Odds & Ends: Kings Arena, Kobe, Raptors

The number of signatures necessary to vote on the public subsidy of a new Kings arena in Sacramento appears to be closing in on the minimum needed for the 2014 ballot, reports Ryan Lillis of the Sacramento Bee

But the success of that ballot measure hinges on the ability of Sacramento Taxpayers Opposed to Pork (STOP) to find the thousands of signatures financed by Chris Hansen. Hansen was recently fined $50K for contributing $100K to STOP in an effort curb Sacramento's plan to fund a new arena in an effort to buy the team and move it to Seattle. 

Here are some some more links from around the league during a slow Saturday in September as most of the NBA world is watching the Mayweather-Alvarez fight…

  • Nike PR Director Heidi Burgett shared a video of a Nike talk, via Twitter, where Kobe Bryant discussed what was going through his head after he tore his Achilles tendon during the April game that ended his 2012/13 season prematurely (h/t SI's Ben Golliver).
  • Doug Smith of the Toronto Star confirms Angolan media reports that MVP of the African championships Carlos Morais will be in training camp with the Raptors (Twitter).
  • Former Mavs and Pistons player Mark Aguirre told the Star-Telegram's Full Court Press blog that basketball on both coasts has shifted with the Clippers overtaking the Lakers in Los Angeles and the Nets overtaking the Knicks in New York.
  • Star-Telegram beat writer Dwain Price adds, in a tweet, that when asked about the Heat's chances for a 3-peat, Aguirre said, "I don’t know if any of the other teams that are pushing them 4 the title understand how 2 win the big game.''
  • Matt Moore of CBS Sports believes there would have been a more formal investigation if the revelations are true about three members of the 1981/82 Knicks colluding to throw games for their drug dealer.

Kings Sign DeQuan Jones

The Kings have added another player to their training camp roster, signing DeQuan Jones, according to Mark Deeks of ShamSports.com (via Twitter). Jones' contract will be fully non-guaranteed, Deeks adds in a second tweet.

Jones, 23, went undrafted in June 2012, but signed with the Magic as a free agent, and ended up earning a rotation spot with the team, starting 17 of his 63 contests in his rookie season. After the 6'8" forward recorded averages of 3.7 PPG, 1.7 RPG, and an 8.4 PER, Orlando decided against tendering him a qualifying offer that would have made him a restricted free agent.

Sacramento's roster count now stands at 16 players, including 14 guaranteed contracts. In addition to Jones' non-guaranteed deal, the team is carrying Trent Lockett on a partially guaranteed contract. That partial guarantee may give Lockett the upper hand on the team's final roster spot, but it's only worth $35K, so it shouldn't be a difference-maker if Jones or another invitee outperforms him in the preseason. C.J. Aiken is also expected to participate in Kings camp.

Pacific Links: Len, Lakers, Kings

Here are some links to pass along out of the Pacific Division tonight: 

  • Royce Young of CBS Sports relayed a tweet from Suns rookie Alex Len, who revealed that he's been cleared to start practicing and should therefore be ready for the start of training camp. 
  • Adi Joseph and Sean Highkin of USA Today have been ranking NBA teams according to their "watchability" next season and continue their list with the Lakers, who come in at number 24. With the departure of Dwight Howard leaving the roster thinner and the possibility that the team continues to struggle with injuries, Joseph expects the purple and gold to only win 33 games and ultimately miss the playoffs. 
  • Next on the list are the Kings at 23, whom Joseph projects to finish 25-57 and fall short of a playoff berth. Although Greivis Vasquez' unselfish play should benefit DeMarcus Cousins and the team could be very entertaining, Joseph points out that the overall roster remains in flux and will continue to struggle heavily on defense.
  • Kevin Ding of the OC Register (via Twitter) notes that the Lakers training camp will open on September 29 after the team pushed their media day back to the 28th. 

Contract Details: Warriors, Lakers, Davies, Lockett

Most of the contracts being signed these days are non-guaranteed and worth the minimum salary, essentially amounting to make-good deals for camp. However, a few players who recently joined NBA clubs received modest guarantees, ensuring they'll make some money whether or not they earn a roster spot. Mark Deeks of ShamSports.com has the details, so let's round them up….

  • The Warriors will pay partial guarantees to two recent signees, Seth Curry and DeWayne Dedmon. Both players inked one-year rookie minimum contracts, but Curry received the larger guarantee — $75K to Dedmon's $25K.
  • The Lakers guaranteed $100K of Shawne Williams' one-year, minimum-salary deal.
  • Brandon Davies' two-year deal with the Clippers is partially guaranteed for $50K in 2013/14.
  • Trent Lockett's two-year contract with the Kings is currently guaranteed for $35K, but he can increase that amount by earning a spot on the team's regular-season roster. Lockett's guarantee will become $100K if he's not waived by opening night, and if he keeps a roster spot all year, his 2014/15 salary will become guaranteed for $100K on the last day of the '13/14 season.
  • The Pelicans cut Lance Thomas in July to clear cap space for their new additions, then re-signed him to a new deal. Thomas received a guarantee of $15K for his trouble — his previous contract had been fully non-guaranteed.

Pacific Notes: Buss, Lakers, Nunnally, Kings

Many Lakers fans have been skeptical about executive vice president Jim Buss assuming a decision-making role in the organization previously held by his late father, Jerry Buss. But Ramona Shelburne of ESPNLosAngeles.com writes that Jim had gained the trust of his father, and that the two men worked together in making decisions like the hiring of Mike D'Antoni, who they felt was a better fit than Phil Jackson. Shelburne's piece includes plenty of interesting tidbits and quotes from Buss, who adds that he'd be "all for it" if Jackson wanted to work with the Lakers on a consultant basis.

Here's more from around the Pacific Division:

  • In an Insider-only piece for ESPN.com, Bradford Doolittle proposes a few steps for rebuilding the Lakers, including re-signing Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol next summer, trading Steve Nash, and keeping their 2014 first-round pick.
  • Sources indicate to Henry Abbott of ESPN.com that the Lakers could have trouble attracting impact free agents next summer, in part because it's not clear how much cap space the team will have, and in part because of Kobe's reputation as a difficult teammate.
  • Yesterday, we heard that free agent swingman James Nunnally would work out for the Spurs and Jazz. Today, Keith Schlosser of Ridiculous Upside adds a couple more teams to the mix, writing that Nunnally will also audition for the Suns, as well as the Pelicans, in the hopes of earning a camp invite.
  • Without the petition signatures that Chris Hansen's money was able to buy, there's not much momentum left for the anti-arena effort in Sacramento, according to Marcos Breton of the Sacramento Bee.

Pacific Notes: Clippers, Kings, Seattle

The Suns decided last week that Michael Beasley's potential upside will take too long to surface and/or it's just not worth the hassle.  The former No. 2 overall pick was waived by Phoenix but it may not take long for him to find a new home.  The Heat, who drafted Beasley in 2008, are reportedly among the teams thinking about signing the talented and troubled forward.  Here's today's news out of the Pacific Division..

  • After years of losing, Clippers fans are finally being rewarded for their patience, writes Alex Kennedy of HoopsWorld.  “This team’s depth is right up there [with the deepest teams I’ve been on],Jamal Crawford said of the club's offseason additons. “Adding Jared [Dudley] and J.J. [Redick], those are two guys who can really shoot the ball, who can space the court and who can really play…We hate to see anybody leave and it’s unfortunate to see some of the guys from last year leave in different ways like trades and free agency, but anytime you can get some high-level additions like that it really helps your ballclub. I think it’s going to give us a lot of space."
  • Seattle investor Chris Hansen was fined $50K for putting $100K behind an effort to thwart Sacramento's efforts to build a new arena in the downtown portion of their city, according to the Associated Press.  
  • Earlier today, we learned that the Suns, along with the Bucks, have interest in Royal Ivey.

Northwest Notes: Jazz, T-Wolves, Thunder

The Jazz have a big decision on their hands this fall as they have until Halloween to extend Derrick Favors and Gordon Hayward.  Utah is comfortable with heading into the season without new deals for either player, but it might behoove them to lock them up before they see big minutes in 2013/14 and increase their value.  In last week's poll, most Hoops Rumors readers said that they expect both players to get extensions ironed out.  Here's more from the Northwest Division..

  • Zach Harper of CBSSports.com sees an extension of roughly $8MM per season for Hayward and the Jazz.
  • Darren Wolfson of 1500 ESPN Twin Cities has reported on multiple occasions that the Timberwolves would likely leave their final regular season roster spot up for grabs between Othyus Jeffers, Robbie Hummel, Lorenzo Brown and another big man, but Flip Saunders tells WCCO that there's no unnamed big man forthcoming, as Wolfson points out via Twitter. So, it appears it's down to Jeffers, Hummel and Brown, though none of the three have inked a camp invite yet.
  • The Thunder, after relocating from Seattle, had the luxury of being able to build at a slower pace because the fans in OKC were supportive and anxious for basketball.  A move to Seattle would have afforded the Kings a similar opportunity, HoopsWorld's Bill Ingram argues.

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

Extension Candidate: DeMarcus Cousins

It's doubtful that there's a more divisive figure than DeMarcus Cousins among this year's extension-eligible players on rookie-scale contracts. Cousins is a rare gem — a young center who flirts with averages of 20 points and 10 rebounds. He also has a reputation as a malcontent, drawing three separate suspensions last season, according to Patricia Bender's database. Sacramento's completely revamped braintrust, from owner Vivek Ranadive to GM Pete D'Alessandro to coach Michael Malone, have to make the decision on Cousins' extension without the benefit of going through a season with him. The Kings would still have the right to match offers if they let him hit restricted free agency next summer, but the extension period offers them the opportunity for complete control and perhaps a chance.to leverage any desire Cousins may have for long-term security into a team-friendly pact.

The new-look Kings have indicated a willingness to give Cousins the benefit of the doubt. D'Alessandro came aboard with a fondness for Cousins, and he traveled with Ranadive and Malone to meet the 6'11" center in the big man's native Alabama. D'Alessandro consulted with Cousins about free agents, and team officials reportedly expressed their commitment to Cousins when they met again with him and his representatives on multiple occasions in Las Vegas over the summer.

There was some turbulence in the spring, as a report from Sam Amico of Fox Sports Ohio suggested that Malone's hiring meant Cousins was a "goner," but later it appeared rival teams were advancing that notion in the hopes they could shake Cousins loose at a bargain price. Later, Amico reported that Malone was excited to work with Cousins.

Through it all, agent Dan Fegan instructed Cousins to keep quiet on the incoming powers that be in Sacramento. It also looks like Fegan's going after a max contract for his client, with hints that he'll demand a trade if no such deal is forthcoming. Fegan is as cagey as they come, as witnessed by his negotiations for Dwight Howard, and he's already scored one max extension this summer, for John Wall. He negotiated the offseason's other rookie-scale extension, too, for Larry Sanders. Still, the Kings wield the hammer. If they don't want to give him a max extension, they can simply wait until next summer, allowing themselves an extra year to monitor his progress. Another team could come along with a max offer at that point, but the Kings could match it, and it could only be a four-year deal with 4.5% raises, as opposed to the five-year contract with 7.5% raises he could get from signing with Sacramento outright. Realistically, the Kings control Cousins' fate for years to come, unless he takes the drastic move of accepting his qualifying offer next summer. So, a trade demand would ring hollow.

The specter of a trade seems more likely to be a weapon for the Kings rather than an arrow in Cousins' quiver. Sacramento could sign him to a long-term deal, and if they don't like his progress, the team could swap him to a team willing to overpay for size, as SB Nation's Tom Ziller suggested. Of course, an extension could make a trade difficult, at least for the coming season, thanks to the Poison Pill Provision

An extension for Cousins, be it for the max or otherwise, is no certainty. The Kings were an atrocious defensive team with him on the floor last season, allowing 109.5 points per 100 possessions, per NBA.com. That's a rate that would have made Sacramento the worst team in the league in that category. Of course, the Kings weren't much better defensively when he wasn't on the court, but it's tough to make a long-term commitment to someone who's a minus on one side of the floor. Cousins averaged a career-worst 0.7 blocks per game last season, though he did make progress on defending without fouling. He picked up 3.6 personals a night — the first time he averaged fewer than four, and the first time he didn't lead the league in total fouls committed.

He's far more evolved at the offensive end, even if his range doesn't extend much farther than eight or nine feet away from the basket. He's improved his field goal shooting in each season, though there's still room for further growth from the 46.5% mark he put up last year. He took fewer shots last season, which accounted for a dip in points per game, but he also grabbed fewer rebounds in the same minutes per contest, with a lower rebound rate, according to Basketball-Reference. That could be a function of the way former coach Keith Smart used him, but the regression still seems like a red flag.

The Kings already have about $40MM committed for next season, and with Cousins and Greivis Vasquez both up for extensions this summer, there's not much room to maneuver. Still more important than any basketball or cap-related measure is Cousins' maturity. It makes sense that the Kings have visited with him frequently throughout the summer, so that the new management can get a sense of the way he handles himself. Cousins just turned 23 last month, so it's reasonable to suggest that his youth had much to do with his past transgressions. Still, the experience of going through a walk year, and the pressures that come with it, might force him to finally grow up. It could also reveal a further inability to handle life in the NBA.

The consequences of tying him up long-term seem to outweigh the downside of letting Cousins hit free agency next summer, namely the possibility that the Kings would miss out on signing him to a bargain deal, one he and Fegan might not agree to anyway. I expect Cousins will be the most talented extension-eligible player not to get one this year.

Poll: Most Improved Player In The Pacific?

The spotlight in the Pacific Division will surely be on former Clipper reserve Eric Bledsoe, who will now headline Phoenix's backcourt next to another young talent in Goran Dragic. Bledsoe's numbers last season (8.5 PPG/3.1 APG/20.4 MPG) wouldn't seem very comparable to what will be expected of him in 2013/14, especially considering some of his standout performances when given more than 30 minutes of playing time: 23 points, 10 rebounds, and 7 assists in 38 minutes against the Celtics, 19 points, 7 rebounds, and 5 assists in 37 minutes against the Rockets, 10 points, 10 assists, and six steals in 39 minutes against the Timberwolves, and a 27-point, 6 rebound, 6 steal, and 3-block performance in 41 minutes against the Magic to name a few. Now equipped with starter's minutes, it will be fascinating to see how the 6'1 guard will utilize his significantly increased role and responsibilities as a leader of a young team. 

Keeping all this in mind, Bledsoe should undoubtedly be among the favorites within the whole league to have a breakout season. With that aside, it was unquestionably a summer of shakeups for the rest of the Pacific Division, as each of the other four teams will feature new key rotation players in 2013/14. Let's take a look at some of the other new faces looking to make a lasting impact on their respective clubs: 

Marreese Speights, Warriors – The 6'10 power forward is entering his sixth year in the league and will be playing for his fourth NBA team after signing with Golden State this past July. Following a trade from Memphis to Cleveland halfway through last season, Speights averaged 10.2 PPG, 5.1 RPG, and 18.5 MPG in 39 games and one start for the Cavaliers. Although Sean Deveney of the Sporting News and NBA.com's Scott Howard-Cooper have reported that the team is currently expecting Andrew Bogut and David Lee to be healthy enough to play without limitation, head coach Mark Jackson could possibly rely on Speights for extended minutes on some nights in order to preserve some of his older frontcourt veterans.

Considering his production in a limited amount of minutes last season, the former Florida standout could prove to be one of the most important reserves on a playoff contender this year and may open some more eyes in the process.

Byron Mullens, Clippers – Fresh off of career highs in points, rebounds, and minutes last season with the Bobcats (10.8/6.4/26.9), it remains to be seen just how Mullens' minutes and role will be handled in Los Angeles. The 7'0 big man put together a flurry of attention-grabbing performances last season, averaging 12.9 PPG/8.2 RPG/33.0 MPG in November and 10.0/7.3/28.6 in December before being sidelined with an ankle injury. Following a 19-game absence, Mullens picked up where he left off, posting 14.6/7.9/32.1 in February.

Although his overall shooting percentages were less than desirable last season (.385/.317/.636), one thing to consider is the possible improvement in the quality of shot attempts as a by-product of playing with a superstar playmaker in Chris Paul and his solid distributing backup, Darren Collison. Byron's confidence in attempting perimeter shots is far from lacking, as nearly four of his 10.6 shot attempts per game last year were taken from beyond the arc. With that being said, Mullens may very well be a viable threat who can stretch the floor provided he can improve his shooting efficiency and have better opportunities created for him. If given the minutes, he's shown that he can definitely put up some numbers. 

Wesley Johnson, Lakers – Despite his lack of floor time for the first four months of 2012/13, the 6'7 swingman made the most of his situation after being given consistent starter's minutes in the final two months of the season, averaging 13.2 PPG/1.2 SPG/30.3 MPG in March along with 12.9 PPG and 27.3 MPG in April respectively. He did well enough that despite the Suns opting not to exercise his fourth year option, there was still mutual interest in a return to Phoenix this summer. Ultimately, the former lottery pick out of Syracuse wound up with the Lakers, where he should have his fair share of opportunities as an athletic player in Mike D'Antoni's system. With Johnson playing on a one-year contract, it'd certainly be in his best interest to continue his momentum from last season and perform well enough to earn a lucrative contract next summer, whether it'd be in L.A. or somewhere else. 

Greivis Vasquez, Kings – It's more than reasonable to deem 2012/13 as a breakout year for Vasquez. The 6'6 point guard rose to the occasion in New Orleans, producing an impressive 13.9 PPG and 9.0 APG stat line in 34.4 MPG and 78 games played/started. It's important to note that he'll be entering a contract year, and one significant question is how Vasquez's numbers will fare with an entirely different cast of teammates, especially with the surplus of guards on the roster – namely Isaiah Thomas, Ben McLemore, Marcus Thornton, and Jimmer Fredette. Although the former Maryland star displayed his capabilities as a distributor and a tertiary scoring option last season, it appears that another major improvement within reach would be to raise his shooting percentages (.433/.342) as well as the amount of times he gets to the line (2.0). Following his career-best season to date, Vasquez will surely have to deliver in his most important one yet. 

After Bledsoe, who would you expect to be the most improved player in the Pacific Division?

Most Improved Player In The Pacific?

  • Greivis Vasquez 35% (215)
  • Wesley Johnson 31% (190)
  • Marreese Speights 18% (111)
  • Other 8% (46)
  • Byron Mullens 7% (44)

Total votes: 606

Bighorns Name Abelson Head Coach

According to a team press release, the Reno Bighorns – which serve as the D-League affiliate to the Kings – have officially named Joel Abelson as their head coach. This figures into being one of the first major moves of newly appointed general manager Shareef Abdur-Rahim

Abelson, who will usher in the first season of a single affiliation partnership between the Kings and Bighorns, brings experience as head coach of the Sioux Falls Skyforce and had previously served as an assistant for the Idaho Stampede. Two days ago, we relayed that he had reached an agreement with the team. 

 

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