Free agency! How does it work?
I don't usually talk
about Free Agency online. Because, usually everyone else has for me. I didn't
feel like I needed to talk about you-know-who, nor did I feel the
need to talk about who was gonna overpay for Carmelo Anthony's
services. I wasn't particularly interested in Houston's future and I
knew the Lakers were screwed either way. I was more than fine with
being silent on the issue. Then, Friday June 11, 2014 comes around
and I have to say something! What a fascinating turn of events we
had. So many things happened! Not just with the heavy hitters, but
with the building blocks as well. And now that all the dominoes have
fallen I'll go down the row and discuss what I think of each move
from a basketball standpoint and mentally prepare for what is sure to be an interesting, if not entertaining, 2015 season.
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS
I won't go on about
you-know-who going you-know-where. From what I read of his essay it
was a very personal decision and it was apparently going to be made
at one point or another. Perhaps maybe a little earlier than some had
forseen, but the writing was on the wall it seems. He was ready and I
respect his choice. Just like any other choice he would have made.
I've known the true character of this man all along and never doubted
for a second. Be well, sir.
MIAMI HEAT
I will talk about his
former team, however, because Miami is in an interesting position.
After four straight Finals appearances and back-to-back titles they
are in retooling mode. It's not a bad place, either. With the
acquisition of Luol Deng, their line-up next year looks like this:
- Mario Chalmers 2. Dwayne Wade 3. Luol Deng 4. Josh McRoberts 5. Chris Bosh
And with Danny Granger
coming off the bench (and perhaps a look at Mike Scott from Atlanta)
Miami could complete their current rotation of the Big Guys Who Can
Shoot All-Stars. Continue to develop Norris Cole. Make sure to show
Shabazz Napier the ropes. I don't know if Miami is a contender, but
with most of their roster back they are every bit a playoff team.
HOUSTON ROCKETS
I'll hop to Houston
next. Since that was where Bosh was thought to be going before The
Decision came down. It could have been a good fit, too. Bosh gets to
play Power Forward – his true position – and spread the floor
with his improved perimeter shooting. Houston would have gotten one
of the best off-the-ball players in the league today. Not to mention
a battle-tested world champion and perhaps even someone to knock down
shots when James Harden goes cold in the playoffs.
Now they don't get any
of that. Oh, spoilers, they're not getting Carmelo either. Which
sucks for them because one thing holds true in free agency no matter
who is involved: if you aren't willing to shill out for your guy,
there is someone, somewhere who just found his number on their list.
Houston made a mistake early by burning their bridge with Jeremy Lin.
Hijacking his number for a Photoshopped banner to lure The Melo Man
to The Lonestar State. He didn't feel like moving but Jeremy Lin did,
being traded to the Lakers not days after the initial controversy.
"Good thing we didn't telegraph that, right guys?" |
They also went so far as
to rub Chandler Parsons the wrong way by not offering what he felt
was market value. This is tricky. Sure you could argue that maybe
Parsons isn't worth $15 million or more, especially on a team where
he's the third option at best. On the other hand, he single-handedly
helped extend their First Round playoff series against the Portland
Trailblazers that they were going to lose anyway. But whatever you
believe, he's off to a team in Dallas that has a need for him and he
has more value for. It's a cold world in Houston, though. Losing two
of their young, talented players their immediate future sees them
jobbing out to Portland. You know, seeing as how they still have no
answer for LaMarcus Aldridge, one less answer for Nic Batum and even
less answers for Damien Lillard. Have fun, Clutch City.
CHICAGO BULLS
We're in Texas and not
too far away so let's swing it up to the Second City. Lots of
questions for Chicago. Questions that include but aren't limited to:
Why didn't Melo sign?
Can they score?
Will D-Rose make it to
December before disintegrating like Sandman?
Can Joakim make it to
December without devouring the rookies?
I'm only halfway kidding
with some of those. There is much uncertainty when it pertains to the
Chicago Bulls. They had the worst offense in the NBA last season and
lost badly to an upstart Washington Wizards team (who would have
swept if they weren't such a terrible home team) in the first round
of the playoffs. Nobody knows when Derrick Rose will return and to
what capacity. The window is shrinking. Yes, even in this piss poor
incarnation of the Eastern Conference. Why would any man - let alone
a legit Top 10 player – take less money to have Coach Thibs run
your knees into pixie dust unless you were 110% sure you would get a
title?
I was not-so-secretly
hoping the Bulls would give a kind “Screw You” to both of the big
dogs on the table and just overpay for Lance Stephenson, who deserves
a team who will appreciate his ear-blowing greatness. They didn't
though, and instead settled for drafting Doug McDermott and
saving-uh, I mean, signing Pau Gasol from the Lakers. The bigger
question for me however, is Coach Tom Thibodeau himself. He must have felt he was
coming into a favorable situation, and he was at the time. Now
several years later and we must address the elephant in the room
Bulls fans. What if Derrick Rose can never be Derrick Rose? How long
does he stay, then? There is interest in the market for him. Rumors
already have him going to Memphis at some point. Maybe it's for the
best, though. Perhaps the Bulls could use a coach that won't rely on
his backup Point Guard as Option No. 1.
LAKERS
BUCKS
JAZZ
NETS
76ERS
PISTONS
SUNS
DALLAS MAVERICKS
Okay, okay for real this
time. Back to Texas where upside is the word of the day and no, for
once we won't be talking about the Spurs. As was referenced above,
the Rockets' loss is the Maverick's gain in Chandler Parsons to the tune of 3yr/$46mil. The
Mavs get a young Small Forward with potential room to grow and a nice
piece to help take some minutes away from Dirk who himself resigned
to a 3-year deal. Don't sleep on the Mavericks next year, folks. On
top of being one of the best teams to watch in the regular season
they'll also be a tough out again in the playoffs. And it will be
solely because of the sudden and shocking brilliance of Monta Ellis
in the Point Guard role. We'll see how next year goes for them, but
if I were one Mark Cuban, I'd think long and hard about keeping this
kid on long term. Fast don't lie.
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES
Let me take some time
today to talk about the 'Wolves. At the time this piece is being
written they hold a tremendous amount of power in this year's free
agency because they have on their roster one considerably talented
player. I speak of Kevin Love and, yes, I will admit to his talent
but I won't be so quick to admit to his value. Allow me to explain.
Mr. Love is the centerpiece of two proposed trades that his current
team is looking to make. One of which would see him going to Golden
State; the other shipping him off to Cleveland. Not terrible on the
surface. Until you see what the pieces are.
Bird forbid that say any
team doesn't need LeBron James but I'm gonna say it anyway. The
Golden State Warriors do not need LeBron James. They can win a
championship right now. When they're healthy, they have the best
starting five in all of basketball. Period. All they really need is a
deeper bench, which they'll have if they develop the guys they've already signed. So when I hear the top brass want to trade Klay
Thompson and/or Harrison Barnes for Kevin Love, I think I might pass
out. You have a better team than Cleveland right now despite the fact
they have their Prodigal Son. If you already know you don't need the
best player in the world, why would you blow that up to get a guy who
is at best No. 3 at his position?
Same thing goes for the
Cavs. They want to trade the No. 1 overall draft pick Andrew Wiggins?
After three straight years of screwing up their draft pick they
finally get one right and now they want to delete that with one
signing? I get it, okay. Love is an upstart. And at 25 isn't even close
to his prime yet. I like my big white guys who can shoot as much as
the next [cc: Josh McRoberts] but however good you think he is, it's
still not as good as Wiggins (who hasn't even played a damn game
yet!) will be. I mean, look at this shit.
Man, this screenshot from 2K looks dope! |
Granted, the athleticism
might not always be there but the skills he learns as he goes along
will more than make up for it. Even then, all he really needs is a
consistent outside shot. Once he gets that, it's lights out. Don't
you stand to gain more if you're Cleveland by having this kid learn
from the best? You don't even need a Power Forward. You just signed
Mike Miller! Miami's loss is your gain: two times over!
Don't get greedy now.
All of that is assuming
anything comes from these talks. As is typical of most free agencies
it is more likely that nothing will come of it and Kevin Love will
play one more half-assed year for the 'Wolves until he moves out West
and they lose him to the Lakers for absolutely nothing. Poetic
justice for the team that had two First Round draft picks and used
them to pick two guards who both happened to be named Not Stephen
Curry.
INDIANA PACERS
Oh you poor Pacers fans.
I am so sorry. No Danny Granger, no Lance Stephenson; you guys don't
even have Miami to pick on anymore. It was a collapse of massive
proportions. Mostly because it happened in slow motion. From the end
of February after the All-Star break to the end of the Conference
Finals at the end of May, the Pacers were in free-fall. It was equal
parts horrible and spectacular and it will be tough to pin down where
it all started. Was Paul George not as good as we thought? Was Roy
Hibbert as bad as Skip Bayless thought? Was the Pacers second unit
worse than we all thought?
Whatever the reason(s),
it's back to square one in Indy with one viable offensive threat [cc:
David West] and no true Point Guard. The Evan Turner Experiment is
over and Lance has moved on to a team who will pay and use him
correctly. You know, probably. Which reminds me.
CHARLOTTE HORNETS
If you had told me this
time last year that the Basketball Team from Charlotte would set
themselves up to be the 5th best team in the East...I
might actually believe it after some coercing because it is the East
but it would still take plenty of coercing. But after striking free
agent gold last year with Center Al Jefferson and a breakout year for
young Kemba Walker, the new-look Hornets are on the upswing. Add to
that draft prospect Noah Vonleh and the newly acquired Lance
Stephenson [3yrs/$9mil per] to start alongside Kemba in the backcourt; suddenly the
Hornets have reclaimed their rightful place as that one team no one
wants to play. A nasty surprise waiting for teams in the East this
year.
NEW YORK KNICKS
Sigh. I don't have to
talk about the Knicks do I? Do I?? Gah! Fine! But I'm doing it for
you, America! The Knickerbockers were bad last year. Really, really
bad. So bad I was forced to no-sell their games completely. Short of
watching the Warriors play I refused to watch a Knicks game. There
was no appeal to be found. You know, unless Hero Ball, poor guard
play and lazy defense are your slice of cheese. Nevermind that Melo
arguably had his best year as a pro, shooting nearly 40 percent from
3. Too bad no one noticed, as his teammates were too busy doing their
best Washington Generals impression.
The problem areas are
numerous; one can't really pinpoint one particular place where
everything went to crap. Perhaps the most pervasive problem was
having a slash/create offense run by a guard who can neither slash or
create.
But this is free agency
and with one phone call even the Raymond Felton-sized anchor that
held down Iman Shumpert last year can be lifted. And it was by way of
a big six-man trade that saw Tyson Chandler and Felton both head to
Dallas while the Knicks cash in on a bevy of guards: Jose Calderon,
Wayne Ellington, and Shane Larkin. Not to mention the veteran big man
Samuel Dalembert. With Carmelo reported as taking 5yrs/$124 mil from
New York and Amare being off the books by next season at the latest
there may be an outside outside chance the New York Basketball
Knicks could attract some big time free agent like a Kevin Love or
even a Russell Westbrook (the next MVP). Will they be better now?
Could they be worse than they were?
MISC:
Really though, why all
the fuss over Kevin Love? Why do this to yourselves? Just tank your
final year, sign with Boston and put Bill Simmons out of his misery.
Or, fly home to play for the Lakers and put Simmons out of his
misery. Either way, really.
The one where the
Hawks drafted Adreian Payne No. 15 and robbed the league blind.
With all the guys opting
out this year, it was pretty cool to see Zach Randolph opt in to the
Grizz. Great show of solidarity from your best player. Those fans
deserve it. Now get some shooting.
Was disappointed in the
Knicks head coach decision. Not because I don't like Derek Fisher,
but because it confirmed my fears of Phil Jackson's thought process
as President. All he had to do was get a guy who could coach. A
leader of men who could be respected. Instead, he got a first-time
coach to use as a hitch to run his own system because his first
choice wanted to be a leader and not a lackey. They're even paying
him the same $25 million that Steve Kerr is getting paid by Golden
State. I'm not saying it's good or bad, but it rubs me the wrong way.
Why is Kendrick Perkins still on my TV screen?
Why is Scottie "Glasses Make Me Look Smarter" Brooks
still a head coach?
I mean what I said about
Russ. If he can manage to improve his outside shooting, coupled with
his athleticism? There will be no one in the game that can stop him.
The Celtics drafted
Marcus Smart. So when Rajon Rondo gets traded, the trending theme of
poectic justice says it has to be either Miami or Brooklyn.