And-Ones: Divac, Okafor, Knicks
The Kings have hired former NBA player Vlade Divac as their vice president of basketball and franchise operations, the team has announced. “With an unparalleled philanthropic track record that spans the globe, Vlade Divac is the epitome of our NBA 3.0 philosophy,” Sacramento owner Vivek Ranadive said. “He has a unique perspective and global stature that will only further elevate our organization around the world.” In a career that spanned 16 NBA seasons, Divac averaged 11.8 points, 8.2 rebounds, 3.1 assists, 1.1 steals, and 1.4 blocks per game. Ranadive was the driving force behind hiring Divac, Ailene Voisin of The Sacramento Bee tweets.
Here’s more from around the league and abroad:
- With the Guangdong Southern Tigers having been eliminated from the Chinese Basketball Association playoffs, Will Bynum, Jeff Adrien and Chris Daniels have become free agents and are eligible to sign with NBA teams, Enea Trapani of Sportando tweets.
- The NBA has fined the Knicks for team president Phil Jackson‘s public comments regarding Ohio State freshman D’Angelo Russell, Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports reports (Twitter link). Upon leaving Ohio State’s game last Thursday night, Jackson told reporters that Russell was a “great looking kid, [a] great prospect.” This is the second time in his brief career as an executive that Jackson has been fined for tampering. The first instance was for his comments regarding Derek Fisher last spring while Fisher was still a member of the Thunder.
- Mike D’Antoni would be an excellent fit as the next coach of the Nuggets, Adi Joseph of USA Today opines. Joseph cites Denver’s personnel, who would be well-suited to D’Antoni’s style of play, as the main reason the former Knicks and Lakers coach could match up well with the Nuggets.
- With the Knicks currently owning the worst record in the NBA according to Hoops Rumors’ Reverse Standings, New York has the best odds of snagging the top pick in June’s NBA draft. Chris Herring of The Wall Street Journal examines the pros and cons of projected No. 1 overall pick Jahlil Okafor, and how the big man would fit in with the Knicks.
- The Lakers intend to apply for a hardship exception once Ronnie Price misses his fourth consecutive game, Eric Pincus of The Los Angeles Times reports. Los Angeles has lost Kobe Bryant, Steve Nash, Julius Randle and Price for the season. The Lakers have discussed the matter internally, but haven’t decided if they will use the exception if granted, Pincus adds.
Western Notes: Frye, Leonard, Collison
Channing Frye is upset with the Suns’ management, who made some critical comments last week regarding the veteran big man’s departure to the Magic as a free agent last summer, John Denton of Magic.com tweets. Phoenix’s owner Robert Sarver had said that Frye didn’t give the Suns an opportunity to match Orlando’s four-year contract offer. “I think we have to take what that front office says with a grain of salt,” Frye said in response to Sarver’s comments. “I think right now they need to focus on their own team. I think we had many negotiations between [us and] the Suns,” Josh Robbins of The Orlando Sentinel relays.
Here’s more from the Western Conference:
- There’s plenty at stake for the Spurs over the next few months, but nothing that happens this spring will alter the value of the max or near-max contract Kawhi Leonard is set to receive in restricted free agency this summer, as Buck Harvey of the San Antonio Express-News believes.
- Former Nuggets coach George Karl feels no sense of glee at Denver’s struggles without him, as he said last week, according to Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link). Karl has sympathy for Nuggets owner Stan Kroenke, Spears notes.
- Darren Collison underwent successful surgery today to repair a core muscle issue, the Kings have announced. Collison will begin rehabilitation immediately and is expected to be out for approximately six weeks.
Chuck Myron contributed to this post.
Western Notes: Green, Stockton, Grizzlies
Draymond Green offered an ominous comment for Warriors fans to Gary Washburn of the Boston Globe, saying he wants to savor the feeling of being a part of a fun, winning team while it lasts. Green, who’s set for restricted free agency this summer, is the only member of the team’s core who isn’t signed through at least next season, as Washburn points out.
“I’ve said it multiple times this year, we know how good we are,” Green said. “We’re having so much fun. It’s a fun group to be around. It’s easy to capitalize on this, when you enjoy being around the people you’re around every day. This is a special group, a special bond, so let’s make the best of it, because this team will probably never be together again. That’s just the nature of this business. One addition, one subtraction, and the team isn’t together no more. So take advantage of it while you’ve got it because I’m sure this team will never be together again. It’s a fun time. One of the funnest times of my life. Live in the moment.”
Golden State executives have given plenty of signals that they intend to match any offer for Green, who reportedly has interest in signing an offer sheet with the Pistons. So, it’s ultimately up to the Warriors to decide if he comes back, though his price may prompt the team to let someone else go. Here’s more from around the Western Conference:
- The Kings have decided against signing David Stockton to another 10-day contract, tweets James Ham of Cowbell Kingdom. Sacramento’s deal with Stockton, son of Hall-of-Famer John Stockton, expired Sunday.
- The three-year contract that JaMychal Green reportedly agreed to sign with the Grizzlies will include partially guaranteed salary that extends beyond this season, a source tells Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link).
- Nuggets players didn’t seem to give coach Brian Shaw much of an endorsement when they broke a huddle with a “six weeks” chant Friday, but Shaw today told reporters, including Christopher Dempsey of The Denver Post, that it wasn’t a reference to the time left in the season. They were instead talking about the weeks that had elapsed since the team’s last win at home, Shaw said.
Financial Impact Of Deadline Trades: Pacific
Last week’s trade deadline was a dizzying affair, with 39 players and 17 teams involved in a dozen trades, including a trio of three-team transactions. The day had wide-ranging effects on the salary structures of those 17 teams, and we’ll examine the aftermath for each of them in this multipart series.
Four of the deadline’s 12 trades involved Pacific Division teams, and the Suns were part of three of them, as we detail today. The salary figures listed below denote this season’s salaries, though we’ll also discuss salary for future seasons.
Phoenix Suns
In: ($17,121,160)
- Marcus Thornton ($8,575,000)
- Brandon Knight ($3,553,917)
- Danny Granger ($2,077,000)
- John Salmons ($2,000,000)
- Kendall Marshall ($915,243)
Out: ($19,205,456)
- Goran Dragic ($7,500,000)
- Isaiah Thomas ($7,238,606)
- Zoran Dragic ($1,706,250)
- Tyler Ennis ($1,590,720)
- Miles Plumlee ($1,169,880)
Perhaps no team defined the 2015 trade deadline quite like the Suns. They dealt the deadline’s most prominent player, Goran Dragic, and among the 10 players going back and forth from Phoenix, more than a quarter of the players who changed places leaguewide that day, five of them were point guards. The moves the Suns made carried their requisite share of the day’s confusion, too. They started the day with a team salary of $61,848,216, more than $1MM beneath the $63.065MM cap. Their team salary at day’s end was $59,763,920, even farther under the cap. However, as Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders reports (Twitter link), they actually wound up over the cap and created a $5.5MM trade exception.
What that means is that at some point last Thursday, the Suns crossed over the cap. So, it appears either or both of the trades in which the team added money to its payroll were processed before the Dragic deal, the one in which the Suns cut salary. Either the three-teamer with the Bucks and Sixers or the Isaiah Thomas–Marcus Thornton swap would have done the trick, since they both added a greater amount of net salary than the Suns had in cap room. That meant those trades had to conform to salary-matching rules, and in the case of the Thomas-Thornton deal, the Suns took in less than 150% plus $100K of what they gave up, making the trade kosher. However, the incoming salary in the Bucks-Sixers three teamer, which brought Brandon Knight and Kendall Marshall to Phoenix, exceeded that 150% plus $100K cushion. The minimum-salary exception that was so helpful for other teams at the deadline once more came into play, since the Suns were able to absorb Marshall into that, meaning his $915,243 didn’t have to count as incoming salary. Knight’s salary is within 150% plus $100K of the sum of the salaries for Tyler Ennis and Miles Plumlee, so the trade works.
That leaves the matter of the Dragic trade, which the Suns evidently pulled off as an over-the-cap team. Essentially, they split the deal into two separate exchanges. They matched salaries with Zoran Dragic and Danny Granger, as Granger’s salary is within that 150% plus $100K range of Zoran’s. The trade-within-a-trade of Goran Dragic for John Salmons involves a $5.5MM difference between their salaries. New Orleans didn’t need to worry about that difference because it didn’t have anything to do with Goran’s salary. The same was true of Miami and Salmons. Phoenix’s only obligation to match salaries involves keeping the incoming salary from exceeding the outgoing salary by too much, and not the other way around. When the outgoing salary exceeds the incoming salary, a capped-out team can reap a trade exception, and that’s how the Suns wound up with their $5.5MM exception.
That gives the Suns an asset for the start of the offseason, but that trade exception might not last until its expiration date next February. It disappears if the Suns open cap space this summer, and Phoenix afforded itself a greater opportunity to do so with last week’s trades. The Suns cleared $12,390,773 from next year’s payroll, not counting the $7.5MM player option Goran has been planning to decline, and replaced it with contracts that end after this season Granger’s $2,170,465 player option. Granger’s reps and the team have reportedly talked about the idea of a buyout, and there’s a chance that he would decline the player option, or reduce its value, as part of such a deal. Entirely eliminating the salary in the option year would mean the Suns had traded for five players without contracts that extend beyond this season, a rare feat. The team has already cut ties with Salmons and Marshall, each of whom the Suns waived immediately upon their acquisition. Phoenix surely would have sought to re-sign Dragic this summer, so adding his salary to the eight-figure amount that the trades cut from next year’s books would serve as further demonstration of just how drastically the team altered its payroll for next season. The Suns have only about $41MM in commitments for 2015/16, more than enough against a projected $68MM salary cap to dangle a max offer in front of a marquee free agent whom they’d like to lure to the Valley of the Sun.
Sacramento Kings
In: ($4,625,000)
- Andre Miller ($4,625,000)
Out: ($2,077,000)
- Ramon Sessions ($2,077,000)
The capped-out Kings were able to receive a player making more than double the amount of salary coming to the player they sent out thanks to the remnants of one of their two deadline trades from last year. The Kings shipped Marcus Thornton (yes, the same Thornton for whom the Suns traded this year) to the Nets for Jason Terry and Reggie Evans a year ago. Evans is still with Sacramento, but the Kings traded Terry to Houston in the offseason, creating a trade exception worth Terry’s $5,850,313 salary in the process. It was the largest of the five trade exceptions the Kings possessed at the trade deadline, and the only one valuable enough to absorb Miller’s salary in this year’s trade. The Kings took advantage, and that in turn allowed Sacramento to send out Sessions’ salary by itself, which begets a new trade exception worth the $2,077,000 that Sessions makes. The Terry exception still exists, though it’s reduced to $1,225,313.
Sacramento upped its salary for this season, but next season’s payroll went in the other direction, since Sessions has a guaranteed salary of more than $2.17MM for 2015/16 while Miller’s contract expires this summer. The Kings have about $53.1MM in commitments for next season in the wake of the trade, and with the salary cap projected to come in around $68MM, $2.17MM could make a significant difference if Sacramento elects to open cap room and chase some attractive free agent targets. That $53.1MM figure is somewhat skewed considering that money is going to only seven players, necessitating another $2,625,465, at least, in cap holds. Plus, opening cap space would mean waving goodbye to those trade exceptions. Still, the money that the trade saves the Kings for next year gives the team a few more options to explore during the July Moratorium, when they’ll be able to negotiate with free agents without committing one way or another to the idea of opening cap space.
The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.
Pacific Notes: Clippers, Stoudemire, Miller
Despite missing on all of their buyout market targets after creating some roster flexibility with the idea of adding veteran talent after the trade deadline, Doc Rivers is nonetheless content with the Clippers’ roster as it is, writes Arash Markazi of ESPNLosAngeles.com. Among the Clippers’ missed targets are Josh Smith (Rockets), Kendrick Perkins (Cavaliers), Kevin Garnett (Timberwolves) and Tayshaun Prince (Pistons). They still have an open invitation out to Ray Allen, Markazi notes, but execs around the league are reportedly losing faith that he’ll sign with any team.
“We like our team,” Rivers said. “We actually like our basketball team, and if we could add something that can help that, we will. What people don’t understand is chemistry is so freaking important. Unless it’s somebody you think is going to really change your team, this team was a couple bad plays in Game 6 away from the Western Conference finals last year. We lost some guys and added some guys, but we like our team.”
Here’s more from the Pacific Division:
- Amar’e Stoudemire, who will be a free agent in July, would welcome a return to the Suns, where he spent his first eight seasons, sources told Howard Beck of Bleacher Report. Stoudemire loves the city, and his knees could benefit from a reunion with the Suns’ renowned medical staff, Beck wrote, but it’s unclear if the Suns would reciprocate the interest. Marc Berman of the New York Post wrote earlier this month that a return to Phoenix for next season was “quite possible”.
- Andre Miller would be interested in re-signing with the Kings, reports Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link). The 16th-year veteran whom the Kings acquired a week ago in a deadline-day trade turns 39 next month, but he still wants to continue playing after the season, when his contract is up.
- Archie Goodwin is showcasing his ability and making the most of his boosted minutes in the Suns’ regular rotation, writes Paul Coro of The Arizona Republic. The Suns informed inquiring teams before the trade deadline that Goodwin, whose rookie scale contract runs through 2016/17, is a big part of the franchise’s future. Goodwin, who said earlier this season that comments attributed to him about his frustration with a lack of playing in a report were taken out of context, has made four rotation appearances in a row after making only four appearances totaling 16 minutes from New Year’s Day through the All-Star break.
Darren Collison Likely Out For Season
2:03pm: Collison is set for surgery next week, and he’ll be re-evaluated three to six weeks later, Spears reports, reiterating that the point guard’s season is likely done (Twitter links).
11:22am: There’s little optimism that Darren Collison will play again this season, sources tell Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link), who nonetheless cautions that a decision isn’t final. Collison has been out since February 5th due to a hip flexor strain he suffered against the Mavericks. The Kings initially said when he got hurt that he would be evaluated on a day-to-day basis. Collison met with a specialist in Los Angeles on Tuesday, reports Jason Jones of the Sacramento Bee.
“I think there’s still discussions going on with doctors,” coach George Karl said, according to Jones. “I think something will probably be known in the next couple of days. It’s in the hands of interpretations and doctors.”
Ray McCallum has started the last three games for Collison. Karl previously said he spoke with Kings GM Pete D’Alessandro about the idea of adding a point guard but added that he’d prefer not to make any more changes. The Kings are limited to giving out the minimum salary, and they have a full 15-man roster, though David Stockton is on a 10-day contract, as our roster counts show, giving Sacramento at least a measure of flexibility.
Collison, who signed a three-year, $16MM deal with the Kings in July, is suited to play the uptempo style that Karl favors because he can get up the floor quickly and attack, Jones added. In his first season with the Kings, Collison is averaging 16.1 points, 5.6 assists and 1.5 steals per game. It has been his best season statistically.
Kings Open To Trading DeMarcus Cousins?
The Kings wouldn’t rule out trading DeMarcus Cousins or anyone else on their roster at the trade deadline, a person with insight into coach George Karl‘s thinking told Bleacher Report’s Howard Beck. Karl, who also worked with Kings GM Pete D’Alessandro when they were with the Nuggets, has a level of control over personnel decisions in Sacramento, that source said to Beck. Karl would love to acquire Ty Lawson or any of the other members of the 2012/13 Nuggets, the last team Karl coached, Beck also hears.
There were conflicting reports about whether the Celtics were pursuing Cousins prior to the deadline, but most of the chatter surrounding the star center had to do with his frustration regarding Sacramento’s coaching situation. Cousins was an advocate of former coach Michael Malone and expressed frustration about the upheaval that saw Tyrone Corbin and now Karl succeed Malone this season. Still, Cousins has indicated that he’s enthusiastic about playing for Karl, one of nine NBA coaches with more than 1,000 career wins. The 24-year-old center is in the first season of a four-year max extension.
Tension surrounds Lawson and the Nuggets, and GM Tim Connelly recently exhorted the 27-year-old point guard to “grow up” after he was late returning from the All-Star break. The Kings were among the teams with apparent interest, but while the Nuggets reportedly received calls from numerous would-be suitors, they were turning them away. The team did engage in exploratory talks with the Celtics, several sources told Grantland’s Zach Lowe, but it appeared as the deadline drew near that Denver hadn’t seriously considered any deal. Lawson makes more than $12.404MM next season and in excess of $13.213MM in 2016/17, the final season of his contract.
No trades can take place before the end of the season, since the deadline has passed. Teams are eligible to trade players as soon as the regular season is over if they’re not in the playoffs, but typically moves don’t happen until June.
Pacific Notes: Knight, Perkins, Kerr
The Suns were already planning to a hard push for Brandon Knight in free agency before they traded for him at last week’s deadline, according to Chad Ford of ESPN.com, who writes amid a chat with readers. Phoenix was willing to trade the rights to the Lakers’ top-five protected first-round pick to Milwaukee for Knight, but the Bucks decided instead to take a package that included Michael Carter-Williams from the Sixers in what ended up a three-way deal, Ford adds.
Here’s more from the Pacific Division:
- It was tough for Kendrick Perkins to turn down former coach Doc Rivers and the Clippers, but a pitch from LeBron James was too tempting to pass up, notes Chris Fedor of the Northeast Ohio Media Group. “He was real honest with me,” Perkins said of Rivers. “He told me, ‘I think your best two situations right now is either us or Cleveland.’ So I was like, ‘Doc? Or I have a chance to go play with The King [LeBron James]. Doc? The King? Uh, I choose The King.”
- New Kings assistant coach Vance Walberg is being counted on to bring creativity to Sacramento’s offense, which is something the team was looking for when it fired former coach Mike Malone, Jason Jones of The Sacramento Bee writes.
- The hiring of Steve Kerr as coach was the final ingredient needed to change the Warriors from a one-and-done playoff team into a title contender, Chris Ballard of SI.com writes. Ballard also runs down how GM Bob Myers constructed the rest of the team’s roster, which is currently an NBA best 44-10.
Chuck Myron contributed to this post.
Eastern Notes: Williams, Hawks, Garnett
The Pistons claimed Shawne Williams off waivers to offset the loss of Jonas Jerebko, who was traded to Boston last week, David Mayo of MLive.com writes. “We’re a little thin up front and Shawne played very well in Miami this year, got put in that trade to New Orleans, New Orleans waived him before they got everybody hurt, so we got some luck there,” Stan Van Gundy said. “So we got a little luck there. But we needed a little depth and he’s a guy that comes in, again, on a value contract, and he’s got a non-guaranteed contract for next year. So it gives us a lot of flexibility.”
Here’s more from the Eastern Conference:
- The Wizards are sending $839K to the Kings as part of the Andre Miller for Ramon Sessions trade that occurred last week, Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders notes (Twitter link).
- There’s a decent chance the sale of the Hawks won’t be complete until May or June, a person familiar with the deal told Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Today is the deadline for prospective owners to submit preliminary bids, Vivlamore reports.
- Newly acquired Goran Dragic has become a fan of his new team already, Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald relays (Twitter link). Speaking about the Heat, Dragic said, “They take care of players. I feel I’m spoiled here. So much great stuff.“
- Kevin Garnett said that it was difficult for him to leave the Nets mid-season because of his loyalty to the organization, but he believed that returning to Minnesota was a great opportunity, Mike Mazzeo of ESPN.com writes.
- The Knicks are counting on oft-injured Andrea Bargnani to help make up for the scoring the team lost with Carmelo Anthony being out for the season, Justin Tasch of The New York Daily News writes. “Well, he has the skillset and the versatility to do those things,” coach Derek Fisher said. “Whether he can average the same amount of points [as Anthony], we’ll see. He’s capable of it. I think if he can stay healthy and just continue to get a comfort out on the floor again, playing basketball, competing hard every night, the physical and mental grind that exists in doing that – which is different when you haven’t done that for a year, which is basically what it’s been for him.“
Pacific Notes: Thomas, Warriors, Green, Karl
Isaiah Thomas insists he didn’t verbally push the Suns to deal him to the Celtics last week, as Mark Murphy of the Boston Herald relays. Suns GM Ryan McDonough said Thomas’ desire to start was the catalyst for last week’s swap, notes Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic.
“They said that? I did want to start, who doesn’t?” Thomas said. “I don’t get that. I was a team player, didn’t complain about anything. The guys who complain, you see it in the media. I didn’t say anything. For the most part, it was good. When we did play together it was positive and it worked, but it’s tough to do when you have three talented point guards who need the ball to be effective. It’s three point guards that want the ball.”
Thomas qualified that remark, saying that he would have liked to have played more, according to Coro. He called the Phoenix backcourt “a tough situation” that’s “not what I expected” in November, but later made comments indicating he was pleased with the setup. Here’s more from around the Pacific Division:
- Warriors co-owner Joe Lacob reiterated that he’s willing to pay the luxury tax next season, telling Sports Illustrated’s Chris Ballard that the team has no choice but to do so barring “some massive deal.” “[GM] Bob [Myers] keeps saying I must have the only owner in the NBA who says, ‘Stop worrying about the luxury tax,’” Lacob said. “Even today I said, ‘I don’t care about the luxury tax.’ I don’t want to make decisions based on the luxury tax. We want to get better. Our job is to get better. Secondarily, we’ll worry about the money.”
- Lacob wouldn’t address soon-to-be restricted free agent Draymond Green directly but said to Ballard, “It would take a lot to not sign our core players. Does that answer your question?”
- George Karl said he spoke with Kings GM Pete D’Alessandro about the idea of adding a point guard but added that he’d prefer not to make any more changes, observes Matt Kawahara of The Sacramento Bee. Darren Collison has missed the last six games with a right hip flexor strain and doesn’t appear on his way back anytime soon, so Karl has turned to Andre Miller and is giving him a much greater role than he had with the Wizards, as Kawahara examines.
- Karl’s reps impressed upon the Kings during negotiations earlier this month that the coach would likely have other opportunities in the offseason, putting pressure on Sacramento to hire him as soon as possible, according to Scott Howard-Cooper of NBA.com.
