Showing posts with label New Jersey Nets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Jersey Nets. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

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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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

NBA News 2011: Top 5 Playoff-Ready Lottery Teams

Bucks logo from 2006–presentImage via Wikipedia
This is a great time of year to be an NBA fan.  The playoffs are in full swing, teams are surprising us with unbelievable postseason play, and fans in arenas have kicked up the energy about a thousand notches.  The playoffs are so fantastic because there's so much at stake, and sixteen teams are fighting their rear ends off for a shot at the NBA title.

So yeah, it's a great time of year… for those 16 teams.

That leaves 14 teams (and by association, 14 fan bases) with little to look forward to until the draft in late June, but let's remind ourselves which of those 14 lottery teams are still worth talking about.  Some of these organizations aren't far from the playoffs; they've either got the players to make a real run at it right now, or they've got a young core right on the cusp of blowing up.  Today's Top 5 looks at the non-playoff teams who are most likely to get into the playoffs next spring.  In descending order, here they are:

#5 – L.A. Clippers
#4 – Utah Jazz
#3 – Golden State Warriors
#2 – New Jersey Nets
#1 – Milwaukee Bucks

http://www.hoopsworld.com/Story.asp?story_id=19491


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Thursday, March 3, 2011

NBA News 2011: Dwight Howard: Which Top Contenders Have the Best Shot at Landing Superman?

Los Angeles Lakers logoImage via Wikipedia
Dwight Howard is playing some of the best basketball of his career, but that's not all people are talking about when it comes to Superman.

It's no secret that he's going to be a free agent after next season, and then it's decision time for the big man.

There have been whispers that he's eying up New York or Los Angeles when his contract is up.

New Jersey Nets
Chance: 20 percent

Dallas Mavericks
Chance: 15 percent

New York Knicks
Chance: 5 percent

Boston Celtics
Chance: 10 percent

Los Angeles Lakers
Chance: 25 percent

Orlando Magic
Chance: 25 percent



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Thursday, December 16, 2010

NBA News 2010: For Smith, trade is a dream come true

Joe Smith playing with the Cleveland CavaliersImage via Wikipedia
The text message was short and to the point.

"Call me ASAP," Joe Smith's agent wrote.

The news was better than expected.

"You've been traded to the Lakers," Smith's agent told him.

Smith has been smiling since he got the news the Lakers agreed to acquire him from the New Jersey Nets on Tuesday. The trade became official Wednesday and Smith took his physical and joined his new teammates Thursday.

"At this point in my career, this is probably a great move because this team has won two in a row and has a chance to win a third one," he said. "Hopefully, I can be a part of it and try to bring whatever I can to the table to help us succeed."

The Lakers will be Smith's 12th team in an NBA career that's in its 16th season. He didn't even try to name his former clubs and said, "I've lost count." The 35-year-old forward is a former No. 1 overall pick by Golden State in 1995.

Despite his vast NBA experience, Smith has not played deep into the playoffs. He was with Cleveland when it lost to Boston in the second round in 2008, but that's as far as he has gone.

He has never been with a team like the Lakers, who are trying for a three-peat. He admitted he had all but given up the idea of playing for a championship contender, "but I was still hopeful that something could happen where I could end up in a place like this."

Mission accomplished.



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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Boxing News 2010: I’d Have Schooled Pacquiao in my Prime — De La Hoya

Oscar De La Hoya - Planet Hollywood Casino - L...Image by Kaloozer via Flickr
MANILA, Philippines — Seems like Oscar De La Hoya simply can’t get over Manny Pacquiao.

On Wednesday, Michael Marley of Examiner.com had a brief chit chat with the Golden Boy Promotions (GBP) big boss, who was in Brooklyn to grace a media event announcing GBP’s tie-up with Barclays Center (who will be housing the New Jersey Nets in the NBA) to promote boxing in New York.

Marley, wanting to strike up a lively conversation with the 37-year-old Hall of Famer, asked De La Hoya what he thinks could be the outcome if he were given the chance to face the Manny Pacquiao of today during his prime.

“Whew,” De La Hoya said. “Different story.”

De La Hoya, who set a 2.5 million pay-per-view record against Floyd Mayweather, Jr. in 2007, would surely want to erase the memory of his brutal loss to the pound-for-pound king during their December 2008 showdown at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, where he was forced to quit on his stool just before the bell signaled the start of the ninth round.

Pacquiao landed 195 of the 333 power punches he unleashed against De La Hoya in that match, or a staggering 59 percent accuracy, as compared to less than one-third of what De La Hoya converted from the 164 he threw.


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Friday, September 24, 2010

NBA News 2010: Carmelo Anthony trade talks heat up

Carmelo Anthony of the Denver NuggetsImage via Wikipedia
The Denver Nuggets went into weekend on the brink of completing a four-team megatrade that would land All-Star forward Carmelo Anthony with the New Jersey Nets, according to sources with knowledge of the negotiations.

The proposed deal, as ESPN.com reported earlier Friday, would also involve Utah and Charlotte and is poised to deliver prized Nets rookie Derrick Favors, Jazz veteran Andrei Kirilenko and multiple future first-round picks to Denver in exchange for their franchise player.

Sources told ESPN.com that the deal, which has yet to be finalized, would send former All-Star point guard Devin Harris to Charlotte, with Bobcats forward Boris Diaw moving to Utah. The Bergen Record reported Friday afternoon that the Nets would also receive Bobcats guard D.J. Augustin, with New Jersey's Jarvis Hayes accompanying Harris to Charlotte in a sign-and-trade. Nets swingman Quinton Ross would go to Utah and Denver would get a 1-to-7 protected first-round pick in 2012 that New Jersey received from Golden State.

The four teams are "seriously engaged" after negotiations progressed well Thursday and Friday, according to two sources close to the talks. If final hurdles are cleared, Anthony's uncertain future -- which has dominated discussion throughout the league since mid-August -- could be unexpectedly resolved before the Nuggets hold their first practice of the new season.

The trade's completion, though, hinges on Anthony's willingness to sign an extension with the Nets as part of the deal, as Kevin Garnett did to clinch the blockbuster trade that sent him from Minnesota to Boston in July 2007. One source with knowledge of New Jersey's thinking told ESPN.com that the Nets will not part with assets such as Favors (selected No. 3 overall in the June draft) and Harris (an All-Star in 2009) and go through with the trade unless Anthony commits to the extension, no matter how ready Denver is to pull the trigger.


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Monday, September 6, 2010

NBA News 2010: New Jersey Nets 2010-2011 Preview

Devin Harris of the New Jersey Nets in 2009Image via Wikipedia
Top Offensive Player: Devin Harris

Top Defensive Player: Brook Lopez

Top Playmaker: Terrence Williams

Top Clutch Player: Devin Harris

The Unheralded Player: Anthony Morrow

Best New Addition: Derrick Favors


Strengths

The only thing worse than losing, is losing with old guys. Thankfully, the Nets are the youngest team in the NBA and because of that, all mistakes are theoretically correctable. New Jersey finished last year on a 5-7 stretch, which was actually a marked improvement. If that's the starting point for this season, things might not be so bad and perhaps the playoffs aren't out of the question.


Weaknesses

In the absence of any truly great scorers, the Nets' offense became stagnant last year. And since LeBron James and Chris Bosh never arrived, that isn't likely to change. New coach Avery Johnson will be asked to turn a handful of solid offensive players into a scoring force. That's going to be difficult for a team that finished last in the NBA in offensive efficiency (points per 100 possessions) a season ago.


Can former Mavericks coach Avery Johnson and former Mavs guard Devin Harris start anew in New Jersey, or will their contentious past resurface?

Harris was Johnson's guy in Dallas before he was traded for Jason Kidd. Sure, Johnson couldn't stop the trade from going down, he tried, but both seem to be excited for a new start in Newark. The bottom line is, this relationship has to work if the pair has any chance of changing their recent fortunes.


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Thursday, August 12, 2010

NBA News 2010: Fantasy Basketball: Darren Collison big winner in trade

UCLA point guard Darren Collison driving for a...Image via Wikipedia
But beyond the formation of the new triumvirate in South Beach, there have been minor moves all across the NBA landscape during the past several weeks, many of which will impact the strategies of shrewd fantasy owners. Most notably, a major four-team trade went down Wednesday that alters the value of fantasy mainstays such as Troy Murphy and Trevor Ariza, and created an opportunity for Darren Collison, who impressed in Chris Paul's absence last season, to grab the starting point guard job in Indiana and become perhaps the top sleeper point guard for the draft. Here are some players impacted by the recent offseason moves:

Darren Collison, PG, Indiana Pacers: The diminutive Collison is the big winner of Wednesday's mini-blockbuster, we're finally spelled of the Earl Watson/T.J. Ford dirty duo, and now we get a chance to see how legit Collison's 18.8 points, 9.1 assists, 1.4 steals and 1.0 3s per game in 37 starts last season truly were. His turnovers were horrendous (4.1 per game as a starter, 2.7 overall), as those of rookie point guards typically are, but his percentages are mind-blowing (.485 on field goals and .841 on free throws as a starter), perhaps even more impressive than the gaudy point and assist totals. The real question: How high is too high to draft Collison? It's insane to expect a replication of those numbers during the span of an entire season with a worse team at his disposal and defenses centering on both him and Danny Granger. In his starts in 2009-10, Collison was playing more than 40 minutes per game out of necessity, something the Pacers won't want to do with the centerpiece of their "three-year plan." 

Trevor Ariza, SF/SG, New Orleans Hornets: Swapping Collison for Ariza was also done undoubtedly to appease Chris Paul, but it makes sense for the Hornets this year if CP3 stays healthy, as Ariza will team with David West and Marcus Thornton to provide Paul with solid ammo. Ariza's worst fantasy traits are his inefficient percentages (.394 field goals, .649 free throws), which should improve with a better supporting cast, especially his field-goal shooting (which stands at a career 44.2 percent). Ariza should improve upon his overall numbers from last season, even if he takes and makes fewer 3-pointers, and should be considered an upgrade after the trade.

Courtney Lee, SG, Houston Rockets: While he likely had a starting role in New Jersey, he'll be the sixth man in Houston. Martin is still fragile, averaging just 52 games per season during the past three seasons, and the Rockets don't have the depth at swingman the Nets do, so if Martin misses time as usual, Lee will see big minutes. This move is basically a wash, and the real winners at the shooting guard position are Terrence Williams and Anthony Morrow in New Jersey.

Troy Murphy, PF/C, New Jersey Nets: Murphy will pair nicely with Brook Lopez and can backup at center at times so they don't have to rely upon the shaky Johan Petro. His numbers won't change much with the shift in scenery, namely his excellent rebounding/3-point combo, although playing with a better supporting cast should allow him to see more open looks and potentially improve his field goal shooting (47 percent in each of the past two seasons) a couple of ticks.

Shane Battier, SF, Rockets: Upgrade Battier -- who has consistently been a valuable glue player -- because he will hurt you less in the scoring categories and see his points get back into the double-digits like they were from 2005-07 with the Grizzlies.

Mike Dunleavy, SG/SF, Pacers: He could eclipse the 15.1 points per game of two seasons ago, and without the hassle of handling the ball so much because of the lack of a decent point guard, his field goal percentage should also increase. Dunleavy is one of the quiet winners of this trade, as he should find himself once again in the realm of fantasy relevance, as the Pacers will rely upon his offensive versatility with limited options behind Collison and Granger.

Roy Hibbert, C, Pacers: Like Dunleavy, Hibbert will benefit from the absence of Murphy in the paint, and if he can stay out of foul trouble, he should average more than the 25 minutes per game he garnered in '09-10. That could push his averages toward 15 points, eight rebounds and two blocks per contest, with field goal shooting in the upper-40s and free throw percentages in the mid-70s. 

Ronnie Brewer, SG, Chicago Bulls: Throw in the fact that Luol Deng has averaged 54 games per season during the past three years, and the fact that Brewer can slide to the 3, and he should find himself in a more statistically lucrative situation than he was last year, when he shuffled from Utah to Memphis amid injuries. Steals specialists are hard to find, and Brewer is one of the best thieves in the game (1.5 steals per game for his career in 26 minutes per game), so consider him an upgrade after signing with the Bulls, a team with several top-tier players but not much depth.

Ramon Sessions, PG, Cleveland Cavaliers: With the King gone, there are tons of assists to go around, and Sessions will also have to shoulder a significant scoring load. I could easily see him averaging 15 points and seven assists with more than a steal per game and decent percentages, as well as a solid turnover rate. That would make Sessions a nice sleeper once again come draft day. 

Shaquille O'Neal, C, Boston Celtics: I'm avoiding the Big Leprechaun in the fantasy game as I have for the past several seasons, simply because the free throw percentage (.496 on 4.3 attempts per game in Cleveland in 2009-10) and unpredictability isn't worth having him as a team mascot. That being said, he'll likely assume a bigger role in Boston than he did in Cleveland, especially for the first chunk of the season while Kendrick Perkins is sidelined. I could see him hovering around 14 points and seven rebounds with 1.5 blocks per game, but his health is unpredictable and free-throw shooting predictably bad.

Linas Kleiza, PF/SF, Toronto Raptors: Kleiza slides into the starting small forward job in Toronto after the trade that rid the Raptors of Hedo Turkoglu, which equals a big upgrade in Kleiza's stats, as he was mired behind Carmelo Anthony in Denver for a couple seasons before bouncing to Europe for the 2009-10 campaign. He made a name for himself in deep leagues as a source of 3s (0.9 per game for his career despite averaging just 19 minutes) before the move, and could easily flirt with 2.0 3s per game this season in a starting role for the Euro-looking Raptors. 


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Wednesday, August 11, 2010

NBA News 2010: Fantasy Basketball: Collison, Murphy, Ariza trade

Trevor Ariza of the Houston Rockets in 2010Image via Wikipedia
As you have likely heard by now, a fairly substantial NBA trade went down earlier today:

The New Orleans Hornets acquired Trevor Ariza Wednesday in a four-team, five-player trade that also sends point guard Darren Collison to the Indiana Pacers, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

The deal also sends Pacers forward Troy Murphy to the New Jersey Nets and Nets guard Courtney Lee to the Houston Rockets. In addition to landing Collison – the young point guard they’ve been searching for all offseason – the Pacers also have to take on forward James Posey, who has two years and $13.5 million remaining on his contract.

Collison made a lot of fans within the fantasy community and around the NBA last season while he filled in for an injured Chris Paul. In his 37 starts, Collison averaged 18.8 points on 49-percent shooting, 1 three, 85-percent foul shooting, 9.1 assists, 4.1 turnovers, and 1.4 steals in 40 minutes. He immediately becomes the point guard for the Pacers and makes a leap into fantasy’s top 10 at the position – he was a top-40 player after Paul’s injury and warrants being drafted ahead of his significantly hyped peers Derrick Rose and Russell Westbrook. That is, if it’s the nine-category numbers that you are looking at.

Ariza had trouble adjusting to his significant offensive responsibilities with the Rockets last season, shooting just 38 percent from the field and 30 percent from three before the All-Star break. Things changed significantly after Kevin Martin showed up (44% FG, 41% 3PT), and less was definitely more for Ariza from a fantasy perspective. He’ll be the fourth option on offense in New Orleans and should benefit tremendously from an efficiency standpoint, albeit with less volume, and will still provide those excellent defensive stats (1.8 steals, 0.6 blocks in 09-10). I’ve got him pegged as a solid Round 7 pick, and he’s an even better head-to-head target when you are ignoring free-throw percentage.

Murphy will hold down the fort at power forward until the exceedingly raw Favors is ready for significant minutes. It’d be silly to play him against other teams’ starting units from the outset, and there’s no guarantee that he’ll be truly ready at any point this season, although Murphy’s expiring contract does represent a valuable trade piece. The Lopez/Murphy tandem will be an effective one – Murphy’s 3-point range is an excellent complement to Lopez’s post game; and Murphy dominates the defensive boards, while almost 40 percent of Lopez’s boards came on the offensive glass last season. Things are a bit unsettled at the two and three, but Williams’ dynamism and Outlaw’s two-way potential make them the odds-on favorites to start right now. I know there will be plenty of you calling for Morrow to immediately start and shoot non-stop threes, but he’s looking like a better fit as a main cog in the second unit. 


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Wednesday, June 9, 2010

NBA News 2010: Washington Wizards Draft Preview (1st, 30th and 35th Overall Picks)

John Wall in a game for the Kentucky WildcatsImage via WikipediaPicks Owned: 1st, 30th, 35th
Areas Of Need
The Wizards good fortune of winning a lottery comes in a year where there is a truly transcendent player, but he unfortunately plays the same position as the unmovable Gilbert Arenas. Considering how difficult it will be to move Arenas, the Wizards will have an expensive logjam at point guard if the experiment of moving Arenas to shooting guard does not work.
Playing the let's suppose game, if the Wizards would have won the lottery after a season that did not include the gun incident, do the Wizards still keep the pick and select Wall, or do they trade down for DeMarcus Cousins, Derrick Favors or Evan Turner since those four prospects play positions of need for Washington.
Draft Targets
John Wall is the one and only target at number one and a detailed analysis of his abilities can be read here. His combination of athleticism, instinct and vision is unlike anything we have seen since LeBron James was in the 2003 Draft. He will become both the face and heart of this franchise for the next decade.
Looking at Washington's other two picks, more interestingly, the Wizards will be able to add two additional players at an extremely small cost as they head into a summer of cap space. Both players will presumably be amongst the top 25 players on their draft board.
Assuming they are available, I like Solomon Alabi, Stalnley Robinson, Tibor Pleiss and Kevin Seraphin as targets in that area of the draft.
The Wizards should also consider parlaying the 30th and 35th, along with potentially another asset, to move up in the draft where someone like James Anderson or Luke Babbitt would become available, both of whom would do well in their offense to stretch the floor.
Draft History

  • 2009: 5th overall pick who became Ricky Rubio traded
  • 2008: JaVale McGee, 18th
  • 2007: Nick Young, 16th
  • 2006: Oleskiy Pecherov, 18th
  • 2005: Andray Blatche, 49th
  • 2004: 5th overall pick who became Devin Harris traded
  • 2003: Jarvis Hayes, 10th / Steve Blake, 38th
  • 2002: Jared Jeffries, 11th / Juan Dixon, 17th / Juan Carlos Navarro, 39th
  • 2001: Kwame Brown, 1st
  • 2000: No first round pick

*Only notable second round picks listed
Because the Wizards have been a middle of the pack team for most of the past decade, the draft has hardly been an area where core players have been acquired.
Gilbert Arenas was signed in free agency, while Antawn Jamison and Caron Butler were acquired in trades.
Looking at this list, Blatche in the second round of 2005 has been their best pick.
The 2007 class was fairly weak behind Nick Young, though both Wilson Chandler and Rudy Fernandez would have been better wing options for the Wizards.
Other than Serge Ibaka, the 2008 pick of McGee still looks promising.
Trading the number five overall pick in 2009 to essentially rent Randy Foye and Mike Miller already is a disastrous decision. If they keep the pick, perhaps they would selected Rubio and they would be more motivated to trade out of the first slot, which would be a mistake given the vastly superior game of Wall.
History of the 1st Overall Pick


Average career PER: 18.6
I do believe the Wizards will improve their first overall pick record to a two-for-two, with Wall being much closer to Hall of Famer Walt Bellamy than Kwame.
http://wizards.realgm.com/articles/293/20100609/washington_wizards_draft_preview/
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