, continues to be a sore spot, there seems no rush for the team to do so. The Lakers' payroll exceeds more than $100MM this season, and the choice of two rookies, who have no prior NBA experience and thus make a minimum salary roughly half that of the veteran's minimum, for the last two spots on the bench is a sign of subtle cost-cutting. Salary cap guru Larry Coon estimated shortly after the Howard trade that the team's salary and luxury tax bill for 2013/14 would be a record $185MM in 2013/14 if the team re-signs D12 to a maximum deal this summer. There may soon come an end to the team's seemingly limitless spending. For now, though, the priority remains championships above all else, and the team will surely use the rest of its mid-level exception if it deems it necessary.

Like their Staples Center neighbors, the Clippers, the Lakers pulled off a fairly significant overhaul without the benefit of cap room or a first-round pick in this summer's draft. Indeed, the Lakers will find themselves without first-round picks with regularity in the coming years, having traded every first-rounder they're allowed to give away under the Stepien Rule to acquire Howard and Nash. Though much is riding on Howard's decision next summer, the verdict on the 2012 offseason will come in the spring of 2013. It's championship or bust for the purple and gold, as usual.

Luke Adams contributed to this post.

Western Notes: Gasol, Jamison, Shved, Casspi

Since taking over as head coach of the Lakers, Mike D'Antoni has had difficulty utilizing Pau Gasol. The primary reason is because he wants to stretch the floor for Dwight Howard, writes the Los Angeles Times' Eric Pincus.   

Notes On Dwight Howard

On the eve of Dwight Howard's first game against his former team, the Orlando Magic, several teammates, coaches, and Howard himself have weighed in on the controversial past and mysterious future of basketball's best center. 

ESPNLA.com's Ramona Shelburne has a story with quotes from people on the Lakers side (including head coach Mike D'Antoni, Chris Duhon, and Howard), and the Orlando Sentinel's Brian Schmitz has quotes from the Magic side (including Glen Davis, J.J. Redick, Arron Afflalo, Jameer Nelson, general manager Rob Hennigan, and head coach Jacque Vaughn.

Western Rumors: Dwight, Fisher, Mavs, Marshall

It was a whirlwind first month of the season for the Lakers, but nothing has changed Dwight Howard's affection for L.A., tweets Mike Bresnahan of the Los Angeles Times. "From 1 to 10, I'd give it a good 12," Howard said. "I love it. It's been a lot of fun. Just everything here." Still, unless Howard signs an extension during the season, which is unlikely, the big man's answer about whether he likes his surroundings only really matters next summer, when he's due to hit free agency. While await that, here's more news out of the Western Conference.

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