• Since we moved our URL please clear your browsers history and cookies and try logging in again. Thank you and sorry for any inconvenience
  • Since we moved our URL please clear your browsers history and cookies and try logging in again. Thank you and sorry for any inconvenience

NBA signings and trades 2009-10

  • Thread starter Thread starter eliooo932
  • Start date Start date
E

eliooo932

Guest
76ers acquire Kapono from Toronto in exchange for Reggie Evans.
 
76ers acquire Kapono from Toronto in exchange for Reggie Evans.

Kapono should fill in nicely on the void that Korver left. Also, the departure of Reggie Evans would mean that the Sixers will be shopping for a slot man.
 
what if Cavs traded Lebron?

Cavs - Lebron James

LAC - nbr 1 pick(griffin), Marcus Camby, Eric Gordon, and future 1st round pick

dreaming.. haha
 
Shaq to Cavs? Why Not?

Shaq to Cavs? Why Not?

Talk between the Phoenix Suns and Cleveland Cavaliers of a trade that would have Shaquille O'Neal playing with LeBron James next season is "heating up again," according to a report in The Arizona Republic.

The trade rumor involving O'Neal, Ben Wallace and Sasha Pavlovic may sound practical for Phoenix and dynamic for Cleveland and has been confirmed to ESPN.com by a team executive, but another source close to the situation said "there's nothing going on" between the two teams.

O'Neal, 37, will make $20 million next season in the final year of his current deal, while Wallace will make $14 million in the last year of his contract and Pavlovic $4.9 million with only $1.5 million guaranteed.

The salary swap is close enough to make the trade work under the salary-cap guidelines, and the Suns would save $10 million in the transaction -- $4.5 million in salary and $5.5 million in luxury-tax payments.

They could save even more money if Wallace takes a buyout, a possibility that was raised when Wallace said he was considering retirement after the Cavs' Eastern Conference finals loss to the Orlando Magic.

If the Suns acquired him and bought out his contract for less than face value, they could lower their actual expenditures, although the full amount would still count toward their luxury-tax total.

Multiple sources close to the situation confirmed to ESPN.com in late February that a deal sending O'Neal to the Cavaliers had been discussed.

Wallace and Pavlovic were offered to the Suns for O'Neal as part of the Cavs' well-chronicled quests to add one more big man for the playoffs and show James they were serious about an NBA championship.

Information from ESPN.com's J.A. Adande and Marc Stein was used in this report.
 
Odom or Ariza?

Odom or Ariza?

ORLANDO, Fla. -- Such is the business of basketball that Trevor Ariza and Lamar Odom are collaborating while competing, trying their best to win a championship for Los Angeles even if it means one of them won't be around when they hand out the rings next season.

Both will be free agents this summer. And since the Lakers are looking at $74 million for eight players (assuming Kobe Bryant doesn't leave through his opt-out clause) on the 2009-10 payroll, it is not a given that both Ariza and Odom can return.

"Sometimes you have to make tough decisions," a Lakers official said.

But this organization does not always make cold-hearted decisions. After the Lakers won their last championship in 2002, owner Jerry Buss refuted notions that he would slash payroll to get below the luxury-tax threshold, jubilantly declaring, "We're going way over the tax!" in the hours after the Lakers beat the New Jersey Nets in the NBA Finals. General manager Mitch Kupchak also said the core players deserved a chance to defend their championship. As a result, 10 players made it back to the roster the next season. So there's room for sentiment. There's also a little extra cash in the coffers, thanks to 12 home playoff games (grossing about $4 million each for the Lakers) so far this postseason.

But both Odom and Ariza will seek long-term, lucrative deals that could extend beyond this group's championship window. For Ariza, who made $3 million this year, it's his first crack at a large contract. For Odom, coming off an $11.4 million base salary this season, it could be his last big contract.

Both have bolstered their value with strong playoff performances. Ariza made two critical steals in Lakers victories against the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference finals, then emerged from a shooting slump to make three 3-pointers and score 16 points in Game 4 of the NBA Finals. Odom has averaged 12 points and nine rebounds in the postseason and the Lakers have a 5-1 record in the six playoff games in which he recorded a double-double. There's always a premium placed on youth. Ariza turns 24 at the end of the month, while Odom will be 30 in November.

Ariza has not been a breakout star, but he's been a valuable contributor in his first go-round as a starter on a playoff team.

"I just go out and play the game," Ariza said. "You start messing up when you put too much pressure on yourself. Just come into the game clear and just try to play hard."

Odom is no longer viewed as a potential star, but he has won over enough general managers with his versatility that there will be interest in him. And nothing increases a player's value like a championship ring, as new teams believe the winners can share that experience like a wireless network.

That's the basketball element.

"Then you say, 'What's the economy going to say?'" an Eastern Conference executive said.

In a slumping financial world, with a shrinking NBA salary cap and luxury-tax threshold and a limited number of teams with salary cap space, one team executive described this as a "nuclear winter" for free agents.

The Phoenix Suns, for example, could use Ariza to fill the perimeter defender/spot-up shooter role that used to be filled by Raja Bell, but owner Robert Sarver doesn't want to add to an already-swollen payroll unless the Suns can move some of their hefty contracts first.

One rumor I heard from one team executive Friday had the Suns sending Shaquille O'Neal (who will make $20 million next season, the final year of his contract) to the Cleveland Cavaliers for Ben Wallace ($14 million) and Sasha Pavlovic ($4.9 million, but only $1.5 million guaranteed). The salary swap is close enough to make the trade work under the salary cap guidelines, but the Suns would save $10 million in the transaction, counting salary and tax savings. They could save even more money if Wallace takes a buyout, a possibility that was raised when Wallace said he was considering retirement after the Cavs' Eastern Conference finals loss to the Magic. If the Suns acquired him and bought out his contract for less than face value, they could lower their actual expenditures, although the full amount would still count toward their luxury tax total.

That may sound practical for Phoenix and dynamic for Cleveland, but a source close to the situation said, "there's nothing going on" between the two teams.

The reality is a team that is looking to spend money could use the midlevel exception of approximately $5.6 million in starting annual salary to make an offer to Ariza, although folks in the league expect the Lakers to retain him. Meanwhile, a Western Conference executive believes "if you're in position to use the full midlevel for a couple of years, you'll get [Odom]."

A team with more options available than the midlevel is the Detroit Pistons, who will have approximately $18 million in salary cap room. One free agent supposedly being targeted by the Pistons is Chicago Bulls guard Ben Gordon, a scenario that would make even more sense if the rumors about their interest in trading Richard Hamilton are true. The Pistons have won with an unconventional power forward in Rasheed Wallace, so they might be agreeable to trying Odom at the 4 spot.

There are multiple possible destinations, for Odom and for Ariza. Not necessarily the same thing as their goal: winning a championship for the Lakers.

J.A. Adande is an ESPN.com senior writer and the author of "The Best Los Angeles Sports Arguments." Click here to e-mail J.A.
 
Talk between the Phoenix Suns and Cleveland Cavaliers of a trade that would have Shaquille O'Neal playing with LeBron James next season is "heating up again," according to a report in The Arizona Republic.

The trade rumor involving O'Neal, Ben Wallace and Sasha Pavlovic may sound practical for Phoenix and dynamic for Cleveland and has been confirmed to ESPN.com by a team executive, but another source close to the situation said "there's nothing going on" between the two teams.

O'Neal, 37, will make $20 million next season in the final year of his current deal, while Wallace will make $14 million in the last year of his contract and Pavlovic $4.9 million with only $1.5 million guaranteed.

The salary swap is close enough to make the trade work under the salary-cap guidelines, and the Suns would save $10 million in the transaction -- $4.5 million in salary and $5.5 million in luxury-tax payments.

They could save even more money if Wallace takes a buyout, a possibility that was raised when Wallace said he was considering retirement after the Cavs' Eastern Conference finals loss to the Orlando Magic.

If the Suns acquired him and bought out his contract for less than face value, they could lower their actual expenditures, although the full amount would still count toward their luxury-tax total.

Multiple sources close to the situation confirmed to ESPN.com in late February that a deal sending O'Neal to the Cavaliers had been discussed.

Wallace and Pavlovic were offered to the Suns for O'Neal as part of the Cavs' well-chronicled quests to add one more big man for the playoffs and show James they were serious about an NBA championship.

Information from ESPN.com's J.A. Adande and Marc Stein was used in this report.

I know the Suns are doing this for financial issues but I still think it's a very bad trade if it happens.
 
Mavs could acquire Chris Paul and Anderson Varejão. Anyone heard about this?
 
Mavs could acquire Chris Paul and Anderson Varejão. Anyone heard about this?

Interesting, Dallas needs a youg PG and C.Paul is the best PG in the league right now... where did you get this info from? As for Varejao, i don't think the mavs really need him
 
Since Hedo might leave Orlando, i think the suns should try to sign him. Grant Hill is 37 years old.
 
Are there any rumor trades for the Boston Celtics?

Not really, but if I think they are interested in the No.2 draft pick who belongs to memphis and they also might want to move Ray Allen.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Since Hedo might leave Orlando, i think the suns should try to sign him. Grant Hill is 37 years old.
I haven't checked the boards for a while, but a few days ago I saw in Turkish media that Magic decided to keep Hedo at the expense of going over salary cap.

If some other club offers crazy money, the plan will not hold of course.
 
Mavs could acquire Chris Paul and Anderson Varejão. Anyone heard about this?

It was reported last season just before the trade deadline that the Mavs have reached out to the New Orleans Hornets about helping out the in the financial situation wherein Chris Paul and Tyson Chandler would be shipped to the Mavs in exchange for Jerry Stackhouse, Josh Howard, Erick Dampier and Gerald Green.

But the Hornets turned it down. They rather incur and pay luxury taxes than mortgage their franchise.
 
Interesting, Dallas needs a youg PG and C.Paul is the best PG in the league right now... where did you get this info from? As for Varejao, i don't think the mavs really need him
It was posted on a Portuguese forum, don't know how reliable the info could be.
 
The NY Knicks might be interested in getting T-Mac this summer for his last year of his curent contract with Houston.
 
Back
Top