Archive

Archive for December, 2011

Broussard: Dwight Howard trade “may happen today”

December 9th, 2011 4 comments

According to Chris Broussard, Dwight Howard is expected to ask the Orlando Magic for a trade to the Nets today, and that the deal could be done by the end of the day.

Of course, given the general structure of superstar-laden deals in the past 24 hours, it’s hard to believe anything that’s going on in the NBA. The deal reportedly includes Brook Lopez and two first-round picks going one way, with Hedo Turkoglu potentially included in the deal.

Chris Mannix of SI.com reports that the Nets have had no discussions with Orlando regarding Howard yet, though they’ll assuredly make that phone call soon.

Meanwhile, Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! tweeted earlier today that the Nets had agreed to terms for a one-year contract with free agent Shelden Williams, but the tweet has since been deleted.

Categories: Nets Rumors, Offseason

Shorthanded Springfield rolls past Maine

December 9th, 2011 No comments

Bob MacKinnon and the Springfield Armor had their work cut out for them before Thursday night’s game against Maine. Springfield was without its four top scorers – JamesOn Curry, Jerry Smith, Dennis Horner, and Jeff Foote – who all received invitations to NBA training camps for tomorrow.

Despite the absence of four starters, the Armor (3-1), who sit atop the Eastern Conference standings, were able to have other players step in as Springfield rolled over the Red Claws (1-4) 97-89 Thursday at the MassMutal Center.

“Milton Lee has done a tremendous job of getting us players,” said MacKinnon. “If we lose players, the next guy steps in.”
Read more…

Categories: Springfield Armor

Broussard: Nets frontrunners for Dwight Howard

December 9th, 2011 8 comments

Dwight Howard is preparing to ask the Orlando Magic to trade him to the New Jersey Nets, according to sources close to the situation.

Howard’s representatives have told the Nets that they are his preferred destination.

via Chris Broussard — Dwight Howard to ask Orlando Magic for trade to New Jersey Nets, sources say – ESPN New York

The deal for Howard would presumably be Brook Lopez and two first-round picks, though if the Nets are truly willing to take on Hedo Turkoglu’s remaining three years and $34 million, more contracts would have to go the other way. Jordan Farmar and Travis Outlaw are possibilities, as is Anthony Morrow, though Dwight did once mention Morrow as one of the five players in the NBA he’d like to play with most.

As always, stay tuned.

Categories: Daily Link

My brain is mush, i.e. The Chris Paul Saga

December 9th, 2011 No comments

At 5:57 PM EST, Adrian Wojnarowski tweeted that the New Orleans Hornets were near a deal to send Chris Paul to the Los Angeles Lakers for Lamar Odom and Andrew Bynum. Los Angeles is one of Paul’s preferred destinations, specifically the Lakers.

My mind began racing immediately. From a basketball perspective, a Chris Paul-Kobe Bryant backcourt could compete for the title of the best backcourt ever. Chris Paul is the mid-2000s Shaq of point guards, and Kobe is 2011 Kobe. With two top-7 players in the NBA, the Lakers would’ve been a fantastic team, and so fun to watch — and with Pau Gasol in the post, they still have the option of running the triangle some of the time. I know CP3′s at his best when he’s not constrained to certain parts of the floor, as the triangle can do to point guards, but Chris Paul’s also the best point guard in the league.[1] This team will be fun as hell.

From the Nets’ perspective, A deal for Andrew Bynum all but takes the Lakers out of the Dwight Howard sweepstakes, taking one major player for the latest “Superstar New Jersey throws itself into the mix for” off the table. Pau Gasol is their only major trade chip left, and even though he’s a better player than Bynum or Brook Lopez, Gasol doesn’t help the Magic rebuild or move forward in any way. So this deal was cool for a lot of reasons.

At 6:06 PM EST:


Correction: The proposed deal to the Lakers is Chris Paul for Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom, source says.
@WojYahooNBA
Adrian Wojnarowski

Okay. This is a little different. Firstly, I can’t believe the Lakers are trading away Gasol — the power forward that all but shut down Dwight Howard in single coverage in the 2009 Finals, and if it wasn’t for the immense power of Kobe could’ve won a Finals MVP in 2010. With Andrew Bynum suspended for the first five games for clocking Puerto Rican leprechaun JJ Barea in Game 4 of the Western Conference Finals, the Lakers front line was looking like Derrick Caracter and … well, nobody. I wasn’t sure how this was going to work… but still, Chris Paul! Kobe Bryant! Fun as hell! Long destroy the triangle! Mike Brown has absolutely no shot at controlling these two, but so what? He doesn’t need to! It’s probably better that they control him!

Still, this bothered the hell out of me. If the Lakers acquired CP3 without giving up Bynum, that still loosely leaves them in the Superman sweepstakes. The fewer players on the market for him, the better for Brooklyn. Make no mistake, though: a potential big 3 of CP3, Kobe, and Dwight? As an NBA fan, I’m salivating. Regardless of how you feel about superteams, they’d play some amazing basketball. You know, until the meniscus’s they don’t have grind them to a screeching halt.

At 6:21 EST:


Hornets working to finalize details on 3-team deal to send Chris Paul to Lakers, Gasol to Rockets and Odom, KMart, Scola to NO, sources say.
@WojYahooNBA
Adrian Wojnarowski

At this point, I skipped entirely over how Gasol would look as the #1 in New Orleans, as I hadn’t even considered how the potential deal impacted the Hornets. But now the picture was somehow clearer and yet completely cloudy. New Orleans’s starting five is Jack, Martin, Ariza, Scola, and Okafor? Two average players under 29 and three above average players over 29? How is this a formula for doing anything? You don’t rebuild with these pieces and you definitely don’t contend with them. On top of that, how does this work under the cap? The Lakers are sending away $27.2 million in salary and only getting Chris Paul. Something’s up. My brain began to lag behind around this point, and we’d only known about the deal for roughly 20 minutes.

And the Rockets? The Rockets! Building around Gasol, with Chase Budinger, Kyle Lowry, Patrick Patterson, maybe Aaron Brooks, and enough space under the cap to sign Nene? That team is suddenly looking pretty fantastic, in a “wow, that team doesn’t have any superstars, but they’re still winning 48 games in a shortened season and probably snaring a top-4 seed in the tough West for reasons no one can explain” kind of way.

At 6:26 EST:


Says a front office executive in the 3-team talks to send Chris Paul to Lakers: “We have not yet finalized, but we are close…”
@WojYahooNBA
Adrian Wojnarowski

Oooookay. Waiiiiiiit a second. I see that tone. That’s the same tone I saw on about 30 official tweets in a six-month period about Carmelo Anthony and a certain New Jersey franchise. “We’re almost there.” “We’re in the home stretch.” “Deal’s just about done.” This past year has taught me to be highly skeptical of any tweets that don’t say it’s over, done, finished, completed, or any other adjective in the same realm. It’s at this point I start balking: maybe it’s not going to happen after all. Maybe they’ll get hung up on whether or not the Rockets should include a 2013 second-rounder or something and the whole deal falls apart. Or maybe it’s a bluff by New Orleans, in the hope that the Golden State Warriors or Los Angeles Clippers will balk on their original claims and include Stephen Curry or Eric Gordon in their packages for CP3.

Either way, starting to buy the deal way less.

At 7:06 PM:


A deal has been reached in principle to send Chris Paul to the Los Angeles Lakers, an executive in the three-team talks tells Yahoo! Sports.
@WojYahooNBA
Adrian Wojnarowski

Welp. Never mind that last thing.

At 7:22 PM:


Besides Luis Scola, Kevin Martin, Lamar Odom and Goran Dragic, Hornets will also receive a draft pick from Houston, source says.
@WojYahooNBA
Adrian Wojnarowski

Okay. Not an amazing haul for New Orleans — I still think this leaves them in a weird sort of limbo. But if Chris Paul is gone anyway, this isn’t terrible. My only issue with the deal is when you’re backed against a wall and have to deal a player of CP3′s caliber, you either want equal value (which never happens) or the ability to rebuild for the future with a ton of young pieces (which sometimes/usually happens, a la Denver or Utah). Don’t really think this deal did either for them, though they can still move pieces. Still good value overall for New Orleans, Houston comes out well too, and the Lakers now have potentially the best backcourt tandem ever, with a shot at getting the best big man of his generation.

At 8:52 PM:


NBA owners have pushed commissioner David Stern to kill the deal sending Chris Paul to the Los Angeles Lakers, sources tell Y! Sports.
@WojYahooNBA
Adrian Wojnarowski

Okay. Wait a second. What now?


Owners were irate in Board of Governors meeting with Stern, livid that the league-owned Hornets were allowed to make Paul deal, sources say.
@WojYahooNBA
Adrian Wojnarowski

I’m going to stop the Twitter timeline from here, because you see where this is going — the league killed the deal, citing “basketball reasons,” a “disconsolate” Hornets GM Dell Demps nearly retired, and Dan Gilbert (who else?) sent an e-mail to David Stern leaked by Yahoo! calling the trade a “travesty” and contradicting himself within two sentences regarding the luxury tax, revenue sharing, and trade exceptions. My brain is a puddle, and David Stern is pouring acid rain into it.

In a weird way, I don’t entirely disapprove of the league exercising its right to block the trade — they do own the Hornets, after all, and as the owner of a team, you have the right to make the final say on any trades your franchise makes. Chris Paul is an enormous asset for the Hornets, after all. There’s nothing blatantly against the rules here.

The issue here is that the league owns the Hornets in the first place. And however unavoidable it may be, you swim knee-deep in collusion with any transaction.

You don’t allow your general manager to pursue deals for months, only to veto at the last second after the deal’s already done. You don’t take “advise” from Dan Gilbert and your 29 1/29th-owners after the fact. This entire time, it was widely known that Chris Paul was a tradeable asset, that the Hornets were looking to make a deal, and when Demps found one worth taking, the league completely pulled the rug out from under him and Chris Paul.

The NBA just endured a five-month lockout that essentially amounted to pissed-off owners bitching about their inability to control the uncontrollable human element. No collective bargaining agreement is going to change the effect of personal decision-making, despite how much you think splitting the basketball-related income down the middle changes things. There’s no deal in the league that’ll turn Cleveland into Los Angeles. Superstars run the league because superstars are the league. They play where they choose to play because they’re in a class of less than a dozen people who happen to be the best in the world at their craft. And there’s something innately odd about a legion (and I mean legion, as all 29 owners have a stake in New Orleans) of older, richer, whiter owners attempting to control the destinies and destinations of the human beings they employ that serve as their product.

For a wild stretch starting around 6 PM tonight, Chris Paul was headed to the Lakers. By some combination of buffoonery, Dan Gilbert-y, and structural power imbalance, the NBA destroyed an allegedly completed deal to send Chris Paul to the Lakers.

Oh, and free agency officially begins at 2 P.M. today.

Categories: General NBA

Free agency update: Prince, Butler off the market

December 8th, 2011 10 comments

Tayshaun Prince has reportedly accepted a four-year, $27 million contract from the Detroit Pistons, and Caron Butler has accepted a three-year, $24 million contract from the Los Angeles Clippers, according to various reports. Prince & Butler are two of the small forwards the Nets targeted in free agency in the hopes of replacing Travis Outlaw with someone competent. Adrian Wojnarowski says the Nets “eased back” on Butler, apparently learning from last year’s mistakes.

According to Ric Bucher, the Nets reportedly offered Butler four years and $30 million, but Butler rejected it to play with Blake Griffin and whoever is still around after the Chris Paul trade winds settle. According to my brain, WHAT!?

Mike Dunleavy, another free agent the Nets might’ve looked at, signed for two years at $7.5 million with the Milwaukee Bucks.

Report: “98% chance” Tyson Chandler becomes a Knick

December 8th, 2011 2 comments

Update: via Marc Stein:


Source close to Tyson Chandler talks just told http://t.co/Ir9HrM0O: “It’s 98 percent sure that Tyson is going to wind up with the Knicks.”
@ESPNSteinLine
Marc Stein

Stein also reports that the Knicks are considering an offer centered around Amare Stoudemire for Chris Paul in the future.

According to Ken Berger of CBS Sports, the Knicks are preparing a major offer for Dallas free agent center Tyson Chandler, putting them in the lead for his services. Adrian Wojnarowski adds that the Warriors believe they’ve lost Tyson Chandler to New York.

Chandler can only be signed if the Knicks clear cap space, most likely by dealing Ronny Turiaf and removing Chauncey Billups’s contract via amnesty or trade. One such rumor reported by Nick Spano is to move Billups back to Denver to play with the Nuggets, though an amnesty seems more likely.

Signing Chandler would also all but remove New York from the Chris Paul sweepstakes in free agency, and barring a trade involving Chandler, Carmelo Anthony, or Amare Stoudemire, removes them from the trade market for him as well. Paired with the assumed departure of Chauncey Billups, that leaves New York without a starting point guard.

The Nets are a major suitor for Chandler, but if the Knicks are prepared to make a godfather offer for him — somewhere around the maximum — they’re more than willing to take him. I think he fits well in New York, as the Knicks are dying for some defensive help in the frontcourt, and Chandler’s arguably the best defensive center in the league not named Dwight Howard. However, a four-year deal in the $14 million range is far too rich for my liking, and I do wonder how much of Chandler’s defensive value was contingent on Dallas’s system.

Additionally, if the Nuggets do swing a deal for Billups, they may be more hesitant to match offers for restricted free agent Arron Afflalo, who’s at the top of our big board. Nene, the other major free agent out of Denver, is an unrestricted free agent who wasn’t expected back in Denver anyway.

Free agency begins tomorrow.

Our free agency “big board”

December 8th, 2011 3 comments

One of these two sits atop our big board.

You ever seen a picture of a team’s draft room, in any sport? Generally, they share a few common characteristics: lots of older white men in suits, sitting in a circular fashion, fervently switching from on the phone to online, and eventually applauding awkwardly at whoever they choose.

Another thing they have in common is the “big board,” plastered along some wall of the “war room.” You’ve seen it: It’s normally a giant whiteboard, with hundreds of names plastered from top to bottom, littered with the names of every possible player they might pick up.

Well, on last night’s Nets are Scorching TV — which you should’ve watched anyway — Justin, Matt Moore, and I played a little version of our own “big board,” with an embarrassingly small board. We could barely fit five names on it, and so in our free agency discussions we culled our list down to the top five free agents we’d like to see the Nets sign, given both their talent level and expected cost.

Analysis of our “top 5″ from myself and Justin after the jump, with our miniature board pictured at the bottom.
Read more…

Categories: 2011 Free Agency, Analysis

#NASTV Episode 7 – Matt Moore – Replay

December 8th, 2011 No comments

Just wrapped another episode of Nets Are Scorching TV. Tonight Devin and I were joined by Matt Moore of Hardwood Paroxysm. Matt is also a senior NBA Blogger at CBSSports.com, and the weekend editor over at NBC’s ProBasketballTalk.

Before Matt comes on, Devin and I discuss the Nets 2011-12 schedule. Look for Matt to join us at about the 14 minute mark of the show.

With Matt, we toss around potential free agents the Nets could sign. One thing we learned is that Kwame Brown should absolutely not be on that list.

Enjoy.

Categories: NAS TV