Video: Catching up with Orlando Magic GM Otis Smith

With the lockout in place, the Orlando Magic — including Otis Smith — spent Friday beautifying a local elementary school (Gary Bassing, Orlando Magic)

You could understand if the Orlando Magic’s Otis Smith and his general-manager counterparts throughout the NBA are feeling a bit frustrated these days.

After all, teams normally would be gearing up for training camp this time of year. But now everything’s in limbo due to the league’s unsettled labor situation. League officials announced Friday that training camps have been postponed indefinitely and that the first week of preseason exhibitions have been canceled.

Some members of the local television media and I caught up with Smith on Friday as about 180 Magic employees worked to beautify Palmetto Elementary School. I understand if you’d prefer to hear Smith discuss the specific issues he faces as he assembles a roster. But David Stern has instituted a gag order that prevents any league employee or team employee from discussing specific players or specific issues involved with the lockout.

So, for now, we’ll have to settle for this:


On the school beautification project:
“We don’t get an opportunity to do these things at this time, because normally we’re playing basketball. But you get some of our guys out here and they actually get into it. So it works for us.”

It is bittersweet that you’re out here because of the lockout?
“Well, we’d rather be playing basketball, but the fact of the matter [is] we’re not. So since we’re not, we’re doing something where I think we could give back a little bit more to the community [at a time] when we’d really wouldn’t have the time — at least the basketball staff.

Reaction to the league’s announcement Friday:
“It is what it is. They’re working to get a deal done. Until we get a deal done, we can’t move forward. That’s the only thing I really have to say. They’re in the process of doing that.”

Follow Josh Robbins on Twitter at @JoshuaBRobbins and e-mail him at jrobbins@orlandosentinel.com. Subscribe to our Orlando Magic newsletter at OrlandoSentinel.com/joinus.

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Rashard Lewis, Otis Smith at center of CBA negotiations

Rashard Lewis’ 8 million dollar contract limited the Magic’s future flexibility, but it wasn’t his fault. (Gary W. Green/Orlando Sentinel)

During Rashard Lewis’ final days in Orlando — amidst his worst season as a starter — the comments section of this blog was nastier than a Ruggero Deodato horror movie. Fans were angry at Lewis for his admittedly poor play, and that anger was amplified because Lewis was one of the highest paid players in the NBA.

Indeed, Lewis’ 6-year, 8 million dollar contract signed in 2007 has crippled the Magic’s future. He’ll earn about million next season despite not being an all-star since 2009 and appearing in just 57 uninspiring games last season because of a knee injury. Next year, Lewis will earn more money than Dirk Nowitzki, LeBron James and every NBA player not named Kobe Bryant.

And so, before the Magic traded Lewis for Gilbert Arenas on Dec. 18, 2010 — in a swap of the NBA’s two worst contracts — fans were bitter.

Lewis could do no right. Even after good games and Magic victories — or even, say, had he cured Alzheimer’s — fans would get on Lewis for not living up to his contract.

But the truth of the matter is it wasn’t Lewis’ fault. Lewis didn’t offer himself a contract. Lewis didn’t force the Magic to extend the Godfather offer, which he accepted before leaving Central Florida.

Says Lewis: “You sign me to a deal, you think I’m going to say, ‘No, I deserve [million] instead of [million]?’ I’m like, ‘Hell, yeah.’ I’m not going to turn it down. You can’t blame the players. If anything, we don’t negotiate the deal. We’ve got agents that negotiate the deals with the team. Y’all need to go talk to the teams and the agents.”

Thus, Lewis finds himself at the center of the ongoing labor negotiations between the players and owners.

Lewis is a symbol of what’s wrong with the NBA’s business model, according to owners: Players earn guaranteed money long after their play deserves it. Because the NBA only doles out guaranteed deals, some players continue to earn big money beyond their primes.

But Lewis’ quote classifies the players’ side: The owners are the ones offering these mammoth contracts to begin with. No one made Otis Smith give Lewis max money. No one forced the Hawks to give a ridiculous deal to Joe Johnson last summer. Gilbert Arenas didn’t put a gun to the Wizards’ head — OK, maybe that’s a bad choice of words — to sign him to a monster extension in 2008.

This isn’t the entire reason we have a lockout, but it sure is part of it. The right answer, as with anything, is probably somewhere in the middle. Owners need protection from themselves offering these ill-advised contracts, and they want a way to get out of these deals when they make a mistake. But you can’t blame the players — the ones putting butts in the seats — for expecting to be paid what they agreed on.

The players’ union and the NBA are meeting today for another day of negotiations. The two sides are expected to make proposals, and how close they are will prove critical in starting the regular season on time.

At the center of those negotiations will be Smith, Lewis and the 8 million deal they agreed to four years ago.

Follow @ZachMcCann

zmccann@orlandosentinel.com

Orlando Magic BasketBlog – Orlando Sentinel

Otis Smith wants Gilbert Arenas to stay off the basketball court

Gilbert Arenas’ priority this summer is his body, not his game. (Gary W. Green/Orlando Sentinel)

Gilbert Arenas needs to take some time away from basketball this summer. That’s what Orlando Magic GM Otis Smith says.

Smith, in an interview with Brian Fritz and Dante Marchitelli on the Open Mike radio show, said it’s important for Arenas to stop playing basketball and focus on improving his body.

Smith wants Arenas, who weighs about 225 pounds, to lose 10 to 15 pounds this summer. And he wants Arenas to continue strengthening his injured knee. Smith called both of those goals a “non-issue” and something he has no worries about.

What Smith does worry about, however, is Arenas playing basketball too much.

“The thing I have to fight with him on a daily basis is the the guys who are basketball players, that love to play basketball, like to play basketball all the time, year-round. And he’s one of those guys,” Smith said. “He’s a gym rat. That’s counter-productive for him. He actually has to play little to no basketball up until September and then he can pick up a ball and start shooting. Guys who are that skilled get those things back.”

When Arenas was struggling this season, he often spoke of his dominance in pick-up basketball over the summer. Arenas played with Tracy McGrady and several other NBA players last offseason.

This offseason, however, it appears Arenas’ team doesn’t want him playing any ball.

To listen to Smith’s complete interview, click here.

Follow @ZachMcCann

zmccann@orlandosentinel.com

Orlando Magic BasketBlog – Orlando Sentinel

Orlando Magic GM Otis Smith is no fan of Twitter

Perhaps no NBA roster uses Twitter more than the Orlando Magic, and that fact dismays Otis Smith, the team’s president of basketball operations and its general manager.

Indeed, Gilbert Arenas, who was fined recently by the NBA for the content in at least one tweet, isn’t the only Orlando player who likes the microblogging service.

At least 10 of the 13 players who finished the 2010-11 season on the Magic roster have Twitter accounts.

Player Twitter handle
Malik Allen
Ryan Anderson @ryananderson33
Gilbert Arenas @agentzeroshow
Brandon Bass
Earl Clark @3eaZy
Chris Duhon @CDuhonStandTall
Dwight Howard @DwightHoward
Jameer Nelson @jameernelson
Daniel Orton @danielorton21
J.J. Redick @JJRedick47
Jason Richardson @jrich23
Quentin Richardson @QRich
Hedo Turkoglu

Smith, who played in the NBA from 1986 to 1992 and considers himself “old school” in many respects, won’t be joining Twitter anytime soon.

Asked by the Orlando Sentinel for his reaction to Arenas’ controversial Twitter account, Smith made his thoughts clear.

“I have thoughts about everyone’s Twitter account, actually,” he said.

“It’s got to be the dumbest thing a professional athlete has ever done. But they do it, and I’ve got no problem with that. That’s the world that we live in now: the mass media in which everyone is a reporter and everyone has an opinion on stuff and they continue to put it out there. God bless ’em all. Why a guy in the public eye would choose to do that kind of stuff is beyond me.”

Follow Josh Robbins on Twitter at @JoshuaBRobbins and e-mail him at jrobbins@orlandosentinel.com. Subscribe to our Orlando Magic newsletter at OrlandoSentinel.com/joinus.

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Schmitz: Orlando Magic Won’t Fire Stan Van Gundy or Otis Smith, Says CEO Bob Vander Weide

Photo

No matter how or when their season ends, the Orlando Magic will not fire President of Basketball Operations Otis Smith or head coach Stan Van Gundy, reports Brian Schmitz of the Orlando Sentinel. Bob Vander Weide, the club’s CEO, spoke with Schmitz on the record about his team’s foremost leaders:

[Vander Weide] and owner Rich DeVos’ family feel comfortable and confident in Van Gundy and Smith.

“We’re happy with Otis and Stan,” Vander Weide said. “Neither are in jeopardy.”

We’ve seen executives go back on their word in professional sports before, especially after issuing the so-called “vote of confidence,” so we still don’t know for sure that Smith and Van Gundy will return.

After the fold, a review of how the Magic got to the point where the media and fans wondered about the futures of Smith and Van Gundy.

This season has been Orlando’s most disappointing since Van Gundy took over in 2007/08, guiding a team that had been swept out of the first round of the playoffs the previous season to 52 wins, a division championshiop, and a playoff series victory; Smith’s acquisition of Rashard Lewis also played a huge role in thi improvement.

The Magic advanced to the NBA Finals the following season, despite All-Star point guard Jameer Nelson missing its final three months due to a shoulder injury. Smith acquired Rafer Alston as a replacement moments before the trading deadline, and Van Gundy integrated the veteran point guard, whom he coached previously in Miami, in short order.

After sweeping through the first two rounds of the 2009/10 playoffs, the Magic wilted against the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference Finals. However, expectations for the coming season remained the same: it’s championship or bust.

Smith made two bold trades on December 18th, acquiring Jason Richardson, Hedo Turkoglu, Earl Clark, and Gilbert Arenas after deciding his current team, which had lost five games out of its last six following a 15-4 start, could not contend for a championship. The new team went on a nine-game winning streak shortly thereafter, improving to 25-12, but never quite showed it was a marked improvement over the previous group.

Now, the team still faces first-round playoff elimination against the Atlanta Hawks despite having the league’s second-highest payroll.

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Otis Smith says Stan Van Gundy, Gilbert Arenas must get along (video)

Otis Smith said the relationship between Gilbert Arenas and Stan Van Gundy must improve. (Gary W. Green/Orlando Sentinel)

Gilbert Arenas, who has displayed frustration about his sporadic playing time over the last couple months, needs to improve his relationship with Orlando Magic coach Stan Van Gundy, Otis Smith said Friday afternoon.

“There’s some growth there that needs to happen as it relates to him,” Smith said of Arenas (complete video below). “Their relationship is going to have to get a little bit better. The relationships in the locker room with one another is going to have to continue to get better.”

Arenas has barely spoken to the media over the past couple months, but he did express frustration about his playing time after being benched for Game 3 against the Hawks.

“I’m sitting there thinking, this is what I’m built for,” Arenas told OrlandoMagic.com. “I’ve averaged 23 (22.3 points), five (assists) and four (rebounds) in the playoffs. I’m a veteran playoff player and I’ve put up big numbers in the playoffs before. But for my number to not get called it hurts.

“It’s the same with what’s been going on most of the season. My type of game isn’t Stan’s type of game.”

Arenas, who averaged a little more than 16 minutes in five playoff games, hopes that playing time increases, but that all depends on how the Magic roster shapes up and how hard Arenas works in the offseason.

The Magic’s chemistry issues played a big role in their demise, Smith said. And the tension between Arenas and Van Gundy certainly didn’t help that.

“There’s some work that needs to be done from a chemistry standpoint,” Smith said. “But it takes time and we didn’t have time during the course of the season.”

Smith, who’s often criticized for the Arenas trade because he’s shared a close relationship with Arenas for almost a decade, defended the trade and said there’s too much made of how much that relationship affects his decision making.

“You guys make a bigger deal out of Gil and our relationship because it’s been ten years,” Smith said. “It’s been seven years with Dwight and Jameer and I have the same relationship. Nothing really changes. I am there every day, and I will say the things that no one else will say to all of them, Gil included. Do I talk to him? Yeah, I talk to him almost every day about what’s going on with him both on and off the court.”

Arenas declined to speak to reporters Friday.

Zach McCann can be reached at zmccann@orlandosentinel.com. Follow him on Twitter at @ZachMcCann.

Orlando Magic BasketBlog – Orlando Sentinel

Schmitz: Orlando Magic Won’t Fire Stan Van Gundy or Otis Smith, Says CEO Bob Vander Weide

Photo

No matter how or when their season ends, the Orlando Magic will not fire President of Basketball Operations Otis Smith or head coach Stan Van Gundy, reports Brian Schmitz of the Orlando Sentinel. Bob Vander Weide, the club’s CEO, spoke with Schmitz on the record about his team’s foremost leaders:

[Vander Weide] and owner Rich DeVos’ family feel comfortable and confident in Van Gundy and Smith.

“We’re happy with Otis and Stan,” Vander Weide said. “Neither are in jeopardy.”

We’ve seen executives go back on their word in professional sports before, especially after issuing the so-called “vote of confidence,” so we still don’t know for sure that Smith and Van Gundy will return.

After the fold, a review of how the Magic got to the point where the media and fans wondered about the futures of Smith and Van Gundy.

This season has been Orlando’s most disappointing since Van Gundy took over in 2007/08, guiding a team that had been swept out of the first round of the playoffs the previous season to 52 wins, a division championshiop, and a playoff series victory; Smith’s acquisition of Rashard Lewis also played a huge role in thi improvement.

The Magic advanced to the NBA Finals the following season, despite All-Star point guard Jameer Nelson missing its final three months due to a shoulder injury. Smith acquired Rafer Alston as a replacement moments before the trading deadline, and Van Gundy integrated the veteran point guard, whom he coached previously in Miami, in short order.

After sweeping through the first two rounds of the 2009/10 playoffs, the Magic wilted against the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference Finals. However, expectations for the coming season remained the same: it’s championship or bust.

Smith made two bold trades on December 18th, acquiring Jason Richardson, Hedo Turkoglu, Earl Clark, and Gilbert Arenas after deciding his current team, which had lost five games out of its last six following a 15-4 start, could not contend for a championship. The new team went on a nine-game winning streak shortly thereafter, improving to 25-12, but never quite showed it was a marked improvement over the previous group.

Now, the team still faces first-round playoff elimination against the Atlanta Hawks despite having the league’s second-highest payroll.

Orlando Pinstriped Post

Give general manager Otis Smith credit for recognizing that Rashard Lewis and Vince Carter weren’t…

Give general manager Otis Smith credit for recognizing that Rashard Lewis and Vince Carter weren’t enough support for even an improved Dwight Howard to carry the Magic to the Finals. That said, Smith went too far parting with Marcin Gortat during his December trading spree, and compounded his error by not getting even a serviceable backup for Howard before the playoffs.

Britt Robson of Sports Illustrated. He gives the Magic a C for their performance this season.

Orlando Pinstriped Post

GM Otis Smith welcomes point-guard controversy – OrlandoSentinel.com

Brian Schmitz of the Orlando Sentinel says Otis Smith, the Orlando Magic’s President of Basketball Operations, would like to see Gilbert Arenas challenge Jameer Nelson for the team’s starting point guard job.

Orlando Pinstriped Post

“I think, looking at it, it was a deal that helped us both,” Magic General Manager Otis…

“I think, looking at it, it was a deal that helped us both,” Magic General Manager Otis Smith said.

Brian Schmitz of the Orlando Sentinel, regarding the Orlando Magic’s trade with the Phoenix Suns on December 18th.

Orlando Pinstriped Post


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