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Evaluating Last Year’s Buyouts

Another deadline looms over the NBA this week. Players must clear waivers by Friday to be eligible for the playoffs with a new team, and many of them are in the process of negotiating buyouts with their current teams to obtain the freedom to sign elsewhere. With a buyout, a player is essentially paying for his free agency by giving back a portion of his contract. Sometimes it's a relatively small fraction of the contract's worth, and other times, as with Mike Bibby last year, it's a sizable chunk of money. Teams may be motivated to do a buyout for cap relief, as the reduced value of the contract, and not its original value, is what counts on the ledger. For more on buyouts and their affect on the salary cap, check out Larry Coon's CBA FAQ.

As this year's crop of buyouts gets ready for harvest, let's take a look back at what happened to the players who agreed to buyouts last year: 

  • Mike Bibby renounced $6,217,616 of his salary over two seasons when he reached a buyout agreement with the Wizards on February 28. Scheduled to make $5,764,767 in 2010/11 and $6,417,616 in 2011/12, he received $4,438,893 last year and gets $1,125,874 this year from the contract. (The contract also netted Bibby $400K in incentives). He signed with the Heat on March 2, earning $342,022 for the rest of the season. He started all but the final playoff game for Miami, averaging 3.7 points, 1.2 assists and 20.8 minutes in the postseason. He has played a limited role with the Knicks this season on a 1,352,181 minimum-salary deal. The $1.125MM he gets from his bought out contract still counts as a cap hit against the Wizards this year.
  • Troy Murphy gave up $300K of the $11,968,253 remaining on his expiring contract when he and the Warriors reached a buyout agreement February 28. The Celtics picked him up March 2 for $310,929, so Murphy came out ahead by close to $11K. Though he averaged 10.5 MPG off the bench for the Celtics during the regular season, he played a total of just three minutes in the playoffs. He signed with the Lakers for the veteran’s minimum of $1,352,181, and as the first big man off the bench, he’s averaged 3.4 PPG and 3.5 RPG in 18 MPG.
  • Al Thornton was making $2,814,196 in the final year of his rookie contract last year, and gave back $100K in a buyout with the Wizards on March 1. He latched on with the Warriors for $218,677 on March 3 and settled into the rotation, averaging 6.0 PPG, 2.6 RPG and 14.3 MPG. Nonetheless, the 14th pick in the 2007 draft has not played in the league this season, and signed with a Puerto Rican team last month.
  • Corey Brewer’s was making $3,703,472 in the final year of his rookie contract with the Timberwolves when he was shipped to the Knicks in the three-team Carmelo Anthony deal. On March 1, he agreed to cut his salary to $3.2MM in a buyout. Two days later, the Mavs used their midlevel exception to sign him to a three-year, $7.452MM deal. He played in 13 regular season games for the Mavericks, performing well in just 11.4 MPG, compiling PER (17.6) and points per 36 minutes (16.8) numbers well above his career marks. He was an afterthought in the playoffs though, appearing for just 23 total minutes as the Mavs made their championship run. Seeking to shed salary, Dallas traded Brewer and Rudy Fernandez to the Nuggets for a second-round pick before this season. Seeing 21.8 MPG, Brewer is averaging 9.8 PPG, the best scoring output of his career save for 13.0 PPG in 2009/10.
  • Jared Jeffries forfeited $1MM of his $6,883,800 salary on February 25 to get a buyout from the Rockets. He signed a $316,584 minimum-salary deal on March 1 with the Knicks, who had sent him to Houston in a 2010 trade. A favorite of coach Mike D’Antoni’s, he saw 19.3 MPG in the regular season but was largely ineffective en route to a career-worst 34.9% shooting percentage. He bounced back in the playoffs, averaging 6.3 PPG on 47.8% from the floor. The Knicks brought him back on another minimum deal for $1,229,255 this season, and while he’s averaged 4.8 PPG and 4.2 RPG in 20.5 MPG this year, his playing time has been cut back somewhat under new coach Mike Woodson.
  • Eddy Curry’s six-year, $56,014,078 contract finally came off the Knicks books last year when they shipped him to the Timberwolves as part of the Carmelo Anthony trade. The Wolves absorbed a $504,459 trade kicker, but wasted little time divesting themselves of Curry. He agreed to give back $250K in a buyout March 1, yet still wound up pocketing more than $11.53MM from the final year of his massive deal. The buyout turned out to be a waste for Curry, who didn’t catch on with another team last year. The Heat signed him to a $1,352,181 minimum-salary deal before this season, but has used Curry for a total of just 46 minutes all year.

Storytellers Contracts was used in the creation of this post.

 

Deadline Deals Explained Financially

A few weeks ago, I broke down some of the rules and regulations on trades in the new Collective Bargaining Agreement. Now that the trade deadline has passed and we've seen a number of deals consummated, it's worth a look back to see how those trade rules applied to this week's moves.

As we run through the trades, explaining the financial details for each team, keep in mind that each club involved in a deal can break down a trade in different ways. Jeff Kramer of Storytellers Contracts explained this splendidly in a piece on this week's Andrew Bogut/Monta Ellis trade for Blazer's Edge. Although the total salaries going each way matched up almost perfectly, the Bucks broke down the move into two separate trades, while the Warriors viewed it as three separate transactions. This way, each team was able to acquire a sizeable traded player exception that wouldn't have been possible by viewing the trade as a single, simultaneous transaction.

For more clarification on this point, check out Kramer's piece, revisit Larry Coon's CBA FAQ, and feel free to ask questions in the comments section of this post. Also, be sure to check out our list of outstanding traded player exceptions, which has been updated to reflect all the info below.

Here's the complete breakdown of this week's trades:

Read more

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List Of Players With Trade Kickers

With just hours to go before the trade deadline, it’s worth taking a look at a set of stumbling blocks that might be making some potential deals a lot harder: trade kickers.

A trade kicker, or trade bonus, is an amount of money paid to a player if he is traded during his contract. Only a few players have trade kickers as a part of their deals, many of them stars who can command such clauses during negotiations. Trade kickers are usually a certain percentage of the remaining value of the contract, but sometimes they are a fixed amount. In either case, they can’t exceed 15% of the deal’s remaining value.

For salary cap purposes, the kicker counts toward the cap of the team acquiring the player, and the bonus is spread evenly over the remaining years of the contract. So, if Player X has a $2.5MM trade kicker and two more seasons left on his contract after this year, the kicker counts as $500K for the rest of this season and $1M each for the next two seasons.

For more on trade kickers, check out Larry Coon’s CBA FAQ page. Here’s a roundup of players with trade kickers, with the value in parentheses.

Atlanta:
Josh Smith
(15%)

Boston:
Kevin Garnett
($1,751,394)
Ray Allen
(15%)
Jermaine O’Neal
(7.5%)

Cleveland:
Anderson Varejao
(5%)

Dallas:
Shawn Marion
(15%)

L.A. Clippers:
DeAndre Jordan
(15%)

L.A. Lakers:
Kobe Bryant
(15%)
Pau Gasol
(15%)
Metta World Peace
(15%)
Luke Walton
(7.5%)

Orlando:
Hedo Turkoglu
($415,850 for each 2011/12 and 2012/13)
Quentin Richardson
(15%)

San Antonio:
Tim Duncan
(15%)
Manu Ginobili
(5%)

Toronto:
Jose Calderon
(10%)
Andrea Bargnani
(5%)
Amir Johnson
(5%)

Note: A player's salary plus his trade bonus is not permitted to exceed the maximum salary for that year, so some of these bonuses would be unavailable in the case of a trade.

Storytellers Contracts and Yahoo! Sports were used in the creation of this list.

2011 Trade Deadline: One Year Later

With just days to go before Thursday's trade deadline and everyone waiting for someone to fire the first salvo, let's take a look at the last-minute deals of 2011. The lockout pushed the deadline into March this season, but last year it took place on February 24, a more customary date. The action got started with just two trading days left, but once it did, the deals got done quickly. It’s still difficult to fully assess winners and losers one year out from a trade, but it is a time when immediate returns begin to give way to long-term considerations. Here's how last year's deadline deals stack up, in chronological order:

Feb. 22, 2011: New York acquired forward Carmelo Anthony, guard Chauncey Billups, guard Anthony Carter, forward Renaldo Balkman and forward Shelden Williams from Denver for forward Wilson Chandler, forward Danilo Gallinari, guard Raymond Felton, center Timofey Mozgov, a 2014 first-round draft pick and a 2012 and a 2013 second-round pick and cash. New York traded center Eddy Curry and forward Anthony Randolph to Minnesota for forward Corey Brewer. Denver acquired center Kosta Koufos from Minnesota. Much like GMs are waiting for the Magic to trade Dwight Howard before the dealing starts in earnest this year, this was the swap that got the action going in 2011. When New York waived Balkman last month, Anthony became the sole player from the transaction to remain in New York. Brewer, who went to the Knicks in this deal and was waived shortly thereafter, is now in Denver, too, after helping the Mavs to the title last year. Anthony’s 21.2 PPG is only four-tenths of a point higher than a career low as the Knicks have struggled to fit him together with Amare Stoudemire, Jeremy Lin and others. Gallinari, Mozgov and Koufos are the only players who’ve been Nuggets ever since this deal, but Denver GM Masai Ujiri flipped Felton for Andre Miller and rookie Jordan Hamilton, both of whom have contributed this year. The Wolves got rid of Curry’s $11.53MM salary this summer, and Randolph’s $2.91MM deal, which expires after this season, could be used as a trade chip as the team looks to be active again at the deadline. Amidst a renaissance, Minnesota could eventually emerge as a sneaky winner of this deal, but the winner, so far is Denver

Feb. 22, 2011: Chicago traded forward James Johnson to Toronto for the 2011 first-round draft pick Toronto acquired from Miami. Though the Raptors went hard after Wilson Chandler last month to fill the small forward position, Johnson has filled role of the starter at the 3 capably, averaging 8.6 PPG and 4.9 RPG this year, similar to his numbers after the deal last year. Johnson wasn’t used much in Chicago, so the move was basically for roster and cap space on their end. That first round draft pick, Norris Cole, was traded twice more on draft night and, ironically, wound up back in Miami, where he’s been in the rotation all season long as the backup point guard. The winner, so far: Toronto.

Feb. 23, 2011: Utah traded guard Deron Williams to New Jersey for guard Devin Harris, forward Derrick Favors, a 2011 first-round pick, a 2012 first-round pick (via Golden State) and cash considerations. The second major blockbuster after the Anthony deal last year may hinge on the primary blockbuster this year. Williams, a free agent after this season, could bolt if the Nets fail to acquire Dwight Howard. As his 22.4 PPG, a career high bolstered by last week’s 57-point outburst, and 8.2 APG demonstrate, Williams is clearly one of the NBA’s elite point guards, even as the league boasts perhaps the most impressive collection of point guards in its history. The Nets have been dreadful this year, however, going just 13-27 while the Jazz are 19-19 and in hot pursuit of a playoff spot. Harris, is averaging just 9.6 points and 4.5 assists, his worst numbers in either category since 2006/07, but Favors and that first round pick, which turned out to be No. 3 overall selection Enes Kanter, are impressive young post players who could soon make Al Jefferson and Paul Millsap expendable. As long as the Jazz keep winning and building, and Williams’ fate is undecided, the winner, so far, is Utah.

Feb. 23, 2011: New Orleans traded forward Carl Landry to Sacramento for guard Marcus Thornton and cash considerations. This is the deal that had Mark Cuban up in arms, as the league owned Hornets took on salary to add Landry. The deal was indeed helpful for New Orleans last year, as Landry took over at starting power forward for an injured David West and averaged 15.8 points and 5.0 rebounds as the Hornets challenged the Lakers in six games. He has returned to the bench this year, however, his numbers falling back to 11.5 PPG and 4.4 RPG. Thornton has proven he can fill it up in Sacramento, averaging 21.3 PPG last year and 18.8 PPG this season as the starting shooting guard. Valuable as Landry might have been in the playoffs last year, it’s hard to call swapping a starter for a reserve a winning move, no matter what Cuban says. The winner, so far: Sacramento.

Feb. 24, 2011: Sacramento acquired guard-forward Marquis Daniels and cash considerations from Boston for a future draft pick. Daniels, who suffered a bruised spine in a nasty collision before the trade last year, was never able to contribute to the Kings before he became a free agent this past offseason. He signed again with Boston, making this deal something of a waste for the Kings. The pick, a 2017 second-rounder is a long way from paying anyone dividends. The winner, so far: Boston.

Feb. 24, 2011: Houston traded guard Aaron Brooks to Phoenix for guard Goran Dragic and a future first-round draft pick. Brooks has spent all of this season in China, and as a restricted free agent in a position similar to Wilson Chandler’s, he might not play at all in the NBA this year. Houston wound up with Dragic, who is averaging a career-high 3.4 APG as the backup to point guard Kyle Lowry. On draft night, the Rockets acquired little-used third point Jonny Flynn for the pick. If Houston can get a useful player in another deal for Flynn, last year’s deadline transaction looks even better. The winner, so far: Houston.

Feb. 24, 2011: Houston traded forward Shane Battier and guard Ishmael Smith to Memphis for center Hasheem Thabeet, forward DeMarre Carroll and a future first-round draft pick. Thabeet is the only remaining player on either of these teams from the deal. Last week I looked at the effect Battier had in his short stint in Memphis last year before signing with Miami before this season. Battier’s clutch three-pointer that proved the difference in Game 1 against the Spurs last season could have made this deal worthwhile on its own. The winner, so far: Memphis.

Feb. 24, 2011: Cleveland traded guard Mo Williams and forward Jamario Moon to the L.A. Clippers for guard Baron Davis and a 2011 first-round draft pick. Initially a swap of point guards, this deal has come to have far-reaching consequences. That draft pick wound up being 2011 No. 1 overall selection Kyrie Irving. Had Irving been in L.A., the Clippers probably don’t make the Chris Paul deal. Davis, who was amnestied by Cleveland and wound up in New York, missed the first part of this season with back and elbow injuries, opening up an opportunity for Jeremy Lin to start. Arguably, this trade significantly altered the course of several teams, and it’s difficult to evaluate at the deal at face value, but let's give it a shot. While it’s hard to discount Williams’ value as a sixth man putting up 13.5 PPG for the vastly improved Clippers, Irving is en route to Rookie of the Year honors and promises even more in years to come for a Cleveland team that’s much better, too. The winner, so far: Cleveland.

Feb. 24, 2011: Charlotte traded forward Gerald Wallace to Portland for center Joel Przybilla, forward Dante Cunningham, forward-center Sean Marks and a conditional 2011 and a conditional 2013 first-round draft pick. This was a salary-shedding exercise for the Bobcats, as they moved into full-scale rebuilding mode. None of the players in this deal are with Charlotte now, and Przybilla recently signed back with Portland. The 2011 pick was used on Tobias Harris, who wound up with Milwaukee. Wallace and his $9.5MM-a-year contract could be on the move again as the Blazers look to retool as well. The Blazers don’t look like they’re headed anywhere remarkable this year, and Wallace’s 13.7 PPG is his lowest since 2004/05. At least the Bobcats, woeful though they may be this season, appear to have a semblance of a plan: The winner, so far: Charlotte.

Feb. 24, 2011: Boston traded forward Luke Harangody and center Semih Erden to Cleveland for a 2013 second-round draft pick. The Cavs picked up a couple of rookie big men on the cheap. Injury limited Erden to just four games for Cleveland last year, but he took over as starting center last month the absence of Anderson Varejao. Coach Byron Scott still played Erden sparingly, however, as he went for just 3.4 PPG and 3.3 RPG in February, and he has since fallen out of the rotation. Harangody averaged 6.2 PPG and 4.2 RPG in 19 minutes a night after the trade last year, but has been little used this year. For the Celtics, this move was essentially meant to clear roster space and out of fear that a homesick Erden would return to Europe. Erden’s still here, but Boston was able to use one of the open slots for Troy Murphy, who averaged 2.6 points and 2.2 rebounds in 10.5 minutes a night down the stretch before signing as a free agent with the Lakers before this season. The winner, so far: Cleveland

Feb. 24, 2011: Boston traded center Kendrick Perkins and guard Nate Robinson to Oklahoma City for forward Jeff Green, center Nenad Krstic, a 2012 first-round draft pick and cash. The Celtics broke up their championship starting five, ranked the most effective five-man unit of the last five years by Basketball Reference metrics, for what turned out to be a startlingly low return. Jeff Green’s heart trouble, which is keeping him out this year, was unforeseen, but even if he returns to the NBA, as expected, next year, it may not be with the Celtics. The team withdrew its qualifying offer when Green failed his preseason physical, which makes him an unrestricted free agent this summer. Meanwhile, Krstic is playing overseas this year and Perkins signed a four-year $32.56MM extension with the Thunder, a contract that pays him less this year than the $9MM the Celtics were set to pay Green. The Celtics gave up plenty for long-term flexibility and cap space. The Thunder continues to grow with Perkins firmly entrenched as the starting center. The winner, so far: Oklahoma City

NBA Execs Expecting Quiet Deadline

Dwight Howard. Pau Gasol. Rajon Rondo. Monta Ellis. There has been no shortage of stars identified as potential trade candidates in the weeks leading up to the 2012 trade deadline. But with just one week left for teams to work out deals, there seems to be a growing sense that this season's deadline will be a quiet one. As a source told Sam Amico of FOX Sports Ohio (Twitter link), "Fans want trades. GMs don't."

Teams may be reluctant to make major deals this season in part because of the new Collective Bargaining Agreement and the compressed lockout-season schedule. Alex Kennedy of HoopsWorld tweets that limited practice time and a later-than-usual trade deadline will give clubs less time to incorporate new acquisitions into their systems before the playoffs get underway. Chris Mannix of SI.com (Twitter link), meanwhile, alludes to uncertainty among general managers about what the deadline will bring, since many teams seem unwilling to take on salary — perhaps a result of the new CBA's increased restrictions on teams above the luxury tax threshold.

There are still seven days for GMs to talk trades, and I expect things to heat up as next Thursday approaches. Underperforming teams will start feeling more pressure to make moves, and perhaps they'll become a little more willing to include an extra piece or two in their trade offers. But, for all the rumors we've heard involving stars like Howard, Gasol, and Rondo, this year's deadline may not feature the sort of blockbusters we saw last season, when Carmelo Anthony and Deron Williams were on the move.

Recent Deadline Deals With Playoff Impact

In 2006, the Heat acquired veteran shooting guard Derek Anderson at the deadline to add depth to a roster led by Dwyane Wade and Shaquille O’Neal. The Heat won the NBA title that year, but since then, no team that dealt for anyone within a week of the trade deadline has gone on to win the championship. Still, there have been a few players acquired at the deadline since then who’ve made their presence felt on teams that have advanced in the playoffs the same year. Let’s take a look at recent deals that have had immediate playoff impact here:

  • The same year the Heat picked up Anderson, Cavs GM Danny Ferry traded Mike Wilks and cash to Seattle for Ronald Murray, better known as Flip. He helped them into the playoffs for the first time in the LeBron James era, and played more postseason minutes than anyone on the team except LeBron and Eric Snow, averaging 8.1 PPG, 3.2 RPG and 1.6 APG as the Cavs beat the Wizards in the first round and took top-seeded Detroit to seven games in the conference semis.
  • Ferry and the Cavs were active again in 2008, this time in a major way. They picked up Ben Wallace, Joe Smith, Wally Szczerbiak and Delonte West in a three-team deal with the Bulls and Sonics. Wallace, Szczerbiak and West made up three-fifths of the team’s starting lineup. Both West and Szczerbiak averaged 10.8 PPG in the playoffs, tying them for third on the team behind LeBron and Zydrunas Ilgauskas. Wallace was the team’s third leading postseason rebounder at 6.5 a night, and averaged more than one block every night playing just 23.4 MPG. Smith averaged 6.6 PPG and 4.6 RPG and teamed with Anderson Varejao to give the Cavs plenty of size off the bench as they again knocked off the Wizards and went seven games with the eventual champion Celtics.
  • No list of meaningful moves would be complete without an entry from R.C. Buford and the Spurs. In 2008, San Antonio dealt Francisco Elson, Brent Barry and a 2009 first-round pick to the Sonics for Kurt Thomas. The veteran big man started eight of the 17 playoff games the Spurs played that season, averaging 15.8 MPG, 4.1 PPG and 4.9 RPG as San Antonio survived a seven-game challenge from the upstart Hornets to get to the Western Conference Finals.
  • When Jameer Nelson dislocated his shoulder and suffered a torn labrum in early February against Dallas in 2009, playing in June seemed out of the question for the Magic. GM Otis Smith traded Brian Cook to Houston at the deadline for Rafer Alston and suddenly Orlando had the point guard who would help them get to the Finals. Alston started every game of the playoffs, even after Nelson returned in the Finals, and averaged 12.2 PPG and 4.1 APG. Curiously, he was shipped to New Jersey just days after the Finals ended, and the Magic haven’t been back since.
  • The loophole Ferry and the Cavs used in 2010 to improve their team at the deadline without ultimately giving up much has been closed in the new collective bargaining agreement. Cleveland picked up Antawn Jamison from the Wizards in return for Zydrunas Ilgauskas, the rights to Emir Preldzic and a 2010 first-rounder. Ilgauskas was bought out by the Wizards and returned to the Cavs a month later, which he wouldn’t be able to do under the new rules. Jamison became Cleveland’s starting power forward and was the team’s second-leading postseason scorer in 2010, averaging 15.3 PPG and 7.4 RPG. The advantage the Cavs gained with Ilgauskas was minimal, however, as he put up just 1.7 PPG and 1.6 RPG in 9.9 MPG off the bench.
  • We’ll include this one because it came tantalizingly close to qualifying as a deadline pickup for a championship team. Instead, the Celtics and GM Danny Ainge fell in Game 7 of the Finals to the Lakers after acquiring Nate Robinson and Marcus Landry from the Knicks in February 2010 for Eddie House, J.R. Giddens, Bill Walker and a second-round pick. Landry only played one regular season game for the Celtics, and while Robinson had his moments in the playoffs, he averaged just 4.2 PPG in 7.5 minutes a night.
  • No one thought Grizzlies GM Chris Wallace would have an impact on the playoffs last year when picked up Shane Battier and Ishmael Smith from the Rockets in exchange for his unfortunate former No. 2 pick Hasheem Thabeet, DeMarre Carroll and a future first-rounder. That was before Battier played more postseason minutes than any other Memphis reserve, averaging 5.5 PPG and 4.0 RPG for an eighth-seeded Grizzlies that fell just one game shy of the Western Conference Finals. We’ll see if Battier can provide a similar boost for the Heat this year.
  • In a trade that looks even better now, Thunder GM Sam Presti gave his team an inside presence for the stretch run last year when they got Kendrick Perkins and Nate Robinson from the Celtics in exchange for Jeff Green, Nenad Krstic, a first-round draft pick and cash. Perkins started every postseason game at center and gave Oklahoma City 4.5 PPG and 6.1 RPG, to go along with defense and championship experience. The Thunder advanced in the postseason for the first time since moving from Seattle.

Falk on Lockout, LeBron, Howard

One-time superagent David Falk is down to eight NBA clients, but as the man who negotiated the contracts of Michael Jordan, Patrick Ewing and countless other superstars of years gone by, his words still carry some clout. He spoke with Sam Amick of SI.com and shared his thoughts on some of the league's current issues. Some highlights:

  • Falk says he wasn't part of a group of agents trying to unseat players union executive director Billy Hunter during the lockout this summer, but believes the union suffers from a lack of solidarity and that Hunter is reluctant to accept help. He believes the union and agents should cooperate more.
  • The rookie wage scale and other rigid salary structures have pressured many agents to pay players and their relatives, friends and other associates to win clients because there's little agents can do to differentiate themselves, Falk says.
  • The public relations disaster that resulted from the televising of LeBron James' "Decision" demonstrates how many star players have been managing their agents, and not the other way around.
  • In the digital age, Dwight Howard doesn't need to be in a major media center, like rumored destinations Brooklyn or Los Angeles, to grow his brand.

 

Players Who Can’t Be Traded Yet

As of March 1st, most players who signed free agent contracts during the offseason became eligible to be traded. However, there are still a handful of players who can't be included in any deals, due to CBA restrictions.

Unrestricted free agents who signed later than January 1st cannot be dealt until two months after their signing date. Restricted free agents who signed for more than 120% what they made last season and whose teams are over the salary cap cannot be traded for three months after their signing date. In some cases, those restrictions will be lifted after the March 15th trade deadline, in which case the player is ineligible to be dealt this season.

Taking into account the CBA rules, here's a rundown of when the league's more recent signees can included in trades:

March 4th
Nate Robinson
(Warriors)

March 6th
Yi Jianlian
(Mavericks)

March 10th
Mario Chalmers
(Heat)
Jonas Jerebko (Pistons)
Thaddeus Young (76ers)

March 11th
Luc Mbah a Moute
(Bucks)

March 13th
Marc Gasol
(Grizzlies)
DeAndre Jordan (Clippers)

Can't be traded this season
Arron Afflalo (Nuggets)
DeMarre Carroll (Jazz)
Erick Dampier (Hawks)
Kenyon Martin (Clippers)
Joel Przybilla (Trail Blazers)
Walker Russell Jr. (Pistons)
Greg Smith (Rockets)
Ishmael Smith (Magic)
J.R. Smith (Knicks)
Rodney Stuckey (Pistons)
Lance Thomas (Hornets)

10-Day Contract Update

Since February 6th, NBA teams have been permitted to sign free agents to 10-day contracts, providing roster depth and an opportunity to get a brief look at a new player. Teams are allowed to sign a player to two 10-day contracts (not necessarily consecutively). After those two deals expire, the player must be signed for the remainder of the season or become a free agent.

A number of teams have taken advantage of 10-day contracts over the last few weeks, so let's catch up on the status of the players who have signed these temporary deals this season:

Active

Expired