Thursday, July 30, 2009

Five teams stand out among future playoff hopefuls

By John Schuhmann, NBA.com
Posted Jul 27 2009 12:16PM

It may seem like the same teams make the Playoffs every season, but there's actually a good amount of turnover from year to year. Over the last 10 seasons, there has been an average of 3.6 new teams in the Playoffs, and every team except the Bobcats has made the postseason at least once in the last six years.

Last season, the Bulls, Heat and Blazers went from lottery team to playoff squad. Chicago was bolstered by Rookie of the Year Derrick Rose, Miami had a healthy Dwyane Wade and Portland -- the worst team in the league three seasons ago -- returned to the Playoffs.

Who will make the leap this year? Here are the top five candidates, with last season's record in parentheses.

1. Phoenix Suns (46-36)

Yes, the Suns missed the Playoffs for the first time in five years this April. They also did little to improve their roster. But who else in the West can move up if the Rockets, as expected, take a dive without Yao Ming, Ron Artest and Tracy McGrady? The Suns are the only lottery team that seems close to supplanting Houston.

Only seven games separated the Suns and Rockets in the West standings and the West's six other non-playoff teams would have to make a 20-game jump (or more) in wins to get in.

If you're a glass-is-half-full type, you might believe that the departure of Shaquille O'Neal should allow Steve Nash, Amar'e Stoudemire and Jason Richardson more offensive freedom. It's no guarantee, but there is a chance that Phoenix can improve, or at least stay in the 45-win range. Don't forget, too, that Stoudemire missed 29 games last season.

So while it's tough to reward a year and a half of bad transactions with the top spot on this list, Phoenix belongs here.

2. Washington Wizards (19-63)

The Eastern Conference is going to be very competitive this season. The Wizards and Raptors seem primed to improve greatly, and none of the eight teams that made the Playoffs this spring look like an obvious candidate to fall off.

Improving by 20 wins isn't easy, but the Wizards look quite a bit like last year's Heat, who went from 15 wins to 43. Washington is getting back Gilbert Arenas and Brendan Haywood, while adding Randy Foye and Mike Miller.

But Washington has lost some frontcourt depth (gone are Etan Thomas, Darius Songaila and Oleksiy Pecherov. That means it will need Andray Blatche and JaVale McGee to improve -- McGee is much more likely to do so -- in order to truly be a contender. But the amount of talent they have now is worthy of the top four in the East.

In addition, coach Flip Saunders looks to be a good fit on the bench. He should get the most out of the Wizards offensively, and isn't as bad a defensive coach as people have made him out to be. Hindsight tells us that he did a much better job in Detroit than he ever got credit for.

3. Toronto Raptors (33-49)

Bryan Colangelo can probably recite the Collective Bargaining Agreement as well as he can recite the alphabet these days. He worked some CBA magic to acquire Hedo Turkoglu through a sign-and-trade deal that also netted the Raptors a solid wing in Antoine Wright. In addition, the deal allowed Toronto to add Jarrett Jack and Rasho Nesterovic, and perhaps bring back Carlos Delfino.

It's yet to be seen how well Turkoglu will fit in with Jose Calderon and Chris Bosh and if he peaked with the Magic over the last two seasons. Regardless, the Raptors' two-year run of underachievement should be over.

It will likely take more than 41 wins to reach the postseason in the East this season, but Toronto should get there. Even with the addition of Turkoglu, how far Toronto moves up the standings will depend on the continued improvement of former No. 1 pick Andrea Bargnani.

4. Oklahoma City Thunder (23-59)

If the Rockets collapse and Suns continue to fade, one of the six teams in the West that last season couldn't win 30 games would have to show great improvement. The Thunder are the most likely of that group to do it.

Kevin Durant is the NBA's next superstar, and with several other young talents around him, Oklahoma City has a bright future. General manager Sam Presti chose not to use his cap space this summer to make immediate improvements, but instead stood pat with his team. That may be the best plan for Oklahoma City's long-term future.

That plan may keep it from gaining more than 10 or 12 wins this season. While everyone is high on the Thunder (and rightfully so), asking them to bring the postseason to OKC in 2010 may be a little unrealistic.

5. Charlotte Bobcats (35-47)

After a 7-18 start last season, the Bobcats went 27-22 from the middle of December to the end of March, before fading in April. Coach Larry Brown likes to break 'em down and build 'em back up again and he has now had a year to acquire the kinds of players he likes. Which means it isn't inconceivable to think Charlotte could have a winning record this season.

The roster is still relatively young, and the Bobcats have improved their win total every season they've been in the league. A few more could net that elusive playoff berth, but they seem to a piece short of putting them higher on this list.

Springfield Armor Name Dee Brown Head Coach and Kevin Whitted Assistant Coach

SPRINGFIELD, MA JULY 29, 2009 – In a press conference at the MassMutual Center today, the Springfield Armor named former NBA player Dee Brown as Head Coach and Director of Basketball Operations and Kevin Whitted as Assistant Coach.

Brown, who enjoyed a distinguished 12-year NBA career that included eight seasons with the Boston Celtics, becomes the first head coach in Springfield Armor history. He also becomes the sixth former Celtics player to serve as a head coach in the NBA Development league, joining Dennis Johnson, Nate “Tiny” Archibald, Joe Wolf, Sam Vincent and Jay Humphries.

“To have Dee Brown as our first head coach is huge,” Springfield Armor Managing Partner Michael Savit said. “Not only is Dee thought of fondly throughout New England and beyond following his days with the Celtics, he also is a terrific mentor for young players and an all-around great ambassador for the sport. He is a perfect fit for our organization and for a city with such a rich basketball tradition.”

Brown played in 476 games as a member of the Celtics after they selected him 19th overall in the 1990 NBA Draft. Brown played in all 82 regular-season games during a spectacular rookie campaign that earned his selection to the NBA All-Rookie First Team in 1990-91. He averaged 8.7 points and 4.2 assists to help the Celtics win the NBA Atlantic Division with a 56-26 record that season. In 11 games during the 1991 playoffs, Brown averaged 12.2 points.

Amid his rookie season, Brown gained national acclaim after emerging the Slam Dunk champion during the 1991 NBA All-Star Weekend in Charlotte. The 6-1 Brown bested 6-10 Shawn Kemp in the finals with a unique “no-look” dunk, in which he draped his right arm over his eyes in mid-air and slammed the ball with his left.

“I am grateful for this opportunity to return to Massachusetts, where I have many wonderful memories from my playing career,” Brown said. “I look forward to working with the talented, young players that will wear the Armor uniform and to making this new NBA D-League team in Springfield a winner.”

Following a 608-game career in the NBA that included stints with the Toronto Raptors and Orlando Magic, Brown made the transition to coaching with the Orlando Miracle of the WNBA in 2002. He also coached the WNBA’s San Antonio Silver Stars in 2004 before launching an on-air career. The winner of ESPN’s “Dream Job 3,” Brown made regular appearances on that network and was the co-host on Sirius Satellite Radio’s daily NBA talk show “Full Court Press.”

In addition to playing, coaching and analyzing the game, Brown also has dedicated himself to the development of the stars of tomorrow. He is the owner and CEO of the EDGE Basketball, LLC, which was created to train players ranging from middle school to the professional ranks on the basketball fundamentals.

Brown, 40, resides in Windemere, FL with his wife Tammy, daughters Alexis (14), Alyssa (12) and Alanni (7) and son Anakin (4). Tammy (Jones) Brown is a native of Massachusetts who played women’s basketball for Springfield’s American International College.

Whitted has a connection to someone who will be immortalized in Springfield this September. A prolific shooter at E.A. Laney High School from 1987-90, Whitted holds the school’s all-time scoring record. The previous holder of that record was NBA legend Michael Jordan, who will be inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame on September 11.

Following a playing career that included 972 points in three years at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, a professional career in Europe and a training-camp stint with the Dallas Mavericks, Whitted joined the head coaching ranks with the Atlanta Vision of the American Basketball Association in 2005. After two seasons at the helm with the Wilmington Sea Dawgs, Whitted made his NBA D-League debut as an assistant with the Fort Wayne Mad Ants last season.

Whitted and his wife De-Neia reside in Kure Beach, NC with their daughters Peyton (14) and Paige (2). Peyton Whitted and Alexis Brown play on the same AAU basketball team.

Springfield Armor

With an ownership group led by the Massachusetts-based Savit, NBA Springfield was announced as the NBA Development League’s second team in New England during a press conference at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame on March 31. Beginning in November, the recently named Springfield Armor will play a 50-game schedule, including 24 home dates at the MassMutual Center.

Emphasizing affordable family entertainment and NBA-caliber basketball, the Springfield Armor has season tickets beginning at just $91! For more information, please call (413) 746-3263 or visit here.

NBA Development League

The NBA Development League, founded in 2001, is the NBA’s official minor league and featured 16 teams with direct affiliations to NBA teams during the 2008-09 season. This fall, two new NBA D-League teams will begin play in Portland, Maine and Springfield, Mass.-- the birthplace of basketball. Eighty-four former NBA Development League players were on 2008-09 NBA end-of-season rosters, amounting to almost 20 percent of NBA players, and the league continues to develop coaches, referees, and front office staff for the NBA and its teams. In fostering the league’s connection to the community, its teams, players and staff promote health and wellness, support local needs and interests, and assist in educational development through NBA D-League Cares programs. The NBA D-League also advances the game of basketball as the research and development arm of the NBA. Throughout the season fans can watch all NBA D-League games on NBA Futurecast, the free live Web-streaming initiative found at nba.com/futurecast.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Free agency creates opportunities for these players

By John Schuhmann, NBA.com
Posted Jul 13 2009 10:26AM

Player movement, via offseason trades and free agency, has changed the NBA landscape. It has made some contenders stronger, some pretenders weaker, and a bunch of guys a lot richer.

But the movement has affected more than just the players who have changed uniforms. It has also created opportunities for guys who have stayed put. For some teams, moves were made for the explicit purpose of getting an up-and-coming player some more shine. And for others, a trade or free agency departure just happened to create an opportunity for a guy who was in the shadows last season.

Either way, here are 10 players who haven't changed teams, but will have expanded roles this coming season thanks to the moves their teams have made. Of course, with 3 ½ months until the season starts, this list can and will change before November.

Joe Alexander, SF, Milwaukee

Richard Jefferson and Charlie Villanueva, the Bucks' two starting forwards who combined to score 2,871 points last season, are gone. And so far, Milwaukee hasn't replaced either one of them. So at this point, Alexander and Luc Richard Mbah a Moute, who combined to score 872 points last season, are slated to start (though Ersan Ilyasova and/or Amir Johnson could challenge for the power forward spot).

Alexander was taken with the eighth pick in the Draft last year, followed by a lot of guys that proceeded to out-produce him in their rookie season. With his athleticism, he skyrocketed up draft boards in the weeks leading up to the Draft, but if you were to re-select that class, Alexander certainly wouldn't be a lottery pick anymore. Come October, it will be time to see what kind of work Alexander put in over the summer.

Renaldo Balkman, SF, Denver

With Dahntay Jones heading to Indiana and the status of Linas Kleiza still up in the air, the Nuggets will need someone to back up the wings, provide energy off the bench and be called on to defend the other team's top scorer at times.

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Get the low-down on all the player movement this offseason with NBA.com's Free Agent Tracker. Sort by team, position and player. Read Full Article

Balkman played just 23 minutes in the postseason this spring, but he may be George Karl's only option when it comes to giving Carmelo Anthony and J.R. Smith some rest this season. Like Jones, his impact will be far greater on the defensive end of the floor.

Aaron Brooks and Luis Scola, PG & PF, Houston

Ron Artest is gone. Tracy McGrady and Yao Ming are hurt. So where are the Rockets' points going to come from? If you play fantasy basketball this season, you could do a lot worse than having Brooks or Scola on your team.

Brooks will have the ball in his hands, of course, and averaged 16.8 points in the Playoffs. Scola will be the guy doing work in the low post, and he put up three double-doubles in the four games Yao missed at the end of the conference semifinals. The Rockets will need to win with defense, but both of these third-year guys will certainly put up bigger numbers than they have before.

Kwame Brown, C, Detroit

The Pistons made the first moves of free agency by agreeing to deals with Ben Gordon and Charlie Villanueva right away, but they've yet to replace Rasheed Wallace, who is off to Boston.

The strength of the Pistons for the last several years has been their balance and their ability to put five guys on the floor that can all shoot the ball from the perimeter. Without Wallace manning the five, that ability is gone, but the additions of Gordon and Villanueva make the Pistons more potent at the other four positions.

Brown obviously hasn't lived up to his No. 1 pick status, but he's turned into a good low-post defender and solid role player. He won't be asked to score much, but that role will be bigger this season.

J.J. Hickson and Darnell Jackson, PF, Cleveland

The Cavs added Shaq, but they're still down a big man unless they re-sign Joe Smith (and even if they do, he'll be 34 years old later this month). They used a four-big rotation last season, and Anderson Varejao now needs a new back-up. The more athletic Hickson is the leading candidate, but Jackson saw some time in the rotation last season as well.

Mike Brown will need to count on one or both of these second-year bigs, especially considering the ages of his two centers. Their ability to defend is what will keep them on the floor and determine whether the Cavs need to shop for another big at some point before the February trading deadline.

Brook Lopez, C, New Jersey

As a second-year player who showed great progress as a rookie, Lopez would be seeing more touches anyway. But the Vince Carter trade undoubtedly makes him the second option after Devin Harris.

Coach Lawrence Frank will need to integrate Lopez's post-up game into the dribble-drive offense that the Nets ran last year to give Harris a clear path to the basket. And Lopez will need to learn how to deal with double-teams, as well as when and where to pass out of the post. Carter's departure will also provide an opportunity for Chris Douglas-Roberts, while Courtney Lee will be asked to carry a bigger load than he did in Orlando.

Robin Lopez, C, Phoenix

Shaq is gone, and unless Ben Wallace discovers the Fountain of Youth this summer, the lesser Lopez is the best option to start at center as the Suns' roster stands. Alvin Gentry could move Amar'e Stoudemire back to the five, but there's not exactly a starting-quality four on the roster right now either. No matter what, Lopez should see much more burn in his second season and could help the Suns improve their atrocious defense.

Lou Williams, PG, Philadelphia

If the Sixers don't bring back Andre Miller (and the two sides are reported to be far apart in negotiations on a deal), they will start either Williams or rookie Jrue Holiday at the point. Neither is a prototypical point guard, but Williams obviously has the experience advantage.

The Sixers are at their best when they're running, and Williams has speed, but he doesn't have the vision and unselfishness that you need in a guy running the break. It will also be interesting to see how well he distributes the ball in the half court, with Elton Brand, Andre Iguodala and Thaddeus Young all deserving plenty of touches. Coming off the bench, Williams had much more freedom to look for his own shot first.

Bench may be biggest hurdle in Iverson-to-Clips deal

By David Aldridge, TNT Analyst
Posted Jul 14 2009 6:58AM

LAS VEGAS -- Yes, the Los Angeles Clippers are having talks with Allen Iverson. But a signing does not appear imminent, because Iverson is still chafing at the idea of coming off the bench.

Sources confirmed the Los Angeles Times' report that the team has offered Iverson a one-year deal at the mid-level exception of $5.8 million for next season. But, those sources said, Iverson remains reluctant to take a reserve role, which would be behind incumbent Baron Davis at the point or Eric Gordon at the two, just as he chafed in Detroit this past season playing behind Rip Hamilton. Even though Iverson would like to play in a big city, or, at the least, for a contending team, he's given no indication yet that he'd be any more willing to be a bench player in Los Angeles than he would be elsewhere.

One source with knowledge of the team's intentions said that Iverson was not the only player the Clippers were approaching. They also spoke with representatives for Milwaukee guard Ramon Sessions, as well as Indiana's Jarrett Jack, before Jack signed an offer sheet with the Toronto Raptors, in their pursuit of a backup point. Another source said that Coach Mike Dunleavy needed some assurances from Iverson's camp that he could accept a reserve role before getting completely behind the pursuit of Iverson.

In the interim, Iverson is still being pursued by Miami, Memphis and Charlotte.

However, the Clippers do remain a strong possibility for Iverson. Los Angeles could provide all kinds of ancillary income opportunities for Iverson. And the Clippers could have significant room under the cap after this season, which would give Iverson a chance to recoup some income if he were to accept the one-year offer at the mid-level.

Pistons eyeing 'Big Baby?'

Meanwhile, the Pistons, no longer among the Eastern Conference's power teams, are trying to build a new team on the fly, and will try to add anther piece in the next week at the expense of one of their old rivals, the Boston Celtics. A Monday trade of guards Arron Afflalo and Walter Sharpe to the Denver Nuggets was done to help make a run at Celtics restricted free agent forward Glen "Big Baby" Davis, according to several sources.

But the Pistons will have trouble creating enough cap room in order to make a serious run at Davis, who starred for the Celtics in Kevin Garnett's absence in the playoffs. After Monday's trade, which cleared an additional $1.8 million in cap room, Detroit only has eight players under contract, not including its three drafted players -- Austin Daye, DeJuan Summers and Jonas Jurebko. (The Pistons will keep all three of their rookies.) The Pistons' current outlay next season for its eight veterans, including the newly signed Ben Gordon and Charlie Villanueva, along with other monies like the $1.9 million that remains on its cap after waiving veteran center Fabricio Oberto and the first-round money due to Daye, is about $53.8 million. With the cap set for next year at $57.7 million, that only leaves a little less than $4 million if Detroit wanted to sign Davis to an offer sheet. But the Celtics would likely match such an offer.

If the Pistons decide not to offer a sheet to Davis, they will likely sign one or two veteran big men for the league minimum.

Detroit's latest move was only one on another busy offseason day.

Magic paying big to stay in East race

The Orlando Magic went all in on massive luxury tax payments next season when it decided on Monday to match the five-year, $34 million offer sheet the Dallas Mavericks made to free agent center Marcin Gortat. It was a decision that shocked many at the NBA Summer League -- not because Orlando, clearly a legitimate championship contender, decided to protect an asset, but because of that asset's cost.

Orlando is already way over the cap, and over the projected luxury tax of $69.9 million next season. So when you factor in the dollar-for-dollar tax the Magic will have to pay on Gortat's first-year salary of $5.854 million, the total comes to $11.7 million for a backup center who averaged 3.8 points and 4.5 rebounds last season.

Including its new contract for forward Brandon Bass, whom Orlando signed to a four-year, $18 million deal Friday, the Magic's payroll at the moment is a staggering $79 million, meaning the Magic will pay almost $10 million in tax and lose millions more in possible revenues they would have received if they stayed under the tax threshhold.

The Magic is moving into a new arena for the 2010-11 season, which will produce a large spike in revenues, but yikes, that's still a lot of money to spend.

"Our ownership has given us all the resources we need to do our job," Orlando GM Otis Smith said by telephone Monday. "They basically said, OK, we're in the tax, but we're committed to winning. And that's all we've talked about from day one -- what do we need to win a championship?"

Orlando is but one of several contending teams that's loaded up for a title run next season. Cleveland (traded for Shaquille O'Neal, re-signed Anderson Varejao, signed free agent guard Anthony Parker), Boston (signed Rasheed Wallace), the Lakers (signed Ron Artest) and San Antonio (traded for Richard Jefferson, signed Antonio McDyess) have all put in claims.

But the arms race is making many around the league a bit queasy, especially considering the cleavage between the haves and the have nots.

"It's not a good business model, and it's obviously something we're going to have to look at over the next couple of years, to figure this thing out," said Spurs chairman Peter Holt, in town for Tuesday's Board of Governors meeting.

"And then you overlay it with what the economy's doing, if anybody has a crystal ball, please let me know, but if you were a betting man, you'd figure it was going to get worse before it gets better," Holt said. "So, no, we're going to see what happens. And then, we're going into labor negotiations."

Smith had repeatedly said that he would not use the mid-level exception to re-sign Gortat and that he did not believe in spending that kind of money for a backup for Dwight Howard, the role which Gortat will now return to next season in Orlando.

"I don't believe everything I read," Smith said Monday, with a chuckle.

While Smith said he wasn't always certain he would match the offer sheet, he ultimately decided that it was more prudent to protect an asset in Gortat than let it get away for nothing. And while some believe there's no way Orlando is planning to keep the 25-year-old Gortat for the long term, it's important to remember two things: one, under the rules, the Magic can't trade Gortat until Dec. 15, and two, Gortat will become, for trade purposes, a base-year compensation player under his new contract, meaning he would only count for half of his first-year salary ($2.9 million, half of $5.8 million) if he were to be included in a deal.

"He's a young center in a league that doesn't have a lot of centers," Smith said. "That's the reason he got the offer to begin with. The second thing is, why can't we protect our assets? He's been with us for five years. We have been developing him. He was ours to lose. And we didn't want to lose him."

If Orlando does want to shave payroll, the likeliest candidate would be guard J.J. Redick, with an expiring contract that pays $2.8 million next season. Moving him to a team under the cap or with a trade exception it could use to absorb Redick's contract for a draft pick or cash would save Orlando $5.6 million in salary and tax payments.

The Mavericks wanted to make Gortat their starting center, hoping he would allow them to play a more up-tempo style next season than they've been able to play in recent seasons using Erick Dampier as their starter. But the Mavericks still feel they'll be able to run with newly acquired Shawn Marion playing alongside Jason Kidd, Jason Terry and Dirk Nowitzki.

Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, in an interview on NBA TV, said that Dallas has been in contact with the agent for Lakers free agent forward Lamar Odom, whose negotiations with Los Angeles are going slowly. But Odom is not likely to sign anywhere for the mid-level that the Mavericks now, again, have at their disposal; he's accepted that he'll face a pay cut from last year's $14 million, but doesn't want to go down that much.

Orlando's ownership had indicated it would be willing to pay luxury tax next season in order to keep the Magic team that won the east and lost 4-1 to the Lakers intact. Those plans were accelerated when the Magic acquired Vince Carter and his remaining three years (at $51 million), along with forward Ryan Anderson, from New Jersey on draft day for Courtney Lee, Rafer Alston and Tony Battie.

The plan detoured a bit when Hedo Turkoglu agreed to a five-year, $53 million deal with Toronto that became part of a four-team, sign-and-trade deal with the Magic. But Orlando beat out New Orleans, Cleveland and Dallas to get Bass, and with Gortat, the Magic's frontcourt holes have all been plugged. Now, Orlando can play big, with Bass at power forward and 6-10 Rashard Lewis back at his normal small forward spot. They could play Gortat and Dwight Howard together. They could play the way they did last season, with the sharpshooting Anderson at the three and Lewis at the four. And they again have size and fouls to deal with Cleveland's Shaquille O'Neal and Anderson Varejao, and Boston's Kevin Garnett, Rasheed Wallace and Kendrick Perkins.

The Detroit-Denver deal had been in the works for a week or so, once the Indiana Pacers signed away Denver's starting two guard from last season, Dahntay Jones, to a four-year, $11 million contract. Denver believes the 24-year-old Afflalo can step into the starting spot next to Chauncey Billups (whom, sources indicate, was a big Afflalo advocate, having played with him in 2007 in Detroit) and handle the defensive assignments Jones did while being a better perimeter shooter

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Pistons Have New Trainer

Narayana Mahendra Prastya - detiksport

Detroit - Around a week after sack coach, Detroit Pistons are getting a new coach. Next season, Pistons will be handled by John Kuester.

Kuester appointment official announcement made by the team at The Palace of Auburn Hills on Thursday (9/7/2009) tonight WIB. Men aged 54 years that will replace the position that outed Michael Curry at the beginning of this month.

Pistons are not the place for foreign Kuester, because he had been an assistant coach in the 2003/04 season. In the same season, the title of champion Pistons to reach NBA. In the last 13 years, Kuester became assistant coach at six different clubs, that is, the Boston Celtics, Philadelphia 76ers, Pistons, New Jersey Nets, Orlando Magic, Cleveland Cavaliers and the last.

"We're pleased to announce John Kuester as Detroit Pistons head coach. He has a lot of problems associated with the NBA experience as an assistant coach, including a team assistant coach when a champion in 2004," said club president Joe Dumars as quoted from the NBA. com.

Next season, task that awaits Kuester as a head coach. For most of the players season ago, including Rasheed Wallace has hengkang.

"I do not have a magic formula. Philosophy is owned by this team will make everything run smoothly. Working hard will be the key to success," said Kuester as publish from Reuters.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Grizzlies' owner, Iverson's agent in contract talks

By David Aldridge, TNT Analyst
Posted Jul 9 2009 6:21AM

Free agent Allen Iverson is in talks with the Memphis Grizzlies about a new contract, but owner Michael Heisley said Wednesday that talks between the team and the 10-time All-Star are only in the preliminary stages.

On the same day that he agreed to let his team take part in the three-team deal that sent forward Shawn Marion to the Mavericks in a sign-and-trade deal, with his Grizzlies taking the contract of guard Jerry Stackhouse, Heisley acknowledged in a telephone interview that the Grizzlies had had discussions with Iverson's agent, Leon Rose, and he said he would like to meet with Iverson in the coming days to assess Iverson's desire to come to Memphis.

"It's something we've talked to his agent about," Heisley said. "We have not come to anything close to an understanding. We're just exploring."

The 34-year-old Iverson is looking for a new home after last year's trade from Denver to Detroit ended disastrously, with Iverson chafing at coming off the bench for then-coach Michael Curry and saying he'd rather retire than be a reserve. Citing a back injury, Iverson and the Pistons agreed that he would be left off the team's postseason roster, and the team moved quickly to use the $20 million in cap room created by not giving Iverson an extension, agreeing to deals with Bulls guard Ben Gordon and Bucks forward Charlie Villanueva.

In this economic climate, no team is going to give Iverson anything close to the money he used to make as one of the NBA's true superstars in Philadelphia. And it may even be difficult for Iverson to find a team willing to give him the full mid-level exception for next season, starting at $5.854 million. But Iverson has been linked by various reports to both the Grizzlies and Miami Heat, and the Memphis Commercial Appeal reported Wednesday that Heisley was giving serious consideration to giving Iverson a one-year, $5 million deal.

Heisley didn't say that the Grizzlies wouldn't ultimately sign Iverson only that such a decision has yet to be made.

"More or less, we're going to have discussions initially with his agent," Heisley said. "But it's very, very early. I don't want people to think there's more to it than that. It's very, very early and it's nothing more than exploratory."

Heisley also said that the Grizzlies would accept Stackhouse's $7 million contract from Dallas in order to create the trade exception necessary for the Mavericks to be able to take Marion's new five-year, $40 million deal from Toronto. Otherwise, the over-the-cap Mavericks wouldn't have been able to offer Marion anything substantial, because they've already committed to using their mid-level exception to sign Orlando restricted free agent center Marcin Gortat to an offer sheet.

Only $2 million of Stackhouse's deal is guaranteed, however. The Grizzlies are expected to get cash from Toronto, and possibly a low-salaried player like backup center Kris Humprhies. Toronto will get cash from Dallas to make the deal more even economically. Dallas and Toronto turned to Memphis after other teams with cap room that could have facilitated a deal, such as Oklahoma City, took a pass. The Thunder would only agree to such deals, a source said, if they got up-and-coming players on their rookie contracts to go with their young core of Kevin Durant, Jeff Green, Russell Westbrook and first-round pick James Harden.

Otherwise, the Thunder plans to hold onto its cap room until at least next February's trade deadline, or could simply turn it over and use it to start signing its young stars to contract extensions as they become eligible."We've agreed, from our point of view, what we would do with Dallas," Heisley said.

Young Thunder show growth in Summer League

By Greg Auman, for NBA.com
Posted Jul 9 2009 6:29AM MAITLAND, Fla. -- This time last summer, they didn't have a home, didn't have a mascot, didn't even know their team colors.

This past season wasn't much better for the newly transplanted Oklahoma City Thunder, who changed coaches before Thanksgiving and won just three of their first 32 games.

But led by second-year stars Kevin Durant and Jeff Green, they went 20-30 the rest of the way and no franchise is putting more emphasis on the NBA Summer League than the Thunder, both in talent and a commitment to play in both Orlando and Las Vegas.

In a summer in which three NBA teams -- Miami, Atlanta and Charlotte -- aren't fielding Summer League squads, and two others (Philadelphia and New Jersey) are sharing a team, Oklahoma City is the only franchise playing in both leagues, hoping a combined three weeks of play will help forge a bond among a young nucleus.

"We take development very serious," said head coach Scott Brooks after watching a convincing 94-82 win Wednesday against the Celtics. "We've been getting after it all summer. ... This is important to all our guys to continue to establish good habits."

Oklahoma City's summer roster includes six first-round draft picks, including a pair of guards selected in the top five picks: second-year standout Russell Westbrook and rookie James Harden of Arizona State.

"The reason we're playing in both summer leagues is to take our team chemistry forward, so we can grow as a team," said Harden, who has averaged 15 points in three games. "Russell's getting to know his players. He has a pretty good sense of how Kevin and Jeff play, but he's getting to know the rookies and other guys."

There's another '09 first-rounder in center B.J. Mullens, and last year's first-rounder, center Serge Ibaka, who played last season in Spain. Another '08 first-rounder, power forward D.J. White, missed most of his rookie year recovering from jaw surgery, and there's three second-rounders who could sneak onto the regular-season roster.

"I think this is going to help a lot," said White, who had 16 points in Wednesday's victory and has averaged a team-best 5.7 rebounds this week. "Out of 12 guys, I think 10 of us are under contract with the team, and we're competing against some of the best guys."

Want a storyline? There's no better comeback story in Orlando this week than former lottery pick Shaun Livingston. He joined the Thunder in April after missing more than two years recovering from a brutal knee injury that saw him tear three ligaments and the lateral meniscus in his left knee.

Westbrook, 20, has the best NBA stats of anybody in Orlando, having averaged 15.3 points per game as a rookie out of UCLA last season. He sees the progress he's made since last year's summer games, and is impressed with what he's seen in Harden, the third pick in last month's draft.

"James is real smooth -- he does a lot of things," Westbrook said. "He's going to be good for us. He can shoot the ball real well. He also knows it's a learning process for him as well, so he can continue to learn and get better."

The players who endured last season's struggles can sense a difference from a year ago, a momentum they hope will carry over from Las Vegas next week to the upcoming season.

"This is kind of like the start of our season," Livingston said. "We're a young team, and this is crucial to forming our chemistry and really building something. They're really putting us in because they want us to start early -- we're in two summer leagues for a reason."

Game Action Notes

PACERS 95, JAZZ 79:
First-rounder Tyler Hansbrough of North Carolina went 14-of-14 on free throws and had a game-high 24 points, combining with center Roy Hibbert to dominate the Utah frontcourt and keep Indiana as the league's only unbeaten team at 3-0. Hibbert had 21 points and eight rebounds, and it was a strong showing for Indiana second-rounder A.J. Price, the point guard from UConn, who had 14 points on 6-of-9 shooting, going 24 minutes without a turnover. "A.J. Price I think could be the steal of the draft," Pacers coach Jim O'Brien said. Utah first-rounder Eric Maynor struggled from the field for the second day in a row, hitting 2 of 9 shots, and the Jazz were led by center James Augustine, who had 12 points in 18 minutes off the bench. Forward Josh Duncan had 10 points, his third straight double-digit game off the Jazz bench.

MAGIC 108, NETS/76ERS 86:
The Magic set a scoring record in eight years of summer-league games in Orlando, and hit 14 3-pointers on 25 attempts. Forward Ryan Anderson continued his strong play with 21 points, and guard Maurice Ager matched his 21 points, hitting 8 of 9 free throws. Brian Chase hit five 3-pointers for Orlando, while forward Kasib Powell hit four. The Nets/Sixers got a surprising 18 points off the bench from Temple grad Dionte Christmas, with Nets first-rounder Terrence Williams scoring 16 with four assists. Nets guard Chris Douglas-Roberts, among the league's top scorers coming in, took only one shot in 28 minutes and finished with five points.