Showing posts with label Toronto Raptors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toronto Raptors. Show all posts

Sunday, June 23, 2013

NBA News 2013: Andre Iguodala a priority

Andre Iguodala on November 23, 2010
Andre Iguodala on November 23, 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
New Denver Nuggets general manager Tim Connelly says re-signing free agent shooting guard Andre Iguodala is his No. 1 priority.

Connelly was formally introduced on Thursday by team president Josh Kroenke.

"The last guy we talked to before coming in for this press conference was Andre," Connelly told reporters. "He's such a pro that he's out there (on the court) working out."

The Nuggets' top defender, Iguodala recently opted out of the final year of his contract after averaging 13 points a game last season.

His situation is just one of several Connelly will have to deal with as he tries to help the Nuggets become a genuine playoff contender.

The 36-year-old Connelly comes to the Nuggets from New Orleans, where he served as assistant general manager under Dell Demps. He replaces NBA Executive of the Year Masai Ujiri, who took the GM job with the Toronto Raptors last week.

Considered a rising front-office talent, Connelly inherits a team that won a franchise-most 57 games during the regular season only to bow out in the first round of the playoffs again, this time to Golden State.

Besides the potential loss of Igoudala, the Nuggets will be without Danilo Gallinari for the start of next season as the Italian forward recovers from an ACL injury.

And Connelly, with Kroenke, also will have to find a replacement for NBA Coach of the Year George Karl, who was let go on June 6 after the early payoff exit.

The Nuggets interviewed former Memphis Grizzlies coach Lionel Hollins on Wednesday and have also interviewed Indiana Pacers assistant coach Brian Shaw, but have not set a specific deadline for hiring a coach.

"I don't think we want to put a concrete timeline on anything," Connelly said. "There's the potential to talk to additional candidates, and we've talked to two great candidates. The two guys we've interviewed are tremendous, and I look forward to going into Josh's office and seeing where we are in that process."

Finding the right personality fit for the coaching job is most important to Connelly, who said he won't dictate a style or philosophy with the new coach.

"I would never try to impose any strategic restraints on a coach," Connelly said. "I'm looking for a good guy who's excited to have the job and build off where we are presently."

Kroenke, who offered Connelly the job during a Saturday night dinner, was bullish about his new hire.

"I'm really excited to have Tim here, and it's going to be a lot of fun moving forward," Kroenke said. "I hope Nuggets fans are as excited as I am. I've known Tim the last several years, and we've stayed in loose contact.

"It became a very easy decision to hire him and bring him here after a couple dominoes started to fall."

http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/9407778/tim-connelly-introduced-new-gm-denver-nuggets
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Thursday, March 7, 2013

NBA News 2013: Old Style Pacers Are Built To Contend

Pacers Paul George
Pacers Paul George (Photo credit: IsoSports)

Last season, Indiana Pacers head coach Frank Vogel’s “smash-mouth basketball” took the surprising Pacers to the Eastern Conference Semifinals, where they led the Miami HEAT two games to one before dropping three in a row to the eventual NBA champions. This year, Indiana is back stronger, tougher and nastier than ever and proving that last season’s 52-win pace was no fluke.

“[The Pacers] are big time,” Toronto Raptors head coach Dwane Casey said. “Tough, physical, nasty – they play playoff basketball every night. They are not into up and down, up and down. They just try to come down and carve you apart. They hit, bang and bump you. Any time they get a chance, they bump you to get you off your constitution a little bit. Anything to rattle you physically and legally, they put their hands on you. Just like playoff games are played and they play that style each and every night.”

Vogel assumed the reins midway through the 2010-11 season from Jim O’Brien and took a losing program to the playoffs that April. He had a philosophy that matched the talent then-president Larry Bird had assembled. Vogel wanted a big team that played tough defense and rebounded.

“When I took over, I felt this was the style that was winning in the playoffs at the time,” Vogel said. “We have seen some teams that have gone small, like Miami and Oklahoma City last year, have succeeded at the highest level, but when I took over it was [Andrew] Bynum and [Pau] Gasol in L.A., [Kevin] Garnett and [Kendrick] Perkins won it, and [Tyson] Chandler and Dirk Nowitzki won championships. So I like playing with two bigs and winning the defensive rebounding battle and then trusting the pass offensively. So that’s the style we are trying to play and hopefully it wins at playoffs. If you don’t have the players to do that then you have to adjust and play whatever style your personnel dictates, but give Larry Bird credit for putting together a team that can play this style.”

The Pacers made immediate improvements in their defensive ratings with Vogel running the show, improvements that have continued into this season. Currently the Pacers lead the league in rebounding differential at plus 4.7 boards per game and hold opponents to a league-worst field goal percentage of 41.5 percent.

“For us it starts on the defensive end,” David West said. “We are trying to win as many games as possible. We are in a tough playoff race. We understand that our defense is going to give us a chance. We are aggressive defensively. We play together defensively and try to protect the rim and guard the three-point line and force teams to score over us.”

The Pacers play this style with pride. It has become the team’s identity and something they can hang their hat on every night. This level of defensive intensity isn’t common throughout the NBA, but the Pacers have the size and depth of talent to make it work. Former All-Stars Roy Hibbert and West are backed up by the seven-foot Ian Mahinmi and Tyler Hansbrough. The return of Danny Granger to the lineup just adds to this team’s depth.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/old-style-pacers-are-built-to-contend/

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

NBA News 2013: How the Grizzlies Cleared Over $16 Million

Memphis Grizzlies logo
Memphis Grizzlies logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Memphis Grizzlies have cleared in the neighborhood of $16 million in a pair of deals that unloaded the contracts of Rudy Gay and Marreese Speights.

On Wednesday, Gay and Hamed Haddadi were sent to the Toronto Raptors.  The Raptors in turn sent Ed Davis, a 2013 second-round pick and cash to Memphis. The Detroit Pistons also sent Tayshaun Prince and Austin Daye to the Grizzlies, in return for Jose Calderon from Toronto.

Just over a week earlier, the Grizzlies sent Josh Selby, Wayne Ellington, Speights and a first-round pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers for Jon Leuer.

The Speights’ deal set up the Gay trade, which was structured as three transactions.

- When Speights was traded to Memphis, the Grizzlies attained a $4.3 million trade exception.  The Grizzlies used that exception to acquire Daye, who makes $2,958,077 this season.  Memphis is left with $1,241,923 remaining in the Speights exception.

- The Grizzlies traded Gay, who makes $16,460,538 this season, for Prince ($6,764,045) and Davis ($2,207,040).  With the two making a combined $8,971,085, Memphis also received a trade exception for the difference ($7,489,453).

- Haddadi was traded to the Raptors without any salary coming back in return, generating another Memphis trade exception ($1.3 million).

http://www.hoopsworld.com/how-the-grizzlies-cleared-16-million/

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

NBA News 2013: Terrence Ross Wins NBA Dunk Contest

The current Toronto Raptors Logo (2008–present)
The current Toronto Raptors Logo (2008–present) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Terrence Ross wore the Vince Carter throwback. Then he followed in his Toronto Raptors predecessor’s footsteps.

Ross won the NBA All-Star weekend slam dunk contest Saturday night in a memorable final round against Utah Jazz forward and defending champion Jeremy Evans. Ross had the best first round in the event and followed through to become the first rookie to win since Josh Smith in 2005.

“It was very hard,” Evans said. “It is hard every year just because so much has been done and there’s only so much you can do in the air.”

“I feel blessed, but it’s still overwhelming,” Ross said. “I’m just trying to soak it all in.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/terrence-ross-wins-nba-dunk-contest/

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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

NBA News 2012: NBA's top trade candidates

Andrea Bargnani
Andrea Bargnani (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Most NBA players who signed contracts during the past offseason become eligible on Saturday to be traded. What that means: With a much larger pool of players available for deals, NBA general managers will start spending a lot more time on the phone in the coming weeks.

"It's about to heat up on Dec. 15," one Eastern Conference general manager said. "Conversations are definitely happening because once Dec. 15 comes, the pool increases. You've heard a lot of rumors about Pau Gasol, Andrea Bargnani. The names are only going to grow on Dec. 15."

From conversations with several NBA executives, here's a list of players whose names figure to frequently surface in trade talks between now and the league's Feb. 21 deadline for deals.

Andrea Bargnani: Toronto Raptors, 27, PF-C
Contract status: Three years, $33.25 million remaining. Player opt-out in 2014. Due 5 percent bonus if traded.
Buzz: Bargnani is sidelined with elbow and wrist injuries, tempering his short-term value. He hasn't lived up to the hype and injuries have been a concern throughout his career. Still, the young 7-footer can score and remains a sharp 3-point threat.
"Toronto definitely wants to move Bargnani," one NBA GM said.

Marshon Brooks: Brooklyn Nets, 23, SG
Contract status: Making $1.1 million in second year of rookie contract.
Buzz: Brooks had a sensational rookie season averaging 12.6 points. But with the addition of Joe Johnson, Brooks has averaged just 6.2 points through his first 14 games this season. Sources said the Nets dangled Brooks in offseason trade talks, but his low contract number makes it difficult to get much of a return for him in a deal.
"They are one of the rare teams that can afford to keep their team at a championship level financially," an NBA GM said. "For them, the development of young players isn't important because they can overspend."

Andrew Bynum: Philadelphia 76ers, 25, C
Contract status: Making $16.1 million in last year of contract.
Buzz: Bynum is still experiencing left knee pain that has kept him from making his debut with the Sixers, but is hopeful he can return sometime in 2013. He becomes a free agent at the end of the season and was expected to command a five-year contract approaching $100 million. His health problems threaten to substantially reduce that number.
One NBA general manager said the Sixers have been making trade inquiries about adding a starting caliber center.
"They got to be a little panicked now," one GM said. "They could get a really interesting deal for him. I could see them doing that."

Jose Calderon: Toronto Raptors, 27, PG
Contract status: Making $10.5 million in last year of contract. Due a 10 percent bonus if traded.
Buzz: Calderon has been mentioned as a possible trade candidate for years and has been linked with the Los Angeles Lakers in the past. Raptors starting point guard Kyle Lowry is expected to be sidelined another week with a partial tear to his right triceps muscle, but that shouldn't keep Calderon from being shopped.
"I believe 100 percent that they're trying to trade him," one GM said.

Tyreke Evans: Sacramento Kings, G-F, 23
Contact status: Making $5.2 million in final year of contract year. Will be a restricted free agent at end of the season.
Buzz: Evans recently had a positive conversation about his future with Kings general manager Geoff Petrie, a source close to the guard said. Evans thinks the franchise could match any offer sheet he potentially signs next offseason and would prefer to return to the Kings to prove he is a franchise player. But can the Kings afford him?
"If they can't pay him, they'll just move him," one GM said.

Pau Gasol: Los Angeles Lakers, 32, PF
Contract status: Making $19 million this season and due $19.2 million next season. Due a 15 percent bonus if traded.
Buzz: Gasol was nearly dealt to the Houston Rockets last year and continued to be the center of trade whispers. The Lakers, however, aren't expected to seriously consider any deals for him until after he returns and gets a chance to play with Steve Nash, who is also currently sidelined. If a move does happen with Gasol, it will likely be much closer to the trade deadline.
"I believe that the message being conveyed to wait and see with Nash is accurate," one GM said.

Tyler Hansbrough: Indiana Pacers, 27, PF
Contract status: Making $3.1 million in final contract year. Will be restricted free agent at end of the season. Buzz: Hansbrough is averaging career-lows of six points, 4.2 rebounds and 16.1 minutes, but could be a good frontcourt addition for needy teams. By moving Hansbrough, the Pacers could potentially add a wing player to help soothe the loss of injured small forward Danny Granger.
"I'm surprised they haven't been playing him," one GM said of Hansbrough.

Gerald Henderson: Charlotte Bobcats, G-F, 25
Contract status: Making $3.1 million in final contract year. Will be a restricted free agent at end of the season.
Buzz: Henderson averaged 15.1 points last season and seemed to be coming into his own. A foot injury early this season, however, forced him to miss 13 games. The Bobcats have since primarily started rookie Jeff Taylor instead and a league source said the team is open to trading Henderson.
"If they don't look like they can afford him, they are probably going to move him," one NBA GM said. "They were playing their best basketball when he was hurt."

Kevin Love: Minnesota Timberwolves, 24, PF
Contract status: In first year of a four-year, $60 million contract. Can opt out after the 2014-15 season.
Buzz: In an interview with Yahoo! Sports NBA columnist Adrian Wojnarowski, Love recently questioned the direction of the franchise under owner Glen Taylor and general manager David Kahn. Love isn't happy about not getting a five-year maximum contract, and some teams might try to explore acquiring him from Minnesota.
"I don't think that's a match that is permanent in Minnesota," a rival assistant GM said. "I'm not saying they're shopping, but if they can get the right deal they would look at it. And I don't think he wants to be there."

Paul Millsap: Utah Jazz, 27, PF
Contract status: Making $8.6 million in final contract year.
Buzz: The Utah Jazz are in the playoff hunt and have two starting big men in the last years of their deals in Millsap and Al Jefferson. Utah also has two talented young big men in Derrick Favors and Enes Kanter. Any big move by new general manager Dennis Lindsey, however, could disrupt Utah's playoff hopes.
"I would think they would more likely trade Millsap over Jefferson because he is going to be harder to keep," one GM said. "He's made less money than Jefferson and he will go to the highest bidder."

Timofey Mozgov: Denver Nuggets, 26, C
Contract status: Making $3.1 million in last year of contract. Will be a restricted free agent at end of the season.
Buzz: Of their three centers, the Nuggets are most willing to part with Mozgov, who has proven in his short NBA career and Olympic play that he is a serviceable big man. The Nuggets probably won't try to re-sign him with two other free agents on the horizon: guard Andre Iguodala and reserve swingman Corey Brewer.
"It's logical because they have three centers and it's hard for [coach George] Karl to play them all," one NBA GM said. "The Nuggets are not a big revenue-generating team and they're not going to pay the tax."

Anderson Varejao: Cleveland Cavaliers, 30, PF-C
Contract status: Has $27.1 million remaining over final three years of contract. Due 5 percent bonus if traded.
Buzz: Varejao is having an All-Star season, averaging 14.3 points and 14.8 rebounds through 22 games. Cleveland, however, has one of the NBA's worst records so teams will at least ask about the availability of Varejao, whose stock is rising by the day.
"He is a target for trade, but I don't think Cleveland wants to trade him," one GM said. "There is a distinction between players teams might want to move and players teams want to have."

Derrick Williams: Minnesota Timberwolves, 21, F
Contract status: Making $4.8 million in second year of rookie deal.
Buzz: Williams has had a disappointing career in Minnesota after being selected second overall in the 2011 draft. The highest draft choice in franchise history has been earning DNP-CDs or short-minute stints under coach Rick Adelman. Both sides would be happy with a move.
"They will move him in a heartbeat if they could," one rival team executive said. "I don't think the coaches are that high on him. You have to get something for him now because the longer he sits, the more people think he can't play."

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/nba--nba-s-top-trade-candidates-000418190.html

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Friday, July 6, 2012

NBA News 2012: Getting Steve Nash is a steal for the Lakers

Nash averaged 10.5 minutes a game in his rooki...Nash averaged 10.5 minutes a game in his rookie year. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Like anyone in this town who has ever bitten his knuckles purple at the sight of that pale little floppy-haired guy from Phoenix, I've seen Steve Nash twist and stretch and seriously wrinkle some Lakers uniforms.

But now he's going to actually wear one?

I'm writing this on the night of July 4, but the blasts and sparkles outside my office window can't compare to the cheery bombs bouncing through the pulse of Lakers fans, who might need until dawn's early light to believe this.

A team with a gaping vacancy at point guard just smothered it with a future Hall of Fame point guard. A team that spent last season boring the entertainment capital just acquired one of basketball's best showmen. Naptime just took three quick dribbles toward again becoming Showtime.

Steve Nash is a Laker and, man, is this going to be fun.

Like one of those no-look moves made famous by the man himself, Nash's acquisition Wednesday is stunningly spectacular from a variety of angles.

It allows the Lakers to run the sort of chaotic, choreographed offense that can hang with the turbos from Oklahoma City and San Antonio. It takes the pressure off Kobe Bryant during crunch times that are increasingly crunching him.

And, oh yes, it gives the Lakers the sort of balanced attack that would be attractive to another potential acquisition who was worried about Bryant's ball hogging. No, Steve Nash can't play defense, but that won't matter so much if his presence leads to the acquisition of Dwight Howard, who must surely see that the Lakers are now his best chance for a ring.

The Lakers can and should still acquire Howard too, because Nash stunningly cost them little. They sent Phoenix some draft picks, which is no big deal right now considering the Lakers haven't had a first-round pick since 2007 and have won two titles since then.

They also sent Phoenix the trade exception they acquired in the dumping of Lamar Odom, which leads me to write something as nutty as Nash leading a fastbreak.

Good job, Jimmy Buss. Even if you were initially just trying to save money by trading Odom, you have proved everyone wrong by essentially trading him for Nash.

At first blush, it's amazing that Phoenix would actually allow Nash to negotiate a trade with the Suns' rival. But then again, if Nash had gone to the Toronto Raptors or the New York Knicks as a free agent, the Suns would have received nothing.

It was a smart deal for Phoenix, an amazing steal for the Lakers, and the coolest of moves for Nash, whose three-year, $27 million Lakers deal is nearly $10 million less than he could have received elsewhere. He told the Suns he wanted to remain near his three children in Phoenix. And he's clearly telling the Lakers that, after spending 16 years in the league without a single appearance in the NBA Finals, he wants desperately to win.

At age 38, is he still spry enough to win? Well, he's not Chris Paul anymore, but he's still got plenty of Steve Nash. He led the league in assists in five of the last eight seasons. And last season, while he averaged only 13 points, his 53 percent shooting was the second-best percentage of his career.

He's not going to dominate games like he did several years ago in consecutive postseasons against the Lakers. But he can still steer and steady games like few others.

His biggest shortcoming remains that he plays defense like those guys in Spain wave those red capes. While the Lakers now have a brand-new offense, they still don't have anybody to guard Russell Westbrook or Tony Parker.


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NBA News 2012: Steve Nash choosing Lakers instead of Raptors promotes misconceptions

photo taken by flickr user The CJM. source is ...photo taken by flickr user The CJM. source is here: http://flickr.com/photos/thecjm/84033610/ (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
On Wednesday night, Steve Nash orchestrated a sign-and-trade deal that sent him to the Los Angeles Lakers. The Raptors made the high offer to the 38-year-old Canadian point guard, but missed out on him anyway. That the Raptors could not land this particular player is promoting some pretty egregious misconceptions:

1.  The Toronto Raptors cannot sign free agents: The last time the Raptors went after a marquee free agent with an expensive offer, they ended up signing him. Just because Hedo Turkoglu’s season in Toronto was a colossal failure does not erase the fact that they beat out overtures from other teams to land him. They overpaid, sure, but so do most teams in free agency. Moreover, the Raptors got their two best players in franchise history, Vince Carter and Chris Bosh, to sign second contracts with the team.

2. NBA players don’t like Toronto: In fact, Toronto is frequently mentioned as one of the favourite cities of many NBA players. For one, Milwaukee Bucks point guard and Los Angeles native Brandon Jennings: “I just love the city of Toronto, man. It’s a great city. The people are great here. There’s always something to do. It’s a great city.” Meanwhile, Raptors restricted free agent Jerryd Bayless is looking into buying a home in Toronto, regardless of whether he comes back to the Raptors next year: “Some of my closest friends are here. They’ve shown me, and I’ve fallen in love with it. I want to make it my home.”

3. The Raptors will always be as unattractive as they are now: The Bulls have been the best regular season team in the Eastern Conference for two years. How did they do it? Not by making a bunch of free agent signings and spending themselves into contention. In 2007, the Bulls landed Joakim Noah in the draft. In 2008, the Bulls landed Derrick Rose with the first-overall pick in the draft. In the 2009 playoffs, the Bulls pushed the Celtics to seven games in an entertaining first-round series. In 2010, the Bulls then hired Tom Thibodeau to coach and had enough in place to get Carlos Boozer (who has been a disappointment, by the way) to come to Chicago. In that order, that is how they became good. After Michael Jordan retired, the Bulls struck out repeatedly in free agency, missing out on Tracy McGrady, Grant Hill, among others. Does anyone want to argue that Chicago is not a desirable city? There are only a handful of teams that will consistently be able to draw free agents: the Lakers, Knicks and Heat. Recently, the Nets and Clippers were able to encourage star players to force trades to them (and Brooklyn has still failed to land Dwight Howard). In both cases, they already had one star in place (Deron Williams, Blake Griffin). Everybody else has to do it the same way: by drafting well, trading well, hiring good coaches and getting really lucky. The Raptors have never been good enough for long enough (one playoff series victory in 17 years) to jump to the above conclusion. Saying that they have is a self-pitying lie.

4. You can’t win a championship without being able to land marquee free agents: Exactly two teams have been spurred on to title runs by signing superstars in free agency: The 2000-02 Los Angeles Lakers, via the 1996 signing of Shaquille O’Neal, and the 2012 Miami Heat, via the 2010 signings (acquisitions, technically) of LeBron James and Chris Bosh. Nearly every other championship team has been built on the foundation of draft picks and trades: the 2011 Dallas Mavericks, the 2009-10 Lakers, the 2008 Boston Celtics, the San Antonio Spurs, and so forth. In the case of the Lakers and Celtics, they were able to trade for stars (Pau Gasol for Los Angeles, Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett for Boston) only because they already had other stars on their rosters (Paul Pierce, Kobe Bryant). Additionally, the Celtics had been bad enough for long enough that they had significant assets (draft picks, past, present and future) to trade.

5. There is no way Bryan Colangelo can recover from this: Colangelo is in a precarious position, but the general manager is nothing if not resourceful. The Raptors will try once again to pry Kyle Lowry from Houston, which will be more difficult now that former Rockets point guard Goran Dragic is off to Phoenix. The Raptors could make a play for Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin, although it is tough to envision a scenario in which New York does not match an offer sheet. The Raptors will also be active in the trade market, kicking the tires on players such as Jennings and Memphis’s Rudy Gay. Colangelo is in a very tough place, but that does not mean he has no move left to make.


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Thursday, July 5, 2012

NBA News 2012: Steve Nash to Lakers

PHOENIX, AZ - JANUARY 05:  Steve Nash #13 of t...PHOENIX, AZ - JANUARY 05: Steve Nash #13 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball during the NBA game against the Los Angeles Lakers at US Airways Center on January 5, 2011 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Lakers defeated the Suns 99-95. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
In an unforeseen twist that could thrust the Los Angeles Lakers straight back into title contention, two-time NBA MVP Steve Nash has successfully negotiated a sign-and-trade deal from the Phoenix Suns to the Lakers that will team him up with Kobe Bryant, according to sources with knowledge of the deal.

Sources told ESPN.com that Nash, with the New York Knicks also pressing hard to complete a similar sign-and-trade deal, was swayed to join the Lakers after a determined push from Bryant and because the move keeps him in the title hunt and allows him to stay in close proximity to his three children in Phoenix.

Nash will receive a three-year deal in excess of $25 million, sources said, because the Suns ultimately agreed to sign-and-trade him to the Lakers, who can absorb Nash via the trade exception they created by dealing Lamar Odom to the Dallas Mavericks in December.

The Suns will receive 2013 and 2015 first-round picks and 2013 and 2014 second-round picks from the Lakers, according to the Arizona Republic.

The deal can't be officially completed until July 11, when a leaguewide moratorium on new business is lifted.

The Lakers are no longer trying to retain point guard Ramon Sessions, who opted out of the final year and $4.55 million of his contract to become a free agent, a source told ESPNLosAngeles.com's Ramona Shelburne.

Sessions was hoping for the security of a longer term contract, but while discussions with the Lakers were positive, they never progressed toward a multiyear deal, the source told Shelburne.

Difficult as it is on some levels for the Suns to help the face of the franchise get to the Lakers -- especially after years of playoff battles with them in the Nash Era -- sources say team owner Robert Sarver finally agreed to the trade after yielding to a plea from Nash to send him to a destination where he could maintain the closest possible ties to his children and still chase the ring that has eluded him for 16 seasons.

The Lakers clinched the deal by surrendering the package of picks, but sources said that the Suns did decide to reward Nash for all the success he delivered over the past eight seasons.

Sending Nash to the team of his choosing ensures that the sides part on good terms after it became clear in recent days that the Suns left little doubt since free agency began Sunday at 12:01 a.m. that they were prepared to move in a different direction instead of trying to match the determined bids for Nash coming from the Toronto Raptors, Dallas Mavericks, Knicks and Lakers to retain the 38-year-old.

The Knicks were equally high on Nash's list in a sign-and-trade scenario -- he's an offseason Manhattan resident -- and the Raptors were initially seen as the favorite for Nash's services after quickly registering a three-year, $36 million offer. The Brooklyn Nets and Mavericks also pursued Nash, Dallas in particular after the Nets won the Deron Williams sweepstakes earlier Tuesday.

Yet, Nash ultimately decided that the chance to team with Bryant, Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum, the three-year deal he had been hoping for, and ability to keep a West Coast base near his children could not be passed up.

Ironically, though, Nash said just last week in a radio interview with ESPN NewYork 98.7's Stephen A. Smith and Ryan Ruocco that it would be difficult on some levels to join Miami after the Heat just won the championship or sign with the Lakers after all their playoff battles the past eight years.

"The truth is I'm a bit old school," Nash said in the June 25 interview. "For me, it would be hard to put on a Lakers jersey. That's just the way it is. You play against them so many times in the playoffs, and I just use them as an example, and I have the utmost respect for them and their organization.

"I kind of have that tendency (to try to beat the best teams), so it is strange, but as a free agent you're free to go where you want, so I'd have to consider everything regardless of the past or the future."



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Wednesday, July 4, 2012

NBA News 2012: Steve Nash heading to Lakers

Steve NashSteve Nash (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
In a stunning move, the Suns sent Steve Nash to the Lakers Wednesday in a sign-and-trade that reverberated from coast-to-coast in the NBA -- not to mention north of the border.

Nash, 38, will team will Kobe Bryant in a move that gives the All-Star point guard the best chance of his career to win a title. The deal for future draft picks and cash came at the expense of the Toronto Raptors, who'd relentlessly pursued Nash on the open market, and the New York Knicks, who were trying to lure him with their own sign-and-trade proposal.

Nash fits into the $8.2 million trade exception the Lakers received for dumping Lamar Odom on the Mavs before last season.

Bryant will play alongside the most prolific offensive point guard of his career, and the Lakers once again become legitimate title contenders as Bryant chases a sixth championship to equal Michael Jordan in the twilight of his career. But even as the mind blurs at the thought of Nash distributing to Bryant, Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol, the deal raises so many more questions.

Would the Lakers venture deeper into trade talks with Orlando for Dwight Howard, or put their trust in Bynum -- whose immaturity rivals that of Howard but whose offensive skills far exceed those of the Magic All-Star? Will statistical paradigms explode with the possibility of Nash, the most skilled playmaker of his generation, making plays for Gasol, as gifted an offensive big man as there is in the league?

One ripple effect seems certain: After the Nets used their cap space to acquire Joe Johnson from the Hawks and re-sign Gerald Wallace, resulting in a five-year commitment from point guard Deron Williams, the Knicks would seem to be the favorites to land another Hall of Famer point guard, Jason Kidd. The Mavs, who chased Williams and also plan to pursue Knicks restricted free agent Jeremy Lin, also will be in the mix for Kidd.

So in the span of 48 hours, NBA stars have aligned on opposite coasts. The Nets loaded up on star power for their move to Brooklyn next season, and the Lakers went from being a stale, predictable offensive team to having one of the most creative, play-making point guards ever to play. Though he's endured back trouble, Nash remains an impactful playmaker who will breathe new life into the Lakers' offense even at age 38.

A significant motivating factor for Nash, according to sources, was finding a team where he could be close to the children he had with his ex-wife. Nash followed through on that desire, accepting about $10-$12 million less from the Lakers than he could've gotten from the Raptors in a return to his homeland of Canada.

As for the Suns, they reportedly get two future first-round picks and two future second-round picks. That, along with $3 million cash, made it easier for Suns owner Robert Sarver to send Nash to a Western Conference rival. Money talks in the NBA, and so does cheap labor needed for rebuilding.


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Monday, July 2, 2012

NBA News 2012: Raptors offer Nash 3-year, $36 million

Español: El jugador canadiense de baloncesto S...Español: El jugador canadiense de baloncesto Steve Nash. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The Toronto Raptors have offered free agent point guard Steve Nash a three-year, $36 million deal, ESPN.com reported

Nash, 38, made $12 million this past year with the Phoenix Suns, so he would be making the same amount per year despite his advanced age.

Nash reportedly has interest in the Heat, Mavericks and Knicks, as well as the Suns and Raptors.

Nash is Canadian, and he is very popular in Canada, which accounts for much of the Raptors’ interest in Nash, who is the general manager of Canada basketball.

Nash averaged 12.5 points this past season, his lowest scoring average since the 1999-2000 season, but he also averaged 10.7 assists this year.



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Tuesday, January 31, 2012

NBA News 2012: An Even More Dominant LeBron

MIAMI, FL - MAY 31:  LeBron James #6 of the Mi...MIAMI, FL - MAY 31: LeBron James #6 of the Miami Heat is double-teammed by Jason Kidd #2 and DeShawn Stevenson #92 of the Dallas Mavericks in the first quarter in Game One of the 2011 NBA Finals at American Airlines Arena on May 31, 2011 in Miami, Florida. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)In a match-up of two equally skilled players, individual defense is primarily a function of being longer, stronger and faster than your opponent. There are a small handful of All-NBA caliber players with a skill-set comparable to LeBron; there isn’t a player in the world who can compare with him athletically.

The Bulls, with three of the best interior defenders in the NBA in Joakim Noah, Taj Gibson and Omer Asik and excellent perimeter athletes in Derrick Rose and Ronnie Brewer, became an elite team due to a defense unrivaled in terms of length and intensity. In the first quarter Sunday, LeBron made them look like the Toronto Raptors.

To stem the bleeding, Tom Thibodeau resorted to a 2-3 zone, abandoning his team’s calling card in an effort to keep LeBron out of the paint. Erik Spoelstra had an easy counter: shifting LeBron to the high post, where his height and court vision allowed him to pick apart the defense and find Joel Anthony at the rim.

However, LeBron’s athleticism and playmaking ability are known commodities.

What should concern the rest of the NBA was the post-game he displayed. His inability to play with his back to the basket has long been his most glaring weakness: Dallas exploited it in The Finals last season, putting increasingly smaller defenders, from the 6’7 Shawn Marion to the 6’5 DeShawn Stevenson and the 6’4 Jason Kidd, on him as the series progressed.

Against Chicago in the second half, he took turns abusing Hamilton and Brewer, facing them up and blowing by them from the elbow, baseline and the low-post. But with 5:00 minutes left in the fourth quarter, the Bulls had crawled back in the game, trailing Miami by only two points.

LeBron received the ball with a 26-year-old 6’7 225 wing with a 6’11 wingspan and a 40’ vertical defending him, and as he began posting up, no help came. So he patiently dribbled the ball five times, bull-dozing Brewer back feet at a time for an easy lay-up at the front of the rim.

To understand how well Chicago will have to play to defeat the Heat, compare the super-human acrobatics the 6’3 Rose uses to score in the lane against Miami with LeBron’s casual demolition of Brewer. The return of the 6’8 220 Luol Deng, the second rated small forward in the high school class of 2003, will help, but he’s not nearly enough.

While LeBron’s lack of a championship has made his game and character media punching bags, a perimeter player has never bested him in the playoffs. The common theme has been a dominant 6’11+ big man capable of controlling the paint defensively --  Tim Duncan in 2007, Kevin Garnett in 2008 and 2010, Dwight Howard in 2009 and Tyson Chandler in 2011.

As great as Rose is, he’s operating on the same plane of the game as LeBron. When Miami needed a stop in the 2011 Eastern Conference Finals, they stuck a 6’9 275 player fast enough to keep Rose in front of him without giving him space for his jumper, and that was that.

Dallas, in contrast, had a 7’0 low post scorer (Dirk) with a release point LeBron could not challenge and a 7’0 center (Chandler) capable of meeting him at the rim. The Mavericks, who treated Mike Bibby like a traffic cone all series long, were perfectly constructed to exploit Miami’s only two weaknesses, yet they barely won one of the tightest Finals in NBA history.

A year later, the Heat are much improved. They have the same starters, but instead of running out players like Bibby, James Jones, Erick Dampier, Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Jamaal Magloire, Juwon Howard and Carlos Arroyo in the regular season, the first four players off their bench are a healthy Udonis Haslem and Mike Miller, free agent acquisition Shane Battier and rookie Norris Cole. Cole, an athletic 6’2 175 guard, gives them someone to match up with players like JJ Barea, whose ability to blow by Miami’s point guards in the Finals made him an unlikely folk hero and an even unlikelier $20 million from Minnesota in the offseason.

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Saturday, December 18, 2010

NBA News 2010: Under-the-radar Lakers certain to ‘rise at the right time’

The Los Angeles Lakers playing a home game aga...Image via Wikipedia
“I don’t know if they sometimes get disinterested,” Raptors coach Jay Triano said Saturday of the two-time defending NBA champions. “They know that a game in November or December isn’t going to mean as much as a game in April. But Phil (Jackson, the Los Angeles coach) has a way of making these guys believe and rise at the right time.”

“I think with what the Lakers have done, winning championships and everything, people think they’re going to do it again but I think a lot of people now are paying attention to the younger teams like Oklahoma City, Miami, New York,” said DeRozan. “There’s a lot of young teams that people are excited to watch besides the Lakers.

“People don’t worry about the Lakers until the playoffs come, you know. That’s what matters and I think they know that as well. You can’t miss out on watching these young teams these days.”

Yes, the Heat, Thunder and Knicks are all good stories.

The Lakers are a good team.

“I think they’re pretty darn good,” said Triano. “They have a little bit of everything, their bench got stronger than it was a year ago, I think (Pau) Gasol is playing well, Kobe is playing well, other guys are finding where they fit.

http://www.thestar.com/sports/basketball/nba/article/909304--under-the-radar-lakers-certain-to-rise-at-the-right-time


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Friday, September 24, 2010

NBA News 2010: Raptors Looking To Acquire An Extra Big

The Raptor mascot, with jersey number 95 after...Image via Wikipedia
The Raptors are searching the free agent and trade market for a frontcourt player due to injuries and a general lack of depth.

"With the injury to Ed Davis, there has been more talk about adding a big,” Colangelo said Thursday. “There’s a universe of bigs still out there.”

Earl Barron, David Harrison, Primoz Brezec, Fabricio Oberto and Peter John Ramos would be on a list of possible additions.


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