Tag Archive for 'Oklahoma City'

Donyell Marshall Signs with 76ers for minimum

From the Philadelphia Daily News:

The 76ers have agreed to terms with unrestricted free agent forward Donyell Marshall on a minimum salary contract, the Daily News has learned.
Agent Andy Miller confirmed that Marshall is scheduled to meet with the Sixers tomorrow. It is likely that he will undergo a physical examination and sign a contract within the next few days.

The Sixers have had interest in Marshall, 35, for many weeks, but bided their time while he remained under contract to Oklahoma City with a salary of more than $5 million. When the franchise that is transplanting from Seattle waived him in a buyout situation, the Sixers - in search of a perimeter shooter - made contact.

A minimum salary for players with at least 10 seasons of NBA experience is $1,262,275, with a portion covered by a leaguewide pool.

Ed Stefanski, the Sixers president/general manager, contacted by the Daily News via email, declined comment. Stefanski has been in serious discussions about Marshall since last week.

Marshall landed with Seattle/Oklahoma City last season as part of an 11-player trade that also included the Chicago Bulls and the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Marshall, from Reading, Pa., was the No. 4 overall pick in the 1994 draft, selected by the Minnesota Timberwolves. He has appeared in 932 games over his career, including 15 games with the then-SuperSonics and 11 with the Cavaliers.

He has also logged time with the Golden State Warriors, the Utah Jazz and the Toronto Raptors. Playing for the Raptors against the Sixers on April 13, 2005, he tied a league record by hitting 12 three-pointers.

Starring for Connecticut, he was the Player of the Year in the Big East in 1993-94. *

Sonics would have traded us Wally and Delonte for some cardboard boxes

Shortly after the Sonics shipped the Cavs Wally Szczerbiak and Delonte West for Donyell Marshall (and Adrian Griffin from the Bulls), they released Ira Newble.  Then again this summer, they traded Adrian Griffin to the Bucks.  As of today, they’ve finally rid themselves of the last remnants of that trade that cleared major payroll for their team.  The AP reports:

 

Forward Donyell Marshall won’t be making the move to Oklahoma City with the Seattle SuperSonics.

The 14-year NBA veteran was waived Wednesday by the Oklahoma City franchise, which still hasn’t been renamed after its relocation last month.

Marshall was acquired by the franchise from Cleveland in a three-team trade in February that sent Wally Szczerbiakand Ben Wallace to the Cavaliers.

He averaged 3.8 points off the bench in 15 games with Seattle and was sidelined by a sore right knee late last season.

Adrian Griffin, who was the other player sent to Seattle in that trade, was shipped to Milwaukee last week as part of a deal that brought forwards Desmond Mason and Joe Smith to Oklahoma City.

 

Maurice Williams is a Cavalier. Welcome back Brian Windhorst!

Well I feel a little bad that my pre-trade analysis article of a rumored Mo Williams trade was so short-lived. But that’s negated by the great news of Brian Windhorst’s return to active reporting.

After missing some time due to illness, Brian Windhorst has returned to break the biggest story of the summer for the Cavaliers. Maurice Williams will join the Cavalier in a three-team deal that sends Luke Ridnour, Damon Jones, and Adrian Griffin to Milwaukee while Joe Smith and Desmond Mason will join the Oklahoma City Hornets.

Here it is from the Akron Beacon Journal:

An NBA executive said the Cavaliers, in a trade expected to be completed later today, finally have acquired a top-level point guard in executing a six-player, three-team deal.

The Milwaukee Bucks traded point guard Mo Williams to the Cavs in exchange for the expiring contracts of guard Damon Jones and forward Joe Smith. As part of the deal, the Bucks will receive Jones and Oklahoma City point guard Luke Ridnour. Oklahoma City acquires Smith and Bucks forward Desmond Mason. Oklahoma City also will send swingman Adrian Griffin to the Bucks.

Williams scored 17.2 points per game with the Bucks last season. He averaged 6.3 assists in 66 games, shooting 48 percent from the field, 86 percent from the free-throw line. He was drafted out of the University of Alabama by the Utah Jazz in the second round of the 2003 NBA Draft.

Williams is coming off three strong seasons with the Bucks, where he established himself as one of the league’s better offensive point guards. He is known for his ability to break down defenses off the dribble. The Cavs are taking on significant salary with this move.

Williams has five years and $43 million left on a contract that he signed last summer. He’ll make $8.5 million this season and owns a player option for 2012-13 at $8.5 million. The Cavs showed interest in him last year, but he resigned with the Bucks.

Williams will likely be the starting point guard, which leaves restricted free agent Delonte West without much bargaining power in his protracted contract negotiations with the team.

Sources said the Cavs still want to bring West back but this increases the chances that he will take the qualifying offer of $2.8 million for one season.

The loss of Smith is expected to be made up by rookie forward J.J. Hickson, the Cavs’ first-round draft choice. He impressed the Cavs during summer-league play last month.

Immediate Analysis

Well this was an unexpected treat.  The best case scenario played out, and the Cavs will now see a backcourt that retains Daniel Gibson and Delonte West (albeit likely only for a year), while adding a significant burst of scoring ability in Maurice Williams.

The price was small.  While losing Joe Smith’s midrange game and veteran leadership hurts, his limited appearances made the deal something the Cavs had to do, especially with the uncertainty of Delonte West.  Damon Jones, who I thought played very well in short spurts last year, wasn’t going to see minutes in a Mike Brown system, except as a last resort.

Now the Cavs will get to see J.J. Hickson sooner rather than later as he will slide into the fourth big man role, allowing the Cavs to finally get Darnell Jackson signed to a deal and on the roster.

As for the Cavs financial flexibility…well they retain between $27-32 million dollars of expiring contracts in Wally Szczerbiak ($13 million) , Eric Snow ($7 million) , Sasha Pavlovic ($4.5 million with partially guaranteed 2009-2010) , Anderson Varejao ($6 million player option), and Tarence Kinsey ($800,000) to move before the deadline.

Where does this leave West?

Delonte West and Boobie Gibson are so fondly regarded by Cavs fans for a reason. They’ve showed a desire to have the ball in their hands during key possesions (when most of the rest of the team watches Lebron operate), and Delonte is/was the closest thing to a penetrator the Cavs had outside of Lebron and “terrible handles” Pavlovic.  While Gibson has been mostly a spot shooter during his formative years, the fondest of memories of him that Cavs fans have is when he “dominated” the ball against Detroit in the Eastern Conference Finals and actually looked to create for himself by driving to the hoop. Getting Williams eleviates some of the concerns that the Cavs won’t be able to replicate Delonte’s ball pressure should he leave. In all likelihood, it will be a marked improvement.

As for West, I’d still like to see him return since the team’s best guards are very small, but I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see him dealt in a sign and trade for another big man to fill the void Joe Smith’s departure has created.  I’m optimistic about Hickson’s promise, but Mike Brown brings along young guys slowly.  Even Daniel Gibson, who hit his shots from day one and played far headier than a rookie usually does, didn’t see significant minutes until after All Star Break of his rookie season.

Future Outlook:

Maurice Williams, Daniel Gibson, and J.J. Hickson are the only guys on the roster who would definitely still be here past 2010.  Adding Williams’ contract may be a concern to some, but it’s a justifiable risk if the Cavs feel they are close to competing for a title, or if they think that Williams strengths will fit well with this roster long-term. 

No team is going to be able build their squad so that every contract is off the books simultaneously, and Williams is making a lot of money on a long-term deal (5 years, $43 million remain), but he is only 25 years old.  He will probably still be contributing throughout that term.  The biggest risk in this deal was the financial part of it.  Chemistry and injuries are secondary to that.

How does this affect Lebron?

Maurice Williams likes to have the ball.  That’s undeniable.  But nobody is questioning who will have the ball in their hands when it matters. 

Lebron IS the playmaker, but when given the chance to post up and play off the ball (like in the Olympics at times) he’s shown he’s more than capable of excelling in that role too.  Williams will be expected to be able to make some plays for himself without relying on Lebron in hopes of adding a new dimension to the Cavs offense instead of always trying to plug every other roster player into a neatly defined one-dimensional role of “Lebron’s helper”.

The Realist View

I don’t think any Cavs fan is under the mistaken assumption that Mo Williams was brought in here to shore up a defensive issue. You won’t find many players making 8 million dollars who address all the shortcomings this Cavalier roster has (did I just say you can’t expect someone making 8 million a year to be perfect…jesus). But a 17 ppg scorer (albeit on a weak Buck squad) with a 17 PER doling out 6 assists per game isn’t too shabby even if he doesn’t play a lick of defense. The Cavs defense is built from the inside out.

It’s a trade off of big money for big potential, as are most deals, but the Cavs have Pavs/West(sort of)/Kinsey for length, and don’t be shocked to see the $27 plus million in expirings they have turn into another deal before the deadline that may or may not bring a better two-guard or a more well rounded big man. 

The Bucks View

For a Bucks perspective, Brewhoop checks in with their summary of the deal:

Talent-wise the Bucks would clearly get the short end of the stick, but then again the questions about Mo have never been related to talent.  Clearly the Bucks view this as addition by subtraction, though that might be tougher to sell to the average fan. The Bucks will get some financial benefits over the next two years and then even more flexibility once Ridnour’s deal is up in 2010, but the near-term benefits won’t be the same as they would have gotten in a straight salary dump. That suggests Hammond and Skiles do see Ridnour as more than just cap relief, though it’s not clear what the point guard pecking order will look like once the dust settles.

As for Mo, he could be a terrific fit next to LeBron in Cleveland, where he’ll also be surrounded by a more defensive starting lineup than in Milwaukee.

I plan to do a podcast later on today, so check back for that as the Mo Williams discussion will certainly dominate.

Are you happy with the Mo Williams deal?

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Mo Williams to Cavs rumors now involve Luke Ridnour

The rumored Maurice Williams trade is picking up steam. This time, it’s the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reporting that discussions have taken place involving three different teams:

Bucks guard Mo Williams could be headed to Cleveland as part of a three-team trade, with the Bucks targeting point guard Luke Ridnour of the Oklahoma City franchise, formerly the Seattle SuperSonics.

As for the motivations for each team:

NBA sources confirmed there have been discussions involving the three teams. Cleveland is searching for backcourt help to complement LeBron James, and Williams could fit the bill. But the point guard carries a hefty price tag with five years and $43 million remaining on the $51 million contract Williams signed with the Bucks prior to last season, when he was an unrestricted free agent.

The Cavaliers have been unable to come to a contract agreement with point guard Delonte West, who is a restricted free agent this summer, and he could be part of the deal in a sign-and-trade, according to reports. Or Oklahoma City could receive former Bucks forward Joe Smith, who has an expiring contract and will be paid $4.8 million next season.
The Bucks are interested in Ridnour, according to league sources. The 6-foot-2 guard from Oregon has played five seasons for the SuperSonics since being selected 14th overall in the 2003 draft.

Oklahoma City suddenly has a surplus of point guards with Ridnour, Earl Watson and Russell Westbrook, the fourth overall pick in the June draft.

Well this deal would be a lot more attractive than a Williams for West swap.  While I like Joe Smith and value his offense and midrange game, if he departs, minutes open immediately for J.J. Hickson.  Cavs fans would get to see what they’ve got before entering next summer when they could be losing both Joe Smith and/or Varejao with or without a trade. 

No one would argue that adding Mo Williams is a positive if the Cavaliers are able to retain Delonte West in the process.  Now if both Smith and West would be bundled by the Cavaliers, I’m not that high on this deal, mainly due to Williams’ contract and the lack of backcourt defense the Cavaliers have.   Tarence Kinsey might actually get some run if he and the oft-injured Sasha Pavlovic are the only guards known to play defense left on the roster

The Guys over at Brewhoop.com (an incredible Bucks blog) made some excellent points regarding any possible three team deal. For starters…

Cap-wise it doesn’t work…yet. First thing’s first: the deal would have to be more complicated given that Cleveland would be taking on too much salary in the simple Williams/Ridnour/Smith scenario. Williams is owed $8.353 million next year while Smith makes $4.795 million, so while nothing would stop the Bucks or OKC from sending out more salary than they take back, Cleveland would have to add in more salary to make the deal work. Teams over the salary cap can’t take back salaries in excess of 125% of the salaries going out plus $100,000. That means that for the Cavs to get Williams, they’d have to ship out at least $6.6024 million.

Given that figure, the most likely candidates to be shipped out would be Sasha Pavlovic or Damon Jones, who both make around $4.5 million next year on expiring deals, or in Pavlovic’s case, a non-guaranteed deal that essentially is an expiring deal (think David Wesley).

The Cavs would undoubtedly choose to move Damon Jones given the choice.  The only other players that could be added to make this deal work are a resigned Delonte West, Daniel Gibson (who can’t be traded), or some combination of roster filler guys (Lance Allred, Darnell Jackson, Tarency Kinsey) with J.J. Hickson. Brewhoop, while probably in vein, discussed the possibility of adding J.J. Hickson to the mix, something that no Cavalier fan wants to see if Joe Smith would be departing as well.

First round PF J.J. Hickson is the only obvious piece of value who makes sub-MLE dollars ($1.33 million), but Hickson doesn’t make enough by himself to make the deal work.

However, the Cavs could still use the non-guaranteed minimum deals of Lance Allred and Billy Thomas in addition to Hickson to make the deal work (assuming Allred/Thomas haven’t been cut yet). Hickson signed on July 10, so the Cavs can now trade him immediately, but they’d likely prefer not to trade both Smith and Hickson without getting another big man back. And it’s very possible Cleveland would prefer to keep Hickson given the age of Ben Wallace/Joe Smith and the likelihood that Anderson Varejao (still smarting from the ugly holdout last year) will be gone by next summer at the latest.

Exactly….. well put by an astute Bucks observer.  Would they want Varejao?

Speaking of which, Varejao has always been the Cav who most interests me, but he’s oddly been left out of most rumors thus far. Given he has a no-trade clause until December 5, that might imply he and agent Dan Fegan have already told the Cavs he doesn’t want to be a Buck, or that the Cavs want to keep him for a later deal and don’t feel they need to use him to acqure Mo. Keep in mind Varejao will be an unrestricted free agent next summer and thus will want to get major minutes next year, something he might be nervous about with Bogut/Villanueva on the Bucks’ roster.

While Fegan is certainly not an agent to put anything past, I’m skeptical that the motives for Varejao not being included in rumors are that complex. In all likelihood, both Smith and Varejao are gone after this season since Smith is on his final year and Varejao is upset with the Cavaliers. But the one thing that Mike Brown has made apparent in his time with the Cavs is that he values defense, and for as terrible offensively as Varejao is, and for ineffective as he was at times last year due to injury, he still saw significant crunch time minutes and is a very good defender. Joe Smith, to the dismay of myself and other Cavs fans, probably didn’t get the burn he deserved given his more well-rounded game.

I’d imagine that the Cavs management has resigned themselves to the fact that if Varejao strings together even a respectable year, they will probably lose both guys, and in that scenario, the only thing relevant to the Cavs would be who they feel is more important to win a title now.  Anderson was big in slowing Garnett, and he was definitely valuable in the NBA Finals run of two years ago. I would anticipate the reason for not seeing Varejao’s name in rumors is because it first requires seeking Fegan’s consent prior to December 5th, and because the Cavs management expect him to play a larger role than Smith would this season. 

One last hiccup that could complicate this deal for the Cavs is the resigning of West.

Typical of most RFAs, West has been at odds with Cleveland over a new contract and reportedly wants more than fellow combo guard Daniel Gibson’s five years, $21 million deal. As such, doing any deal involving West would be complex since a new contract would need to be negotiated that satisfies West while also working under the cap. West will likely be a base year compensation player as soon as he signs, though a big three-team trade could probably accomodate the restrictions on trading BYC players.

Drew Gooden had similar such restrictions on him when many Cavs fans were hoping that his resigning would be followed shortly thereafter by his departure via trade. To oversimplify the base year compensation, basically half of West’s first year salary could be counted towards making a trade work, so if he signed for $5 million a season, then his $2.5 million added to Joe Smith’s 4.8 million would exceed the $6.6 million needed to make this trade possible.

So are you curious as to the reactions of the other teams? Well here’s what Brewhoop had to say:

While I can’t speak as well to the Cleveland and OKC perspectives, Bucks fans will no doubt question whether shedding Williams’ salary and poor fit is worth more than…well, Luke Ridnour. Of course, this is all premature given I just said that Bucher’s version of the deal doesn’t actually work. But let’s consider Ridnour’s merits anyway.

Ridnour’s remaining deal (two years at an even $6.5 million each) is palatable, and in the absence of additional salary coming to Milwaukee it provides more breathing room against the luxury tax, which could be of use if the Bucks make further deals this year that add salary. Still, his deal doesn’t do much for the Bucks’ 09/10 luxury tax issues, which would be one of the main appeals of moving Williams for a package of expiring contracts. In the latter scenario the Bucks could at least free up enough dollars to use their MLE next summer, but adding Ridnour’s two-year deal instead brings that into question, depending on what the Bucks do with Charlie Villanueva and Ramon Sessions (both RFA’s next summer, with CV eligible for a $4.62 million qualifying offer).

So now we wait and see what happens.  ESPN is reporting that Cleveland is the one who has stalled the trade, because they’re balking at Williams contract, but if adding Williams is as simple as moving Joe Smith and Damon Jones, it’s something that warrants strong consideration. 

The Cavs would be losing their 4th big man (Smith) and and a guy who won’t see minutes (Jones) for a guy who could turn out to be playing starter’s minutes (along with West/Gibson/Pavlovic) as some sort of hybrid point guard/shooting guard.

Williams has his deficiencies (defense most notably) and getting others involved isn’t his strong suit, but as has been pointed out time and time again, playing with Lebron has lessened the need for a traditional pass first point guard.  Having guys who can create for themselves that move off the ball and knock down open shots is a commodity, and while Williams’ deal isn’t all that favorable, his skill set may be a great complement. 

If the Cavs really think he can add the type of consistency they’ve been lacking from their backcourt when it comes to aggressively looking to score from the perimeter, then it may be a risk worth taking.  However moving both Smith and Jones, would eliminate two flexible trade pieces that may or may not be needed in any deadline deals involving Wally Szczebiak.  They’d still have either Pavlovic or Jones (depending on who they trade), but many Cavs fans are wary of putting all the eggs in the Mo Williams basket, in hopes of something better.

Links: Waiting For Next Year is also talking about the Williams/Ridnour/Smith deal, and if you haven’t read Rock King’s piece on Lebron heading to Europe yet, do yourself a favor and check it out