Heat Rumors

Heat, Pacers Interested In Chris Singleton

The Heat and Pacers are among the teams who’ve shown interest in free agent combo forward Chris Singleton, a source tells Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link). The Wizards declined their fourth-year option last fall on their rookie scale contract with the former 18th overall pick, setting him up for unrestricted free agency this summer.

The 24-year-old has seen his minutes decline sharply each year following his rookie season, from a high of 21.7 per game when he started 51 games in the lockout-shortened 2011/12 campaign to just 10.0 per contest this past season. He notched 3.0 points, 2.2 rebounds and shot 36.8 from three-point range when he did see the court in 2013/14, and his 8.8 PER, while unimpressive, was a career high.

Neither Miami nor Indiana can shell out more than the minimum salary for the client of BDA Sports Management, though by the looks of Spears’ report, it seems there are other NBA clubs with interest who haven’t been identified. It’s nonetheless doubtful that they’d go above the minimum even if they could for the one-time heralded prospect who’s yet to find his way in the NBA.

And-Ones: Bledsoe, Love, Hinkie, Murry

Eric Bledsoe is the top remaining player still unsigned, though as a restricted free agent the Suns have the right to match any offer sheet that Bledsoe agrees to. Dan Bickley of the Arizona Republic looks at why Bledsoe hasn’t received any offers, and examines the player’s options going forward. Bickley also opines that Bledsoe is risking alienating the fans in Phoenix by turning down the Suns’ four-year, $48MM deal.

Here’s more from around the league:

  • George Karl told Jerry Zgoda of The Star Tribune that the Wolves can’t afford to pass on trading Kevin Love for Andrew Wiggins and Anthony Bennett, if the Cavs are truly offering that package (via Rick Bonnell of The Charlotte Observer’s tweet). Karl coached through a tumultuous season with the Nuggets when Carmelo Anthony eventually received his desired trade to the Knicks.
  • Every year when the dust settles and the free agent signings begin to wind down there are winners and losers. Sam Amick and Jeff Zillgitt of USA Today weigh in on this year’s successes and disappointments.
  • The Thunder‘s Josh Huestis might become the NBA’s first domestic “draft-and-stash” player, writes Darnell Mayberry of the Oklahoman. If Huestis does skip signing with the Thunder and heads directly to the NBA D-League, it could signal a major shift in the future of the D-League and how it’s utilized, notes Mayberry.
  • Sixers GM Sam Hinkie‘s rebuilding plan might not be popular in Philadelphia as the losses keep piling up. Jason Wolf of USA Today profiles the GM, as well as takes a look at the moves he’s made so far in his efforts to retool the franchise.
  • The Jazz are interested in signing free agent Toure’ Murry, tweets Aaron Falk of The Salt Lake Tribune. Falk notes that Murry might be waiting for an offer from the Heat. The Knicks had also expressed interest in bringing Murry back, but currently have a logjam in the backcourt.

Cray Allred contributed to this post.

Heat Re-Sign Chris Andersen

JULY 19TH, 12:38pm: The Heat have announced that the signing is official.

“Chris Andersen has had two great seasons with us and without him, we would not have been able to win the 2013 NBA Championship,” said president Pat Riley. “I’m happy he decided to come back and we’re looking forward to a great season from him in the power rotation.”

10:13pm: Andersen’s deal is a two-year pact in the neighborhood of $10MM, tweets Marc Stein of ESPN.com.

JULY 13TH, 7:46pm: The Heat have reached agreement with Chris Andersen on a multi-year deal, a league source tells Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports (on Twitter).  Exact terms of the deal are not yet known.

The Cavs and Mavericks were among the teams known to have interest in Andersen.   Andersen likely had interest in a reunion with LeBron, but he’ll stay put with a Heat squad that is expected to feature Chris Bosh, Dwyane Wade, Udonis Haslem, and Mario Chalmers.  Jason Lieser of the Palm Beach Post (on Twitter) adds that the Knicks made a late run at the big man.

Andersen, 36, scored 6.6 points per game this past season, the second-highest total of his 12-year career.  He also averaged 5.3 rebounds in 19.4 minutes per contest with an 18.5 PER as Miami’s first big man off the bench.

International Notes: Bertans, Hamilton, Babbitt

Davis Bertans has signed a three-year contract worth just under €2MM with Spanish team Baskonia, tweets Emiliano Carchia of Sportando. The deal has an NBA-out clause in each season that the Spurs, who own Bertans’ rights and have eyed the Latvian for the near future, could pay for without it counting against the cap, presuming it is at or below the $600,000 maximum allowed. Here’s more from around the world:

  • Ryan Richards, the Spurs 2010 second-round draft pick, has signed with an Austrian club, the Zepter Vienna team website announced (transcription via Trapani).
  • Russian team Lokomotiv Kuban is looking to add Justin Hamilton and Milan Macvan next season, reports Enea Trapani of Sportando. Hamilton has a non-guaranteed salary that the Heat can fully waive prior to August 1st, and partially waive before December 1st. Macvan was drafted by the Cavs in 2011, and has been cool to Cleveland’s interest in bringing him to the NBA.
  • Spanish team Unicaja Malaga has offered Luke Babbitt a $980,000 contract if the Pelicans don’t retain him, notes Trapani in a separate report. That amount is nearly identical to Babbitt’s fully non-guaranteed salary in New Orleans, which becomes partially guaranteed at $100,000 if the Pelicans don’t waive him before July 22nd.

Heat Sign Shabazz Napier

The Heat have signed rookie Shabazz Napier, Miami announced in a team release.

“Shabazz is a proven winner and one of the most mature college players that I have ever met,” said president Pat Riley. “Not only did he help lead UConn to two NCAA Championships, but he also knows exactly what he needs to do to make an impact at the NBA level. I believe the experience he had during the Summer League is going to payoff in leaps and bounds when training camp begins.”

Miami traded for Napier on draft night, moving up two spots to select the point guard. At the time, the deal was rumored to be influenced by LeBron James, who believed the UConn senior was the best point guard in the draft. The Heat had reportedly considered moving on from one or both of Mario Chalmers and Norris Cole earlier this offseason, but Chalmers has re-signed and Cole’s contract is less in danger of being dealt for cap space since the team has executed their Plan B following James’ decision to return to Cleveland. It appears Napier will have to work to earn backcourt minutes for a team still angling to contend in the Eastern Conference.

Terms of the deal were unannounced, but it’s likely that Napier received 120% of the $1,032,200 rookie scale slot for the 24th pick. As Charlie Adams noted in the Hoops Rumors Prospect Profile for the Huskie guard, Napier will need to use his scoring abilities and quickness to offset some of the defensive limitations he will likely experience as a result of his 6’1″ size.

The Heat And The Salary Cap

No news shook the NBA universe quite like last week’s announcement from LeBron James that he would be returning to the Cavs. Heat president Pat Riley, who heard from James shortly before the news became public, surely felt the effects of the move as much as anyone. Still, it was just one of many pivot points for the Heat this month, one to which Riley and his staff responded swiftly with a five-year max deal for Chris Bosh, agreements with Dwyane Wade, Mario Chalmers and Chris Andersen, and a discount free agent signing of Luol Deng.

NBA: Playoffs-Charlotte Bobcats at Miami HeatIt was a combination of the use of Bird rights and cap space that appeared to be similar to the team’s original plan, sans LeBron. A report from Brian Windhorst of ESPN.com on the second day of free agency indicated that the Heat were telling free agents from other teams that they had more than $12MM to spend on starting salaries for them. Other dispatches cast doubt on that figure, but it was nonetheless an indication that the team planned on dipping beneath the cap.

The idea at the time appeared to involve James re-signing at the maximum salary, as he made it clear he wanted to do so no matter where he ended up, and Bosh and Wade accepting discounts. The Heat could have gone under the cap and split as much as $35,932,559 on starting salaries for Bosh and Wade in that scenario, though that would leave room to add only a player for the $2.732MM room exception and minimum-salary contracts. That figure is remarkably similar to the $35,644,400 in combined starting salaries that Bosh and Wade wound up with, assuming Bosh is indeed getting the maximum salary as has been reported. Yet if it was true that the Heat envisioned spending $12MM on outside free agents, it sounds like Bosh and Wade would have had to take less under the original plan, assuming the Heat intended to re-sign LeBron for the max.

Six days after Windhorst’s report that the Heat were telling free agents they had $12MM to spend, and four days before James announced that he would sign with the Cavs, the Heat came to agreements with Josh McRoberts and Danny Granger. The deals were equal to the full values of the non-taxpayer’s mid-level and biannual exceptions, respectively. It was a clear signal that Riley’s plan had changed, and the Heat were going to pursue a strategy of remaining over the cap. That meant the notion of adding Deng or any other free agent likely to command eight-figure salaries was out, if the team was to retain its core of James, Wade and Bosh. Staying over the cap would allow the Heat to pay up to the max to retain all three of its stars, providing that it did so and stayed under the $80.829MM hard cap that the use of the non-taxpayer’s midlevel and biannual exceptions triggered. It also meant that McRoberts and Granger would be the team’s most significant offseason additions, since the Heat would be limited to no more than minimum-salary deals for all but their own free agents.

That was what the Heat were signaling, anyway. They still could have gone under the cap, with Bosh and Wade splitting a pool of less than $24,260,231 to allow the team to sign another team’s free agent for more than the mid-level amount it gave to McRoberts. In that case, presuming James came back at the maximum salary, Bosh and Wade would each have to accept about only half of their maximum salaries, or one of them would have to take even less. Such a path never seemed likely, but the possibility of dipping beneath the cap remained, and it foretold the strategy that the Heat, if not entirely by choice, would eventually pursue.

The James decision was a game-changer for many in the league, and it spun Riley into a U-turn. He offered Bosh the five-year max to keep him from jumping to the Rockets or another suitor, trumping the four-year maximum offers that opposing teams were limited to making. He re-signed Wade at a starting salary of $15MM, roughly 75% of his max. He found a replacement at small forward in Deng, agreeing to pay him a $9.7MM salary for the coming season, and with the Deng deal, he turned the mid-level and biannual deals for McRoberts and Granger into contracts that relied on cap space instead. Riley renounced the rights to Udonis Haslem as part of clearing that room, but he used the team’s new position as an under-the-cap team to reward the sacrifice Haslem made when he turned down his player option and gave up $4.62MM. Haslem signed for the $2.732MM room exception, and, as Windhorst reveals, it’s a two-year deal. That means Haslem will see slightly more over two years than he would have made last season alone. It still may go down as a sacrifice for the Miami native, but given his declining play, there were no guarantees that he would have found a new deal next summer, when his old contract would have run out. Presuming his new contract is fully guaranteed, it locks in more money than he had previously been in line for.

Ultimately, it’s a lesson in the difference between agreements and official contracts, and the importance of timing in NBA free agency. When Riley made deals with McRoberts and Granger, there was nothing binding that stipulated that they were for the mid-level or biannual exceptions. They were simply good-faith agreements that the pair would be paid those amounts, whether it required cap space or exceptions. In fact, those deals couldn’t have been more than merely agreements at the time they were struck, since they took place during the July moratorium. Miami could have made those deals official on July 10th, the first day after the moratorium and the day before LeBron made his announcement, and in so doing the team could have informed the league that it was using those exceptions on McRoberts and Granger. That would have prevented the team from clearing the cap room it wanted after LeBron left, and the maneuver almost certainly would have forestalled any agreement with Deng.

Riley didn’t get what he was after this summer, but by remaining flexible, he’s put together a near-certain playoff team from the ashes of LeBron’s departure. The Cavs, by contrast, have yet to return to the postseason since the last time LeBron played for them.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Heat Re-Sign Udonis Haslem

FRIDAY, 3:54pm: The deal is official, the team announced.

“Udonis Haslem has been a fixture in Miami over the last 11 years,” Heat president Pat Riley said in the team’s statement. “He’s a team player, an encompassing all-purpose player, that would play just about any position or role in order to win. It’s been such a privilege and honor to have him with the organization and I’m so happy that he decided to come back.”

TUESDAY, 2:57pm: The Heat and Udonis Haslem have agreed a deal, a source tells Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel (Twitter link). Miami will use its $2.732MM room exception, Winderman adds, so presumably that will be Haslem’s first-year salary on the deal. The room exception allows for a contract of up to two years, but it’s unclear if Haslem’s getting a second season.

The 34-year-old Miami native had appeared close to a deal in recent days, but there always seemed little chance he would leave the Heat. He winds up with little more than half of the salary he would have made if he had opted in for $4.62MM in June, but he chose to opt out in an apparent attempt to give the Heat a better shot at re-signing LeBron James. That didn’t happen, but Haslem will return as the Heat welcome Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh and others who were a part of the team during LeBron’s tenure in Miami.

The Heat’s commitment to the client of Henry Thomas, who also represents Wade and Bosh, didn’t waver even as they renounced Haslem’s Bird Rights to clear cap room. Haslem had a reduced role for Miami this past season, averaging 3.8 points and 3.8 rebounds in 14.2 minutes per game, but he made 18 starts in the regular season and six in the playoffs as coach Erik Spoelstra juggled his rotation.

Central Rumors: Bulls, Udoh, Oden, Jones

Pau Gasol said he has no worries about the health of Derrick Rose and added that the Knicks had only long shot to sign him as part of an interview with Jesus Sanchez of Marca.com, as K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune translates (Twitter links). The Bulls are scheduled to introduce Gasol and Nikola Mirotic to fans in a press conference today after agreeing to deals with both this past weekend, and there’s more from Chicago amid the latest Central Division rumors:

  • There appears to be mutual interest between the Bulls and point guard Aaron Brooks, as Aggrey Sam of CSNChicago.com details. Sam’s story reveals that Brooks is considering the team, while the headline and Sam’s tweet indicate that Chicago is eyeing the 29-year-old point guard.
  • The Lakers’ winning bid for Carlos Boozer was $3.251MM, not just $3.25MM as previously reported, tweets Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders, giving the Bulls slightly more savings than previously thought. The Bulls will be on the hook for $13.549MM of the $16.8MM remaining on Boozer’s contract, which expires next summer, but it won’t count against the salary cap for Chicago.
  • Ekpe Udoh has his sights set on joining a contender, and was close to a deal with the Clippers before they struck a deal with Glen Davis, USA Today’s Sam Amick reports (on Twitter). That wouldn’t appear to bode well for any chance the Bucks have of re-signing the big man, who became an unrestricted free agent when Milwaukee declined to make him a qualifying offer.
  • The Cavs have interest in Greg Oden, but it’s not clear if they’ve spoken with him or have any plans to do so, according to Sam Amico of Fox Sports Ohio. Still, it appears that either the Cavs, LeBron James, or both have been in touch with the free agent center this summer, Amico writes.
  • A lack of playing time with the Heat was one reason why James Jones decided to bolt for the Cavs, as Jones said in a radio appearance on The Ticket Morning Show in Miami, tweets Joseph Goodman of the Miami Herald.

Southeast Notes: Jones, Seraphin, Boozer

Despite expressing interest in a return to the Heat, James Jones just couldn’t pass up the chance to play with LeBron James again. Although it’s not clear whether or not Miami had intentions of bringing Jones back for the 2014/15 season, as Joseph Goodman of the Miami Herald details, there’s no doubt LeBron’s return to the Cavs influenced Jones’ decision to hook up with Cleveland. Here’s the latest out of the Southeast..

  • The Wizards elected to let Kevin Seraphin hit restricted free agency this summer, but Washington wouldn’t be against bringing the big man back at a price lower than the $3.89MM his qualifying offer would have been worth, reports J. Michael of CSNWashington.com (on Twitter).
  • The salary in the first year of Trevor Ariza’s new contract is $8,579,089, according to Mark Deeks of ShamSports, so that’s the value of the trade exception the Wizards create from the sign-and-trade that sent Ariza to the Rockets. Washington is using part of that trade exception to accommodate this evening’s sign-and-trade acquisition of DeJuan Blair. The precise amount of the exception that the Blair trade uses won’t be known until Blair’s first-year salary figure is reported.
  • The Hornets aren’t interested in placing a bid on the recently amnestied Carlos Boozer, reveals Rick Bonnell of the Charlotte Observer (via Twitter). Chuck Myron of Hoops Rumors had predicted as much earlier today when the club agreed to terms with Lance Stephenson.
  • Andrew Perna of RealGM grades the Hornets‘ acquisition of Stephenson, praising Charlotte and criticizing the Pacers’ decision to let the shooting guard walk after the Heat seemingly lost a step this summer.

Chuck Myron and Cray Allred contributed to this post.

Eastern Rumors: Boozer, Blair, Durant

Ethan Skolnick of Bleacher Report details how the Heat’s maneuvers to accommodate the Big Three back in 2010 are now proving costly with the departure of LeBron James. The Heat’s 2015 first round pick–given to the Cavs as part of James’ sign-and-trade to Miami–is still owed to Cleveland, and Miami is still paying Mike Miller‘s amnestied contract while the sharpshooter is on the verge of re-teaming with LeBron in another city. Here’s more from the East:

  • The Hawks, reportedly one of the favorites to place a bid on Carlos Boozer, took a step in that direction, as Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders confirms the team has officially slipped beneath the cap (Twitter link).
  • The Mavs promised DeJuan Blair that they would try to sign-and-trade him to give him a financial boost, according to Marc Stein of ESPN.com, and indeed it appears Dallas is close to sending him to the Wizards via sign-and-trade,
  • The Wizards will bring University of Maryland women’s assistant coach David Atkins as an assistant coach for player development, tweets Jeff Goodman of ESPN.com. A handful of rival executives see it as a sign that Washington has begun to position itself to make a run at Durant, a D.C. native, according to USA Today’s Jeff Zillgitt (Twitter link), since Atkins was one of Kevin Durant‘s high school coaches, fellow ESPN scribe Mark Stein notes (on Twitter).

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.