Dwight Howard is a Jerk for Trade Demand from the Orlando Magic? – NBA Basketball – JRSportBrief

Twitter: twitter.com FB: on.fb.me Dwight Howard is catching a lot of flack for demanding a trade from the Orlando Magic! Is the criticism fair?JRSportBrief covers the latest sports news, game highlights, and athletes of professional sports. JR gives his opinions on all sports: Basketball, Baseball, Football, Hockey, Boxing, MMA and all the major leagues. Whether it’s the NBA Finals, the MLB World Series, or the NFL Superbowl, JR?s got his own opinions and he wants to hear yours! New Episodes all week long. Email: JRSportBrief@gmail.com

Ken Berger on Dwight Howard Trade Rumors

Rumors surfaced that the Nets are offering Brook Lopez and two first-round draft picks for Magic center Dwight Howard. Tune in to CBSSports.com NBA insider Ken Berger to know which team really has the best chance to land Howard.

Why 2 2nd-round picks? Magic trade sweeteners

Can Magic turn picks into assets to help Dwight?

On the surface, it didn’t make a lot of sense for the Magic to trade for another second-round pick during Thursday’s NBA Draft.

But it really was a way for a team locked in salary-cap purgatory and strapped by big contracts to add assets to possible future deals.

GM Otis Smith doesn’t have much ammo left after swinging two big trades last season.

Justin Harper and/or DeAndre Liggins could be used as sweeteners, throw-ins to entice teams to made trades.

Other clubs had Harper on their radar, and some believed he was a late first-round pick. He went to Cleveland at No. 32 — just out of the opening round.

If Liggins (No. 53 ) impresses as a defender early in the season, he might become trade bait.

It sounds far-fetched now, given rookies are unpredictable, but all you have to do is look at Landry Fields.

The Knicks took him in the second round at No. 39 of the 2010 draft out of Stanford and he blossomed last season, looking like a lottery pick. Teams came knocking.

The Knicks refused to give him up during talks for Carmelo Anthony.

So maybe there’s a method to the Magic’s madness.

Orlando Magic BasketBlog – Orlando Sentinel

Where we stand on the Orlando Magic trade front

The Orlando Magic are matching J.J. Redick's offer from the Chicago Bulls. Otis Smith will speak about it at 9:30 a.m. ET today. (Gary W. Green, Orlando Sentinel)

Otis Smith’s phone will be on tonight during the NBA Draft. (Gary W. Green, Orlando Sentinel)

If you were away from your computer or choose to ignore NBA hearsay, you’d assume this was a quiet morning for Orlando Magic fans. The Magic have the same roster they had yesterday and they’re not close to completing any deals; ho, hum.

But if you’re active on Twitter or super into the NBA — which you probably are, since you’re reading this blog — you know it’s been a frantic day for Magic fans struggling to differentiate between fact, rumor and the gray area in between.

Today’s hot rumor was a deal with Portland that would swap point guards Jameer Nelson and Andre Miller, in addition to Orlando receiving the 21st pick in tonight’s draft. The deal, in theory, would make sense for both teams. Portland acquires a point guard who can shoot from the outside, the type of player they’ve desired since signing Miller two summers ago. And the Magic get a guy whose 2011-12 contract is not guaranteed, meaning they could package him to a team trying to shed salary (such as Atlanta, who’s dangling Josh Smith).

The two sides are not close, though, as an NBA source told the Orlando Sentinel the rumor was overblown. And that has not changed throughout the afternoon. But talks aren’t dead, according to at least one reporter.

Smith, a childhood friend of Dwight Howard, has also been linked to the Minnesota Timberwolves for the No. 2 pick.

Another potential Magic trade target, Stephen Jackson, was dealt to the Milwaukee Bucks earlier this afternoon. The Bobcats had been shopping their veterans — putting everyone on the table, really — and it was assumed Jackson would be traded somewhere before the lockout. In my opinion, Jackson wouldn’t have made the Magic much better, anyway. He’s less efficient than the Magic’s last two shooting guards — Vince Carter and Jason Richardson — and he’s not great defensively anymore.

Andre Iguodala, Monta Ellis, Tony Parker and Lamar Odom are all heavily involved in trade rumors tonight.

The Magic, who are looking to improve their roster this summer, don’t have many valuable assets to offer other teams. Nelson has value, sure, but I’ve always felt he meant more to the Magic than he would to another team. Ryan Anderson, Brandon Bass and J.J. Redick are young, productive players, but they’re not deal swingers. Quentin Richardson, Chris Duhon and Daniel Orton hold no value. Gilbert Arenas and Hedo Turkoglu are tied to contracts that make them pretty much untradeable. The Magic aren’t trading Dwight Howard, of course. So we’ll see.

Trades can’t be submitted into the league office until the NBA Draft begins, according to Larry Coon, but that doesn’t mean verbal agreements can’t be made.

Stay tuned with us tonight to track all of it as Josh Robbins, Brian Schmitz and myself will be at Magic headquarters. Also, feel free to chat with Sentinel writers at the chat down below.

Follow @ZachMcCann

zmccann@orlandosentinel.com

Orlando Magic BasketBlog – Orlando Sentinel

Givony: Orlando Magic, Portland Trail Blazers Discuss Jameer Nelson-for-Andre Miller Trade

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The Orlando Magic and Portland Trail Blazers may be discussing a trade which would send Jameer Nelson to Portland, with the 21st pick in the 2011 NBA Draft and Andre Miller coming to Orlando in return, according to Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress. The rumored swap of veteran point guards would appear to make sense for both sides for a few reasons, which I’ll discuss in more depth if the trade happens.

A source I consulted could neither confirm nor deny Givony’s report.

UPDATE (this paragraph only): Josh Robbins of the Orlando Sentinel, citing “an NBA source,” says the rumor “is being overblown.” Writes Robbins, “you’d be best-served to temper your expectations of it actually happening.”

Miller, 35, is a veteran of five teams in 12 seasons known for his on-target passing, uncommonly good back-to-basket game, and limited shooting range. One can persuasively argue he’s the best alley-oop passer in the game’s history. His .8 million salary for the coming season, the last in the three-year contract he signed with Portland in 2009, becomes fully guaranteed June 29th. He averaged 12.7 points and 7 assists last season while shooting 46 percent from the floor.

Nelson has spent his entire seven-year career and earned one All-Star berth with the Magic. His lack of size and problems with consistency make him a popular target for derision among Magic fans, though on balance he is likely the team’s second-best player behind Dwight Howard. He has two seasons, with the final one at his option, worth a combined .6 million remaining on his deal.

Otis Smith, the Magic’s President of Basketball Operations, has a history of making big trades on Draft days. Two years ago, he sent Courtney Lee, who started for Orlando in the NBA Finals which ended just weeks before, as well as two expiring contracts to the New Jersey Nets for Vince Carter and Ryan Anderson.

Orlando Pinstriped Post

Berger: Trade Rumor Linking Josh Smith, Orlando Magic “Totally Legit”

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When Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports reported Josh Smith expects the Atlanta Hawks to trade him, and that the Orlando Magic are on the shortlist of teams to which he’d like to be traded, it piqued Magic fans’ interest. And while a lot of the rumors discussed during the lead-up to Thursday’s NBA Draft turn out to be bogus, it looks as though the Magic and Hawks are indeed discussing a trade built around Smith. From Ken Berger of CBS Sports:

A source also said discussions between Atlanta and Orlando with Josh Smith going to the Magic are “totally legit.” Executives say the Hawks have expressed an eagerness to move Smith and would like to shed salary in the process.

For Orlando, Smith’s appeal is obvious. Smith is a young, productive, versatile player who ought to have at least one All-Star appearance on his resume by now, but doesn’t. He’s coming off a season in which he averaged 16.5 points, 8.5 rebounds, 3.3 assists, and 2.9 combined steals and blocks. He’s a player who can help any team, and as his Hawks showed the Magic in the first round of the NBA Playoffs, Orlando needs the help.

Further, Smith and Magic center Dwight Howard grew up together in Atlanta and played on the same AAU team, a fact of which we’re reminded at least once during Magic/Hawks telecasts. Adding Smith to Orlando’s roster could, in addition to helping the team on the court, give Howard a reason to consider staying when he can become a free agent next summer.

Having established all that, it’s difficult to imagine the Hawks dealing Smith to Orlando, however “legit” the trade talks are. The teams are division rivals, for one, so it doesn’t behoove Atlanta to help an adversary. The simpler reason, though, is Orlando doesn’t have much to offer. Berger’s report says the Hawks want expiring contracts, which the Magic don’t have. Perhaps Orlando could try easing Atlanta’s cap situation by agreeing to take on Marvin Williams’ contract (worth roughly million over the next three seasons). Overall, I don’t see the trade calculus working in the Magic’s favor here.

Orlando Pinstriped Post

Josh Smith hits trade market, lists Orlando as possible destination

The Hawks have gauged trade interest in Josh Smith, according to Yahoo! Sports.

The Atlanta Hawks are seeing what they can get for Josh Smith on the open trade market, according to Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports, and Smith isn’t against being traded.

Smith listed the Boston Celtics, New Jersey Nets, Houston Rockets and Orlando Magic as his preferred trade destinations. The reason for a possible trade is tension between Smith and the Hawks — he and the Hawks haven’t always seen eye to eye — as well as the Hawks’ desire to shed salary.

The Magic would, of course, have interest in Smith, given his close relationship with Dwight Howard and his ability to defend almost anyone. Howard was the best man in Smith’s wedding last summer, and Smith would certainly help keep Howard (or should we say GM Howard?) in town beyond this season.

But it’s hard to envision the Magic putting together an attractive enough package to make the trade happen.

Strapped with Joe Johnson’s six-year, 3 million dollar contract — certainly one of the most outrageous salaries in the NBA — the Hawks are looking to shed salary while still remaining competitive. This puts them in the market for a veteran with a short contract or a player whose contract expires. The Magic can offer neither.

The Magic’s best hope is to convince the Hawks to give up Smith based on roster improvement, not salary reduction.

For example, the Magic could offer a package of Jameer Nelson and Brandon Bass for Smith, a move that would give the Hawks a legitimate point guard and some toughness on the inside. The Magic would acquire a versatile player who appeases Howard. All three players have two more years left on their deal and the salaries line up, so financially it’s a wash. The Hawks will probably receive a better offer than that, though, and that deal might not make Orlando better, to be frank.

Also worth mentioning: Intra-division trades are rare, especially when both teams are competitive. Neither team wants to help the other, especially because they’ve met in the playoffs the last two seasons.

All in all, it’s highly unlikely Smith will end up in Orlando, given the Magic’s inability to help Atlanta financially. This will be a common theme this summer: The Magic would have interest in Player X, but they lack the assets to acquire him.

Follow @ZachMcCann

zmccann@orlandosentinel.com

Orlando Magic BasketBlog – Orlando Sentinel

Monta Ellis Trade Rumors Include Orlando Magic: An Analysis

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A report from Rusty Simmons of the San Francisco Chronicle indicates the Orlando Magic are among the many teams who’ve discussed a Monta Ellis trade with the Golden State Warriors. Simmons doesn’t go into specifics about any of the potential trade suitors, so it’s unclear exactly what Orlando might be willing to offer in such a deal.

Indeed, the Warriors seem determined to trade the star shooting guard, who ranked eighth in scoring and third in steals last season, in order to improve their defense and cede more control of the offense to 23-year-old point guard Stephen Curry. Comments new team adviser Jerry West made last week only fueled speculation of an Ellis trade.

How viable is an Ellis trade for Orlando? Let us review what we know.

  • An Ellis trade seemed laughable as recently as last season
    Before the Magic shook up their roster with a pair of trades last December, a rumor linking the Magic to the Warriors and Ellis began circulating the internet. I checked with a source to learn more.

    The source quashed the rumor with a guffaw, literally laughing it off. That’s how preposterous it was.

  • But last season was an eternity ago, and Orlando’s needs have changed
    The Magic’s overhauled roster flamed out in the postseason as the Atlanta Hawks exposed their lack of perimeter shot-creation. Coach Stan Van Gundy lamented not “[having] the Jamal Crawford or a Joe Johnson, guys who can break you down off the dribble.” J.J. Redick is the only shooting guard under contract for Orlando next season, as starter Jason Richardson is due to enter unrestricted free agency. There’s room for another guard.

  • Creating shots is not a problem for Monta Ellis
    Over the last two seasons, only three players have averaged more shot attempts, per minute, than Ellis. Their names are Kobe, Carmelo, and Dwyane. Perhaps you’ve heard of them.

  • Making shots is a problem for Monta Ellis
    Over the same span, only six players have averaged more than one shot attempt every two minutes. Ellis ranks last among them in efficiency, with a True Shooting mark of 52.7. Last season, the average NBAer had a True Shooting mark of 54.3.

    In short, Ellis takes a lot of shots at below-average efficiency.

  • Still, Ellis can score a ton…
    You don’t rank among the league’s top-10 scorers for two straight seasons on accident. In 144 games since 2009/10, Ellis has scored 30-plus points 45 times. That’s roughly three times every ten games.

    As a team, the Magic have 25 such games in the same span. Wing players account for only four of them.

  • … but some factors artificially inflate Ellis’ stats
    Ellis has led the league in minutes per game since 2009/10, which gives him extra opportunities to boost his per-game scoring

    Further, the Warriors play at a frenetic pace, leading the league with a whopping 100.4 possessions per game in 2009/10 before dialing it down to 94.8 last season. That was still the fifth-highest figure in the league. He plays a ton of minutes on a ludicrously fast team, giving him hundreds more possessions to use over the course of a full season than a player on a slower team would. And the Magic are not a fast team.

  • For all his athleticism and speed, Ellis takes a lot of jumpers
    Ellis is a highlight-reel talent who seems to make at least five you’ve-got-to-be-kidding-me-what-is-this-I-don’t-even layups each season, so one might think he’s a tremendously aggressive driver who scores with ease near the rim.

    That’s simply not the case. According to Synergy Sports Technology, 66.3 percent of Ellis’ shot attempts in a halfcourt offense–and Orlando’s offense is heavily halfcourt-based–are jumpers. Though an athletic dynamo, Ellis draws a shooting foul on just 7.6 percent of his possessions, which ranks lower than the Magic’s team average of 8 percent last season. In fairness, that’s still better than any Orlando wing managed. I’ve argued before that the Magic need to do a better job at drawing fouls. Ellis helps, if slightly, in that regard. But don’t think of him as a slasher.

  • Golden State consistently plays better with Ellis off the floor
    It’s hard to ignore how well the Warriors play with Ellis, dynamic though he is, on the bench. Last season, their offense improved 0.51 points per 100 possessions with him resting, which isn’t much. But defensively? A staggering 6.88-points-per-100-possessions improvement.

    The splits from 2009/10 are even more dramatic, with the Warriors playing 11.52 points per 100 possessions worse overall with Ellis on the court.

I’d mention Ellis’ poor individual defense, but he’s yet to work with a coach who demands accountability on that end of the floor. Similarly, he’s never played with a defender of Dwight Howard’s caliber behind him. For those reasons, I don’t think it’d be fair to assess him at that end. There’s a track record of poor defensive players suddenly thriving when they move to organizations that stress defense. Think Ray Allen with the Boston Celtics or Rashard Lewis with the Magic.

As I wrote last month, I still struggle with where I stand on the issue of shot-creation versus efficiency. It’s hard to dispute Charles Barkley when he says every team needs “that dude” to whom a coach “can say, ‘hey, here’s the ball, I need a basket,” and count on to deliver.

The Magic, for better or worse, do not have “that dude,” instead relying on the perimeter-oriented committee of Jameer Nelson, Richardson, and Hedo Turkoglu to generate offense in late-game situations. Their best, most efficient player, Howard, is relegated to screening and rebounding duties.

There’s no question Ellis can get a shot almost anytime he likes. There are numerous questions about whether that skill benefits his team. At the risk of being obvious, every shot he takes is one that a teammate can’t. Among Warriors regulars, he ranked sixth in True Shooting. Sixth on his own team!

It’s true that the attention defenses pay to Howard might take pressure off Ellis, and vice-versa. It’s true that this dynamic could, theoretically, improve Ellis’ efficiency. It’s true that Ellis would be the Magic’s most dynamic perimeter player since Tracy McGrady’s prime years nearly a decade ago.

And it’s true that when it comes to Monta Ellis and the Orlando Magic, questions abound. Orlando may need “that dude,” but I don’t think Ellis is gifted enough to be it. The problem is that nobody else on the team is either.

Orlando Pinstriped Post

Report: Warriors looking to trade Monta Ellis

Golden State’s Monta Ellis might be traded this summer. (Gary W. Green/Orlando Sentinel)

The Golden State Warriors recently brought in Jerry West as a consultant, and West’s comments seem to insinuate that the team is looking to deal Monta Ellis.

“I’ve seen teams trade players that score tons of points and people say, ‘How in the world can you trade that player?’ ” West said last week, according to Tim Kawakami. “Because he might score tons of points and the team doesn’t win.

“When I look at (the Warriors), obviously they need more size.”

Kawakami, who covers the Warriors for the San Jose Mercury News, believes West has already begun exploring trade partners.

Ellis, 25, averaged 24.1 points per game for the Warriors last season, good for ninth in the NBA. But Ellis’ scoring ability and ball domination overlap with the skill-set of Warriors point guard Steph Curry, who’s younger, cheaper and a better distributor.

So, do the Magic have the assets to land Ellis?

The Warriors need size, as West said, because they don’t have much in the frontcourt past David Lee. And Kawakami speculated the Warriors will deal for a “tough wing,” perhaps suggesting the Warriors will look into trading for Philly’s Andre Iguodala, who also may be on the move.

In terms of size, neither Ryan Anderson nor Brandon Bass would benefit the Warriors beyond Lee’s talents at power forward. It’d be a reach to classify Hedo Turkoglu as a “tough wing,” and the Warriors wouldn’t be interested in his contract anyhow. J.J. Redick might hold some value, however, as he’d form a healthy yet defense-deficient backcourt alongside Curry.

The best deal the Magic could put together — and this is purely speculation — is something like J.J. Redick, Brandon Bass and a first-round pick for Ellis.

Assuming other teams covet Ellis, that’s probably not the best offer the Warriors would see, at least on paper. Chicago and Memphis — the two teams Kawakami linked to the Warriors in his column — could certainly offer more if they felt so inclined.

But there’s more to it than what’s on paper (West, after all, is the same guy who dealt Pau Gasol to the Lakers for the rights to Marc Gasol and a bunch of borderline D-Leaguers back in 2008). Ellis’ quick shooting trigger and lack of past team success will scare some teams from pursuing him, and the Warriors’ perceived willingness to deal him may diminish his value.

His ability on offense would give the Magic they lacked last season: An aggressive, elite wing scorer. He’s not the most efficient offensive player in the league, but he’s certainly improved with age. I mentioned him last week in a column about who the Magic could potentially pursue.

Well, he’s out there now. Do the Magic have enough to get him?

Follow @ZachMcCann

zmccann@orlandosentinel.com

Orlando Magic BasketBlog – Orlando Sentinel

Orlando Magic – Phoenix Suns – Washington Wizards Trade (December 18, 2010)

The Orlando Magic, Phoenix Suns & Washington Wizards do a three-team trade involving in these players: To Orlando: Hedo Turkoglu, Jason Richardson, Gilbert Arenas, Earl Clark To Phoenix: Vince Carter, Mickael Pietrus, Marcin Gortat To Washington: Rashard Lewis
Video Rating: 3 / 5


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