Showing posts with label Howard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Howard. Show all posts

Thursday, February 7, 2013

NBA News 2013: Dwight Howard Told By Lakers He Won't Be Traded

Logo of NBA club Los Angeles Lakers
Logo of NBA club Los Angeles Lakers (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Dwight Howard has been privately told on repeated occasions by Mitch Kupchak that the Los Angeles Lakers will not trade him, according to sources.

The Lakers have not directly asked Howard if he plans to re-sign with the Lakers, but sources the Lakers are "very confident" that he will remain with the franchise on a new contract.

Sources say Howard truly does not know what he will decide in the summer, but that he will definitely not ask to be traded.

Howard can become an unrestricted free agent on July 1.

http://basketball.realgm.com/wiretap/225977/Dwight-Howard-Told-By-Lakers-He-Wont-Be-Traded

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

NBA News 2013: Kobe Unsure About Dwight's Future

English: Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers...
English: Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers during a shootaround before a game against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden, New York City. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Kobe Bryant has made it clear that the culture of the Los Angeles Lakers and his personal leadership style will not change despite the presence of Dwight Howard.

"It's a matter of learning (for Howard)," Bryant said. "What I try to tell him is that it's not necessarily about what you (want), how you are as a person, or what's comfortable for you. It's really about what's going to help elevate us.

"So for us to have a team that's confrontational and on edge brings out the competitive spirit of everybody else, you know what I'm saying? If everybody is just relaxed and happy go lucky and this that and the other, then that's the personality we'll have as a team. And then you run into a team that's a confrontational team, and it's like a bus."

Bryant was asked if he still believes he can win a title with Howard.

"Yeah, for sure."

"It's a process for him," Bryant said. "He wants to be one of the greats of all time, and to do that you have to learn from the greats of all time – be it Bill Russell, be it Shaq. I mean Shaq was a moody, temperamental dude. So if you watch all the big men who have come before, you start to see a common denominator.

"Wilt (Chamberlain), God bless him, was phenomenal, but he didn't have (the same edge). Russell and (those) guys win repetitive – (Michael) Jordan, Magic (Johnson), myself. You've got a little (expletive) in you. I want (Howard) to be great, so I'm trying to push him."

Bryant insists Howard remains part of the Lakers' future.

http://basketball.realgm.com/wiretap/225801/Kobe_Unsure_About_Dwights_Future_Commits_To_Helping_Him_As_Long_As_Hes_Here

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

NBA News 2013: Lakers’ Dwight Howard Unhappy?

Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February ...
Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February 4, 2011 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

There have been numerous reports of unhappiness between Dwight Howard and Laker star Kobe Bryant, although both have tried to defuse that idea in their own way.

However, with the NBA Trade Deadline roughly a month away, there is a sense of uneasiness surrounding Howard’s future.

For Howard’s part his camp says he is happy and content in LA with the Lakers and he’ll likely re-sign there as soon as he is able.

If that’s genuinely true, he’s done a terrible job conveying that to the Lakers because while publicly they are talking up their confidence in keeping Howard long-term, there is still a sense that until he’s signed on the dotting line, Howard is just too unpredictable to bank on

http://www.hoopsworld.com/lakers-dwight-howard-unhappy/

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Thursday, December 20, 2012

NBA News 2012: Kobe's ego is Lakers' big problem

Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers drives t...
Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket against the Washington Wizards in Washington, D.C., USA on February 3, 2007 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The return of Pau Gasol and Steve Nash to the lineup is likely to mask most, if not all, the symptoms afflicting the underachieving Los Angeles Lakers. But the perennial all-stars will do nothing to address the disease lurking deep inside the foundation of the Lakers, the malady that will prevent the high-priced collection of veterans from getting past the Thunder, Spurs or even the Grizzlies come playoff time.

The disease isn’t bungling, overmatched executive vice president Jim Buss. It’s not bungling, overmatched coach Mike D’Antoni.

The root cause of the Lakers’ dysfunction has been consistent for 15 years. It is Kobe Bryant’s ego, his desperate pursuit of Michael Jordan’s legacy. L.A.’s Dwight Howard experiment is going to explode and implode in spectacular fashion unless someone in the Lakers organization is bold enough to kill Kobe’s Michael Jordan avatar so that Howard’s Bill Russell avatar can emerge and lead the Lakers.

You follow?

The wrong player is driving the Lakers. Dwight Howard is the second-most talented player in the league. He’s the single-most gifted defensive player the NBA has seen since Bill Russell. On a properly functioning, championship-chasing team, Howard cannot be a sidekick, a No. 2, Scottie Pippen. Can’t happen. The Heat tried it with LeBron James in Year 1 of the Big Three, and we know how that ended. Dwyane Wade is an awesome basketball player and a terrific leader, but he had to surrender the soul of the Heat to LeBron in order for the Heat to win a title.

Kobe has to let go and let D12. Has to.

Kobe has to accept that he is not the 34-year-old Michael Jordan. You see, at 34 Jordan was taking his final victory lap in Chicago, completing his second three-peat, securing his sixth title, winning his fifth MVP award and 10th scoring title. Kobe wants to duplicate that feat. He’s putting up MVP-like numbers. He leads the league in scoring. He’s shooting a career-high 47.8 percent from the field. He’s averaging five rebounds and five assists. He’s knocking down 38 percent of his 3-pointers. Oh, the numbers look great. The results? The Lakers stink.

You can blame that on the injuries to Gasol and Nash. You can blame it on the incompetence of D’Antoni.

I blame Kobe. He’s the guy stopping Howard from eating. Kobe is the guy giving Howard room to lose himself in his immaturity and hide. Here’s what Kobe has never understood about the Los Angeles Lakers. It’s an organization built to house and nurture giants. From George Mikan to Wilt Chamberlain to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to Shaquille O’Neal, the Lakers function best when the once-in-a-generation big man the organization acquires is allowed to be the man of the house.

Kobe emasculates his big men. Andrew Bynum politely admitted this week that Kobe stunted his growth.

“I think Dwight is a great player, but he’s going to have to get accustomed to playing with Kobe and not touching the ball every single play,” Bynum said.

The problem is deeper than touches. It’s a mentality that a big man must have in order to lead his team. Dwight Howard must enter every NBA arena with this mindset: “If I don’t hunt and kill, no one eats tonight.”

That’s Kobe’s mindset. But at 34, having played 1,186 regular-season games and 220 playoff games, Kobe doesn’t hunt and kill as effectively as Howard. Kobe isn’t the same as a 34-year-old Jordan. At this stage in his career, Jordan had played 873 regular-season games and 158 playoff games. Jordan was still a force of nature. Don’t get fooled by Kobe’s numbers. He’s not Kevin Durant or Carmelo Anthony, and Kobe damn sure isn’t LeBron James.

James, Durant and Melo can impose their will on the opposition. Over the course of a seven-game playoff series, they can mentally bludgeon an opponent into submission. We saw James do it to the Pacers and the Celtics in last year’s playoffs. Kobe is smart. He can be efficient. But he’s trying too hard right now. That’s why he leads the league in turnovers with 97. Kobe’s days of imposing his will in a playoff series are over. Howard’s days should just be beginning.

But Kobe’s ego is in the way. Howard can’t be the man of the house with Kobe sitting at the head of the table eating the biggest plate of food. As long as everything revolves around Kobe, as long as Kobe is on TV sitting across from Stephen A. Smith speaking in hushed, dark tones about the state of the Lakers, Howard gets to hide, gets to feel like the Lakers family can eat regardless of whether he chooses to hunt or not.

Kobe needs to fall back. He’s Dr. J right now and he needs to let Dwight Howard be Moses Malone. That does not mean turn the offense over to Howard. It means building a strategy and philosophy that revolves around Howard’s many gifts, which are mostly at the defensive end (and make the hiring of D’Antoni even more ridiculous). It means forcing Howard to mentally and verbally take full responsibility for the success of the team.

Howard is immature. We know that. We watched him in Orlando. Put some pressure on his ass. Make Howard explain why this team is underachieving.

I know this column will appear to many as hatred of Kobe. I don’t hate Kobe. He’s a wonderful player and terrific competitor. He simply has to make the mental adjustment that Dwyane Wade made last season. Come May and June, the Lakers are going as far as Dwight Howard can take them. Nash and Gasol might help the Lakers recover and get into the playoffs. And Kobe is certainly capable of continuing to put up big numbers.

But the Lakers are not winning a title if their second-best player continues to stunt the growth of their best player.

http://msn.foxsports.com/nba/story/kobe-bryant-ego-hampers-dwight-hoard-los-angeles-lakers-downfall-121812

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

NBA News 2012: Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak sees his window of opportunity

EL SEGUNDO, CA - AUGUST 10:  Dwight Howard (L)...
EL SEGUNDO, CA - AUGUST 10: Dwight Howard (L) is introduced to the media as the newest member of the Los Angeles Lakers by General Manager Mitch Kupchak during a news conference at the Toyota Sports Center on August 10, 2012 in El Segundo, California. The Lakers aquired Howard from Orlando Magic in a four-team trade. In addition, Lakers wil receive Chris Duhon and Earl Clark from the Magic. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)

By peering outside his office window, Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak has an intimate view of the roster he recently constructed playing in the team's practice facility.

He can marvel at Dwight Howard throwing down a powerful dunk. Kupchak can admire Steve Nash running a revamped offense that includes elements of the Princeton system. Kupchak can see whether his upgraded bench will actually provide improved secondary scoring (Antawn Jamison), 3-point shooting (Jodie Meeks), energy (Jordan Hill) and length (Devin Ebanks).

The sight usually appears visually pleasing, at least enough for Kupchak to say "we have enough players to be in the hunt" for an NBA championship.

Kupchak qualifies his remarks, though, by saying "every general manager at this time of the year likes their team." His concerns have nothing to do with the team's 0-6 preseason record.

"You have to be healthy and you have to have a couple of calls go your way and the ball to bounce your way a couple of times," Kupchak said in his office this week in a wide-ranging exclusive interview. "It's not easy to get into the Finals and win a championship."

Yet, Kupchak says he feels encouraged because Howard rehabbed from his six-month old back surgery quickly enough to make his Lakers debut in in the team's sixth preseason game, a 99-92 loss Sunday to the Sacramento Kings at Staples Center. Howard's opening act entailed 19 points on 8-of-12 shooting, 12 rebounds and four blocks in 33 minutes.

"The most encouraging thing for me is Dwight really hasn't missed a practice," Kupchak said. "He has exceeded my expectations in terms of recovery."

The Lakers acquired Howard from the Orlando Magic in a four-team, 12-player trade that involved Andrew Bynum as the centerpiece to the Philadelphia 76 ers. At the time, Kupchak expressed little worry surrounding the uncertainty when Howard would return to the court. The Lakers' general manager conceded the difficulty the team, hypothetically, might have had to absorb Howard's absence through January. Kupchak set his eyes on whether Howard would put the Lakers in a better position to collect their 17 th NBA championship, tying the Boston Celtics.

There's also another pressing issue. Has Kupchak received assurances Howard will re-sign with the Lakers after this season?

"I have not asked that question nor do I intend to ask the question," Kupchak said. "I hear he's embraced the city. Certainly, everything he says publicly is positive. But there really is nothing to pursue there from that point of view. It doesn't make any sense for him to do anything other than wait for this summer."

What would it take to ensure Howard stays?

"Winning a championship wouldn't hurt," Kupchak said. "If we didn't win it this year, would that factor into his decision? I don't know. I would think that if he has a great year and there's great chemistry and the city embraces him like I think we do and will, I'm not sure it would be a factor. But that's something that he'll have to decide. He doesn't have to decide that now."

Kupchak also appeared in no rush to predict how the Lakers will plan for Kobe Bryant's pending retirement. The Lakers star has indicated publicly he might end his storied career after his contract ends following the 2013-14 season.

"I don't know how you replace a guy like Kobe Bryant," Kupchak said. "In terms of the big picture, we want to stay healthy and want to get better every day this year. But our best strategic challenge would be to sign Dwight back. Beyond that, I don't know how you go out further than a year." Still, the Lakers could enter the 2014 offseason with more cap flexibility. Should Howard re-sign, Nash would be the only other player currently under contract in 2014. Pau Gasol and Metta World Peace also have two years left on their contracts that expire after the 2013-14 season.

Will the Lakers pursue a high profile free agent in 2014?

"Even if we sign back Dwight, we'll have cap flexibility," Kupchak said. "But I don't know who's going to be available two years down the road. I don't know what will happen in the next year or two. There may be a trade that comes along. Right now, we do have financial flexibility."

Kupchak also downplayed reports suggesting the Lakers were looking to unload their heavy backcourt, including backup point guards Steve Blake and Chris Duhon.

"This time of year nobody is looking to make trades," Kupchak said.

The uncertain future sure pales to what the Lakers recently faced.

http://www.dailynews.com/sports/ci_21838861/lakers-general-manager-mitch-kupchak-sees-his-window

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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

NBA News 2012: Kupchak: We thought Howard deal was dead

EL SEGUNDO, CA - AUGUST 10:  Dwight Howard (L)...EL SEGUNDO, CA - AUGUST 10: Dwight Howard (L) is introduced to the media as the newest member of the Los Angeles Lakers by General Manager Mitch Kupchak during a news conference at the Toyota Sports Center on August 10, 2012 in El Segundo, California. The Lakers aquired Howard from Orlando Magic in a four-team trade. In addition, Lakers wil receive Chris Duhon and Earl Clark from the Magic. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)Prior to the deal that sent Dwight Howard to the Los Angeles Lakers, you couldn't blame Mitch Kupchak for failing to land the MVP-caliber center. Apparently the Lakers GM had been attempting for months, back to the midpoint of the 2011-12 season, to turn any number of Andrew Bynum-led packages into a deal for the former Orlando Magic big man, but had been rebuffed by two different GMs (and, in a way, Howard himself). And after grabbing Steve Nash for a song and retaining the team's three All-Star level starters, nobody could criticize Kupchak for going on the family vacation he had committed to during the second week of August.

To him, the Howard deal was "over," as the Magic mulled their options. Apparently the relaxed trade restrictions on rookie forward Moe Harkless sent new Orlando GM Rob Hennigan over the moon, and the Lakers were able to make a massive upgrade from the league's second to best center in time enough for Kupchak to make that family holiday.

Of course, this is a man who is thanking the GM that just sent him Dwight Howard. Even without that, GMs will never criticize each other on record, so just take Mitch's words with a grain of salt. Especially when this column appears as if Hennigan was tapping his foot and counting the days until a deal for Harkless (a rookie who has yet to play an NBA game) was made league-legal.

Kupchak was right to believe that Howard was going to re-sign with the team following the creation of his status as a 2013 unrestricted free agent, but the Houston Rockets should have been nearly as confident had Orlando accepted their deal for Howard. So should have been the Philadelphia 76ers (who ended up with Bynum) even before Andrew's presser with the team last week. The sheer amount of money that incumbent teams can throw at their free agents establishes that confidence well in advance.

It's noble for Kupchak to publicly praise Hennigan, a GM nearly half his age, for various reasons. Chief among them, obviously, is the unwritten code of on-record conduct between GMs. Second is the part that tells you that Magic CEO Alex Martins (a person with no basketball history entering his ascension to that position in 2011-12) may have had more to do with this deal than is being let on.

There's also the part where Kupchak says things that are far from incorrect. Hennigan did take his time. He did narrow things down, negotiate, and deal with several teams.

We — and we're not alone in the NBA community in this criticism — just think that Orlando could have taken more time (we're still five weeks removed from Howard having to show up to camp), narrow things down further (Houston, perhaps, and more cap space for 2013 instead of 2014 along with better draft picks?), and deal with different teams. The Rox, again, or actually grabbing Bynum from Los Angeles and putting the onus on Andrew to turn down tens of millions of dollars to leave that team as a free agent in the summer of 2013.

Though we're great fans of Pau Gasol, it's easy to understand why a rebuilding team in Orlando didn't want a player over 30 making nearly $20 million a year to start over with. We like Harkless, and aren't as down on Nikola Vucevic as others. Orlando's eventual Howard deal didn't change much, though, and it didn't affect much in terms of the team's eventual flexibility.

That's for another, possibly spurred on by the words of former Magic coach Stan Van Gundy, column. For now the focus is on Kupchak — a GM who has had incredible fortune and good luck, but has also put himself in the position to have such great luck (by agreeing with Jim Buss to draft Bynum, and by smartly trading Caron Butler in his prime for Kwame Brown because he knew the Memphis Grizzlies would want Kwame for Pau Gasol so badly).

Bad jokes aside, Kupchak has delivered a roster that, while flawed in parts, should be rightfully regarded as the championship favorite even after Miami's impressive run to the title last June. We're aware that the shot selection was dodgy, the defense lacking, and the bench was awful last season; but that's why you trade for Steve Nash, Dwight Howard, and sign Antawn Jamison and Jodie Meeks. Kupchak, in ways that can't be dismissed because his owners are willing to pay more, has done a brilliant job.

http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/lakers-gm-mitch-kupchak-dwight-howard-deal-thought-160921284--nba.html
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Thursday, July 19, 2012

NBA News 2012: Dwight Howard Ready To Commit To Extension With Lakers

English: Dwight Howard, Orlando Magic, 2008–09English: Dwight Howard, Orlando Magic, 2008–09 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Dwight Howard has long coveted the Brooklyn Nets as his next landing spot, but after a summer filled with daily rumors of four-team trade proposals, the six-time All-Star has moved on from his Big Apple infatuation and is locked in on joining the Los Angeles Lakers, according to sources.

The Lakers, Orlando Magic and Cleveland Cavaliers are reportedly discussing a three-team trade that would send Howard to the Lakers, Andrew Bynum to the Cavaliers, while the Magic would receive Anderson Varejao and multiple draft picks.

Howard has always been impressed with the Lakers’ winning tradition and intrigued with the off-court opportunities that come with playing in Los Angeles.

Questions about Howard's role with the team, however, became an early concern for the three-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year. Howard has since moved on from those concerns and is confident he will be an integral part of a team that will have a chance to compete immediately for a championship, according to sources.

The Lakers are reportedly ready to make the trade, but first need assurance from Howard that he will commit to the team long-term. Sources say Howard is “excited” about the opportunity to play for the Lakers and will re-sign with the team when his contract expires at the end of the 2012-13 season.


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Sunday, July 8, 2012

NBA News 2012: Without Dwight Howard, Lakers still not favorite

ORLANDO, FL - FEBRUARY 26:  Dwight Howard #12 ...ORLANDO, FL - FEBRUARY 26: Dwight Howard #12 of the Orlando Magic and the Eastern Conference fights for the opening tip-off against Andrew Bynum #17 of the Los Angeles Lakers and the Western Conference during the 2012 NBA All-Star Game at the Amway Center on February 26, 2012 in Orlando, Florida. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
Dan Patrick asked me at the end of our nine-minute chat on his show Thursday morning who the favorite in the Western Conference is now that the Lakers have secured Steve Nash to play the point.

It’s still Oklahoma City, as exciting as the Nash acquisition is for the Lakers. I said that Dwight Howard is still out there as the true game-changer for the Lakers, who still could be so much better with Howard’s absolute dominance on defense. Nash will certainly perk up the Lakers’ offense with his passing and pick-and-roll prowess and make Andrew Bynum look even better, but Howard is a far more important piece than Nash — as I asserted in my column back on Tuesday (which feels like forever ago in NBA terms) about the Lakers having reached the sweet-spot moment to trade Bynum for Howard.

Patrick and I talked about Howard on the air also and the possibility he wants to play with Nash on the Lakers, but we laughingly acknowledged that neither of us is at all comfortable trying to suggest what Howard wants.


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Wednesday, July 4, 2012

NBA News 2012: Magic eye Lakers center Andrew Bynum

Andrew Bynum of the Los Angeles Lakers.Andrew Bynum of the Los Angeles Lakers. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
As the Orlando Magic work to unload superstar Dwight Howard, management is becoming increasingly focused on a potential trade package centered on Los Angeles Lakers All-Star center Andrew Bynum, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

The Lakers and Magic have had talks about a possible deal, and plan to talk further about constructing a trade. No deals are imminent, and the process has remained fluid as teams have begun to inquire with more serious offers for Howard.

Sources say there is one other trade scenario for a significant player that intrigues Magic general manager Rob Hennigan, but that target is unclear. Before the Magic would agree to consummate a trade for Bynum, they would need to know they could sign him to a contract extension, sources said. Bynum is entering the final year of his contract in the 2012-13 season.

What’s more, Bynum wouldn’t nearly be enough to satisfy Hennigan’s desires for a return on Howard. The Lakers would need to send draft picks and absorb long-term money off the Magic’s payroll, sources said.

The Lakers offered Bynum to the Magic for Howard at the March trade deadline, but the deal never materialized because Howard eventually waived his early termination option for this summer, and Orlando pulled Howard off the market.

The Magic are in no rush to make a deal for Howard, sources said. Howard is rehabilitating from back surgery in Los Angeles, and it’s unclear whether he would even be ready for the start of the regular season in November.

However positively the Magic feel about Bynum, they still need the Lakers to take back one of their expensive veteran contracts – Hedo Turkoglu or Jason Richardson – as part of any proposed trade. With Bynum, Orlando could use cap space to quickly retool its roster around him and become an Eastern Conference contender. Bynum is coming off his best season for the Lakers, averaging 18.7 points and 11.8 rebounds. Still, his immaturity at times left Lakers coaches and officials unsettled about his disposition to be an every-night dominant player.

Nevertheless, the Lakers believe that once they bring Howard into their winning culture, the Hollywood celebrity scene and tradition of great centers, that there’s no team elsewhere offering salary-cap space to sign him in 2013 that could get Howard to leave for less money than they could offer him with his Bird Rights. The Lakers have wanted to know that Howard would sign an extension should they trade for him, but with the Nets' salary cap space gobbled up, the chances of Howard agreeing to a deal will likely increase dramatically.


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NBA News 2012: Deron Williams re-signs with the Brooklyn Nets

PHOENIX, AZ - JANUARY 13:  Deron Williams #8 o...PHOENIX, AZ - JANUARY 13: Deron Williams #8 of the New Jersey Nets in action during the NBA game against the Phoenix Suns at US Airways Center on January 13, 2012 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Nets defeated the Suns 110-103. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
The biggest prize of the 2012 NBA free agent class is off the market. Deron Williams tweeted on Tuesday his intentions to re-sign with the Brooklyn Nets. Yahoo! Sports' Adrian Wojnarowski later followed up Williams' announcement to point out that the All-Star guard would be signing a five-year, $100 million deal with the team, apparently choosing the relocating franchise over a Dallas Mavericks team that both won the 2011 NBA championship, and plays near in Williams' home town.

Apparently the extra year and extra $25 million the Nets were able to pay Williams — numbers ramped up in the NBA's latest Collective Bargaining Agreement in order to encourage players to stay with incumbent teams — was enough to sway the soon to be eight-year vet. The only question now is whether or not the Nets have now signed themselves out of the running for the player they once thought was going to be the prize of the 2012 free agent class, before he panicked and signed into a player option for 2012-13: Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard.

Howard made it clear as late as Sunday to Wojnarowski that he would only be re-signing in 2013 with one team, clearly the Nets squad he has long coveted a trade to, threatening to even play out the 2012-13 season with Orlando to sign with a Brooklyn team that could offer a major endorsement kicker in his deal with his preferred shoe company. Williams' massive deal, and the agreed-upon trade that would send Joe Johnson to Brooklyn, appear to have signed the Nets right out of the Howard sweepstakes.

Mostly because Orlando, at this time, has no interest in the expiring contract and lower-rung draft picks the Nets would only have to offer in a deal, and finding a third team to send assets to Orlando (assets that wouldn't return Dwight Howard to the third team) would be tough. Because Howard is under contract for 2012-13, he's at the mercy of the team's he's held hostage for nearly a year, with no cap available next offseason as the Nets' payroll will be filled up with Williams, Johnson, Gerald Wallace, and potentially Brook Lopez's contract extension (even declining to re-sign Lopez would offer no such room). There's no free agent space left for Dwight, destroying the ideal that both Brooklyn and Howard once had of re-signing Williams this offseason only after coming to terms with Dwight Howard as a 2012 free agent.

Nets fans can't burden themselves just yet considering the consolation prize of Johnson and Wallace, though, because … well, yes they can.

A mixture of poorly conceived moves by GM Billy King (dealing a lottery pick for Wallace, then overpaying him in a market that would have yielded a contract likely half its length and financial scope in order to save face) and immaturity on Howard's part has resulted in a scenario that's pretty good instead of great for Brooklyn, and potentially disastrous for Howard.

Williams is a cornerstone worth celebrating, though. An effortless scorer who should thrive in a pick and roll game with both Johnson and his short-lived Nets teammates like Wallace and potentially Lopez and Kris Humphries, he'll be an absolute rock at a needed position even if the Nets are left to live with where it all went wrong in the spring and summer of 2012 -- surrounding the one evening it went all right. Signing Williams is more than all right, and though the Nets could have played this better, the team will at least have its marquee player as it heads into the new Barclays Center in its first game as the Brooklyn Nets in the fall of 2012.

Nets GM Billy King did fantastic work in keeping Williams' spirits up as he worked through the 16 and a half rebuilding months in the time since his trade from the Utah Jazz to a terrible then-New Jersey Nets team playing out the string in Newark, New Jersey. And it's certainly not King's fault that Howard decided to act so wishy-washy, for one fateful day in mid-March when Dwight chickened out and accepted his player option. And it's certainly no guarantee that, even without Wallace or Johnson's contracts on board the Nets would have enough to deal for Howard.


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Monday, February 27, 2012

NBA News 2012: The Only Option For Orlando

Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February ...Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February 4, 2011 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Three months after Howard first asked for a trade to either the Los Angeles Lakers, Dallas Mavericks or New Jersey Nets, a package built around Andrew Bynum is still the only deal that makes sense for the Orlando Magic. Building a franchise around around Bynum, whose been injured in each of the last four seasons, is a significant risk, but it’s a much smaller one than counting on Howard to stay.

The Magic have a financial edge in re-signing Howard, but the vast majority of it comes from their ability to offer a fifth year. Over the first four years of a new extension, Howard would get an extra $5.1 million if he stayed in Orlando. In 2011 alone, LeBron James made $20 million more in endorsements than Howard.

Opting to play in Orlando, the 26th biggest media market in the United States, would constitute a significant pay-cut for Howard, especially since this current Magic team has little chance of ever winning a championship. Choosing between teaming up with Deron Williams in either Brooklyn or Dallas, or playing in Orlando with a team unlikely to be better than Miami, Chicago or New York isn’t much of choice at all.

If Howard re-signed with the Magic, they would have over $60 million in salary committed for 2012 and over $50 million for 2013. After using their amnesty provision on Gilbert Arenas, Orlando won’t have significant cap room until 2014.

Nor would they have many trade assets. With a new CBA in place that squeezes the salaries of “mid-level” veterans, few teams are going to be interested in Hedo Turkoglu ($23 million until 2014), Jameer Nelson ($8.6 million in 12-13), Glen Davis ($25 million until 2015), Jason Richardson ($25 million until 2015), Chris Duhon ($7 million until 2014) and Quentin Richardson ($5 million until 2015).

For Howard to sign with Orlando, he’d have to give up the chance to compete for championships in the prime of his career while the league is wide open for him to dominate.

The Magic would need to put an entirely new team around him in the same way that Dallas and Miami did for Dirk Nowitzki and Dwyane Wade between the 2006 and 2011 Finals. But while Nowitzki and Wade were re-signing with two of the top front offices in the NBA, Howard would be putting his faith in a group that hasn’t drafted an All-NBA caliber player since he came to Orlando and has a spotty track record (at best) in the free agent and trade markets.

In terms of being an asset for a championship team, Deron Williams has more value than the other 14 players on the Magic’s roster combined. Howard is already gone; Orlando has a two-week window until the March 15th trade deadline to make the best out of it.

Because the core of their team, a large group of one-dimensional three-point shooters, is locked in place, they need to find a 7’0 who can command a double team in the low post and anchor a defense.

With Pau Gasol beginning to slow down, Bynum is the only other player in the NBA who fits that description. At 7’0, 285, he has a 7’6 wingspan, excellent footwork in the low post and great touch out to 8-10 feet. But while Howard, who isn’t nearly as skilled, has a 28.2 usage rating this year, Bynum’s usage rating is only 22.3.

People have often questioned his effort level and consistency in his time with the Lakers, but considering the completely unreasonable way Kobe Bryant boss-hogs the ball, it’s a wonder Bynum even bothers to show up at all. Big men are at the mercy of their perimeter players offensively, and the Lakers have one guard who shoots too much and three (Derek Fisher, Metta World Peace and Matt Barnes) who can’t shoot at all this season.

With Orlando playing four excellent three-point shooters around Howard, many teams opt to foul him when he gets position down-low. That wouldn’t work nearly as well with Bynum, a career 67.8% free-throw shooter.

Bynum is averaging 16.3 points, 12.8 rebounds and 2.0 blocks on 54% shooting for the Lakers and that’s without touching the ball for 4-5 minute stretches of games. In Orlando, where he would instantly become the primary option, he could conceivably score 24-25 points while shooting 50-51% from the floor.

http://basketball.realgm.com/article/219224

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