Greg Buckner

Frontcourt Blues

The way things look like now, the Wolves are on a crash course for 1 of 3 draft possibilities: a) a PG should the Randy Foye experiment not work out, b) Michael Beasley should he fall in their lap, or c) a big man should Foye show proficiency at the point and Beasley is off the board. Regardless of how they pick, the Wolves will have some holes they need to address on the roster. Theo Ratliff and Michael Doleac will be off the books; and Craig Smith, Gerald Green, Ryan Gomes, and Chris Richard will need to be decided on. In other words, 1/2 of the Wolves (and nearly all of their frontcourt players) have the potential to come off the books after the season ends.

Compounding matters even further is that even with these frontcourt players off the books, the Wolves are sitting at $55,124,864 in guaranteed salary (including Telfair’s qualifying offer; which I'm inserting to show how much one of the Boston guys would cost to resign). Add in $4 million for their 1st pick, $442,000 for the 2nd rounder/free agent they almost will have to sign at the league minimum to fill the roster, and they are sitting at $60 million without Green, Gomes, Smith, or Richard. As you can see, they’re already in luxury territory with the following roster:

Antoine Walker
Marko Jaric
Greg Buckner
Randy Foye
Sebastian Telfair
Corey Brewer
Al Jefferson
Mark Madsen
Rashad McCants
1st round draft pick
2nd round draft pick
(Troy Hudson)
(Juwan Howard)

Have I mentioned how much I love guaranteed salary? Before I go any further, could the Wolves make this roster work?

  1. Foye/Telfair/Jaric
  2. McCants/Jaric/Buckner
  3. Walker/Brewer
  4. Jefferson/Walker
  5. Mark Madsen/Jefferson

Can you begin to see why they need Corey Brewer to work out at the 3? Wolves fans: even if you could clear Walker off the books, who is worth resigning to take his spot at the 3/4? Gomes? Smith? How much money would you really be saving if you signed Smith or Gomes to a $3 mil/year contract and bought out Walker for 7-8? It’s a push with his current $9 mil on the books. I wouldn’t bet on the Wolves extending too many more buyouts. They’re in enough of a pickle as it is. I think it’s trade or nothing at this point. Also, as long as Walker says things like this:

Q: A lot of vets in your situation would have asked for a buyout after winding up with a rebuilding team like the Wolves. Why haven't you?

A: Honestly, man, I'm just tired of moving. I don't know that the grass is greener for me somewhere else. You have to try something first before you can have an opinion about it. I didn't want to come in here and say, "I want out." I wanted to see if I can fit in with these guys. I don't want that perception put on me. I didn't want to disrespect these other 14 guys in this locker room.

At this point in my career, I'm not chasing rings like some other guys and I'm not chasing making the playoffs. I'm chasing a good situation for myself to play basketball and do something I love to do.

Q: So you're expecting a long stay in Minneapolis?

A: Right now, I'm a Timberwolf. I plan on being here right now. I've got this year and next year on my contract, and I'm just gonna worry about these two years and then see where I'm at. But I want to play five or six more years if I can stay healthy. I'm only 31.

...it would be pointless to move him because they're not moving in free agency until 2009-10 anyway.

As you may have noticed, the Wolves are already above the likely 2008-09 cap with 11 players, no true center, and 4 frontcourt players (not counting their draft picks). They can take $3 mil off the books by not resigning Telfair’s qualifying offer, but do they then spend it on Smith or Green? Can they sign both? What about Green? Smith/Green/Telfair should be similarly priced players, and signing even one will push the Wolves over the $60 mil mark. Again, the Wolves are in a pickle. Are these the types of players they want to be locking up on their way to rock bottom?

What should the Wolves do?

  1. Get Chris Richard to the D-League now….yesterday, if possible. Get him as many minutes as possible and get him back up in the Association come February. The Wolves can sign Richard for under $1 million next year and they will need to do so. He should be as proficient as possible and the D-League is calling.
  2. Utilize the D-League to fill out the last spot on next year’s roster. Cheap, cheap, cheap is the way to go if the Wolves are going to spend some free agent money in the 2009-10 season. Possible frontcourt players: Nik Caner-Medley, Ronald Allen, Michael Joiner. Learn to love the Sioux Falls Skyforce. The Wolves could also use their 2nd round pick to take a 4th year college big man. Randal Falker, DJ White, and Joey Dorsey may be available at the top of the 2nd round. Whatever they do, they should not, I repeat, should not waste valuable cap space on the Matt Barnes and Jarvis Hayes of the world in free agency.
  3. Do not make any long-term contract negotiations with Rashad McCants. T-Hud the Sequel does not deserve $4 mil/year and he sure as hell doesn’t get a long leash; especially when his 2009-10 qualifying offer could put $3.6 mil in the bank for a free agent run.
  4. If they are going to buy out Walker, Jaric, Buckner, or Madsen, they need to do so immediately so that the multi-year contract agreements will expire before the 2009-10 free agent season. They do not want to miss out on that action. Do not make any trade unless the net salary loss eclipses a buyout + resign number for one of the Green/Smith/Gomes/Telfair combo and, if doing so, is a one year contract. (PS: As you may have guessed by reading this post, it's unlikely they have the money to buy anyone out at this point.)
  5. If they are going to resign anyone currently on the roster, only sign 1 of the Green/Smith/Gomes/Telfair combo. This is more of a fiscal necessity rather than helpful advice. The Wolves have about $3.5 million to throw around at one of these youngsters. Who will it be? I’m partial to Smith myself (although Telfair is growing one me), and I think the Wolves almost have to go with a frontcourt player, but I guess we’ll have to wait and see. That being written, if they can get away with not signing any of them, that would be for the best in the long run.
  6. Do not trade draft picks for established players (i.e. salaries). This isn’t to say that they couldn’t try to package the Miami and Celtic picks to move up in the 2009 Draft, it’s just to say that they need to keep salaries low for the 2009-10/2010-11 free-agent seasons and 1st round picks are much less costly than any vet they would likely get in return. Whatever they do, they should not trade their own 1st round pick in 2008 or 2009 under any circumstances whatsoever. I mention this because of Wally and Cassell.

The main goal for the Wolves is to become a .350-.450 team again in the 2009-10 season and a playoff team the following year with a solid base of extremely young talent and mid-20s “vets” like Foye, Brewer, and Jefferson. If things go right—and by “right,” I mean very, very bad—in the mean time, the Wolves will have had 2 consecutive top-5 picks, Miami’s 2009 pick between 10-15, and the Celtics first round pick in 09 by the time they lace ‘em up in late 2009. (Remember to check out Canis Hoopus' excellent draft info page.) Here’s what the 2009-10 roster will look like if no further buyouts take place:

(Marko Jaric)
(Greg Buckner)
(Mark Madsen)
Randy Foye
Corey Brewer
Al Jefferson
2008 1st rounder
2009 1st rounder
2009 Boston 1st rounder
2009 Miami 1st rounder

Have I ever mentioned that another reason why the Wolves can’t (and shouldn’t) lock up Green/Gomes/Smith/Telfair is because they will be swimming with guaranteed 3-year deals at the start of the 2009-10 season? Let’s throw in a 2nd rounder to bring them up to 11 players and the Wolves are sitting pretty for a big free agent run with a young team, a PF in his prime and, hopefully, 2 extremely talented top-5 draft picks. Since NBA rookie salaries are slotted, let’s take a quick look at exactly how much the Wolves should have to play with in the 2009-10/2010-11 free agent seasons should this scenario play itself out.

Jaric- $7,100,000
Buckner- $4,018,518
Madsen- $2,840,000
Foye- $3,575,761
Brewer- $2,916,120
Jefferson- $12,000,000
2008 1st rounder- $4,000,000 (est pick 1-3)
2009 1st rounder- $2,750,000 (est pick 3-7)
2009 Boston 1st rounder- $800,000 (est pick mid 20s)
2009 Miami 1st rounder- $1,300,000 (est pick 10-15)
Misc 2nd rounder- $442,114 (league minimum)

That’s $41,742,513 and 11 players for you folks playing at home. The 2009-10 cap should be somewhere around $60 million, which means the Wolves would have roughly $20 million to spend in free agency and enough room under the luxury exemption (which Taylor has said he’ll spend on a good team) to resign any good players under the Bird exemption should they get higher offers elsewhere. There’s a lot of cool stuff you can do with $20 million in the NBA. I’ll run down who will be available in the 2009-10 and 2010-11 free agent seasons in a future post, as well as what I think the Wolves should do with the money. (Remember, San Antonio is the model.)

The moral of the story is that next year’s Wolves are going to suck at least as much as (if not more than) this year’s squad. If the Wolves are going to be competitive free market players in 2009-10/2010-11, and if they are serious about keeping their 1st round draft picks, this year is not (cannot) be rock bottom. In order to clear salary, next year’s team will have to be a bare-bones operation and it’s not going to…no, it shouldn’t look pretty. If the KG trade is going to work, they need to clear this cap space to become players in 2009-10/2010-11. This is the only realistic way they can get it done.

PS: How big of a mind f#$k will it be for fans to have a scenario where the only way the KG trade will work is if Gomes, Telfair, Green, and Ratliff are all let go? As I have mentioned before, I don't think this season is about finding out what sort of talent the Wolves received in the trade. It's about seeing if Foye can play the point, seeing if McCants can work at the 2, clearing cap space, and getting ping pong balls. Green can dunk, Gomes can miss shots, Ratliff can give us $11 million off the books, and Bassy...well, he may be a nice back up 1. There...another moral victory.

PPS: Don't forget about the Derrick Rose/OJ Mayo showdown tonight on ESPN. Details here.


Morning News 10/19

Fox Sports with a Wolves preview. There's some great statistical analysis here. Unfortunately the fancy numbers still rank the Wolves second to last in the West.

Another new Timberwolves Blog gives a detailed look at America's Most Blounted.

TWolves Blog gives their season preview.

Rick Alonzo @ the Pioneer Press: Timberwolves like Buckner's veteran leadership. It's good to hear McHale say that they're not going to buyout Buckner. For Alonzo, this is essentially a redaction of yesterday's article. This will be a tough year for the Wolves and the youngsters need someone who's been in tough situations before to help smooth the ride. Foye says he'll "definitely" be ready before preseason's over. His knee is starting to worry me and Skyner's calling year-long knee problems already. Gomes was back at practice yesterday.

Zgoda @ the Strib: Point guards remain idle, leave lineup in limbo. Both Foye and Telfair are expected to be out tonight against the Pacers. Wittman says he's going to keep changing the lineup until a rotation sorts itself out, even if it means doing it in the regular season. On one hand, I don't blame him. He hasn't had much time to figure out what he's really got on the roster. On the other hand, this team desperately needs leadership and direction. Wittman showing some of both by choosing a lineup (even if it changes after a short while) might help.

NBA Today: Trades Change the Landscape.

The Sports Network: Keep an Eye on Minnesota's Jefferson

Timberwolves.com


Morning News 10/18

Tom Ziller @ BallHype: NBA Festivus Northwest Edition do yourself a favor and click this link.

The Old Logo on Tuesday's game and the free throw struggles of the Wolves.

Charley Walters @ the Pioneer Press. Glen says that the team is going to be fun but young. The thing about "fun but young" is that when the "young" is more prevalent fans get exceedingly frustrated. If the "fun" is a couple dunks, then that's just not going to cut it. I think Minnesota sports fans, given the choice, tend to prefer the hard-working, team-oriented image (see Twins, Minnesota) over the razzle-dazzle. This from Taylor: "I wasn't patient last year. I've got to be patient this year." What about the fans' patience? If Buckets and Blount turn into pure chuckers or sour the air, patience will wear thin. Walters also speculates that Al's extension should be in the "five-year...$50 million range." That's not news. Nor does it seem reasonable given that shooting guard Kevin Martin got more than that and there's a premium on size. Jefferson's agent isn't that stupid. If the Wolves lock up Al for 5 years and $60 million, they should consider themselves lucky. Apparently Al's going to buy Dwane Casey's townhouse in Minneapolis too.

Rick Alonzo @ the Pioneer Press: Greg Buckner could be a victim of Minnesota Timberwolves' youth movement. After cutting John Edwards the Wolves will have 16 guaranteed contracts. That's one too many for NBA regulations. Veteran guard Greg Buckner said Wednesday he would understand if the Timberwolves want to buy out his contract and that he wouldn't fight the issue. But his agent said a buyout is unlikely and that the Wolves shouldn't expect Buckner to take less money than he's owed. It would be sad if Buckner was bought out. He and Howard have been positive influences on the youngsters. Moving possible locker room problems should be the priority. Buckner says he wants to be her, which is different from some*cough*marko*players*jaric*cough on the team. But, of course Marko's mammoth contract to production ratio causes a problem. At least we know for sure that the player movement excitement isn't over.

Kent Youngblood @ the Star Tribune: Youthful Timberwolves Learning Some Hard Lessons Early On. Wittman's using the sink or swim method with the kids this preseason. I don't blame him and actually, I agree with him. Just don't give your kids to Witt for swim lessons: "I think that's how they teach kids how to swim now. They throw them into the deep end." As Youngblood points out, though, the youth infusion in the early fourth quarter last game led to a 10-minute scoring drought.

Timberwolves.com: Wednesday Wolves Roundup.

Kyle Weber: Low-balling Jefferson Would Be Stupid. Couldn't agree more.

Hoops Fantasy gives a run-down on the Wolves' outlooks this year.

Guy Lake @ FourLetter.com has more fantasy insight on the Wolves.


TMRB and RickyDavis31

NBA players with their own blogs or websites are becoming more and more prevalent. Most people know that Gilbert Arenas has been "blogging" and cheating at Halo 3 for a while, Greg Oden's blogging and two free agents this summer used their Internet outlets to discuss contract situations (Charlie Bell at MySpace and Dee Brown on his own site).

One blog that everyone should read is Too Much Rod Benson. You may know Rod from the poll sitting over at the right, or maybe you even caught him on Real NBA Training Camp with the Nets on NBATV. Well, he got cut today. Just like Paul Shirley before him, Rod Benson has become the victim of poor marketing foresight. His blog was well worth reading even when he was in the D-League, so I advise you to check him out.

Another player site that caught my eye was RickyDavis31.com. Not only is his website built with the same CMS as this site, but apparently those running it have permission to refer to Mr. Davis as "Get Buckets." Note to said webmasters: that's great that Ricky leads the team in scoring, but how's about he plays consistently instead of clanking repeatedly in the second half.

In case you were interested, there are a few other Wolves with their own sites:

  • RashadMcCants1.com - Yes, there is poetry available. Supposedly he has his own ringtone available, but the link appears to be broken. From "KG": He came to me with open arms, like a hawk embracing his young, and he feed me food out his mouth but I was starving for knowledge.
  • Theo-Ratliff.com - Seriously, you need to go look at Theo's website. Not only does it win for "Most Mid-90s Geocities-style Website," (last modified 8/23/07) but he's also got his own sports drink. "ReboundfxTM is more than just a drink... It's absolute PERFORMANCE!"
  • S31t.com (Sebastian Telfair) - Complete with music. I'm no hip-hop expert, so when the song started I thought it was Wrex N Efex's Rumpshaker. Sadly, no. Just Jay-Z... I think. Also, "Bassy Ringtones" are supposedly available, but just more broken links.
  • JuwanHoward.com
  • BigAlJefferson.com
  • MarkMadsen.com
  • GregBucknerFoundation.com
  • RyanGomes4.com - Apparently this isn't finished yet because the ole' "Lorem ipsum" text is the answer to "Why is Ryan Gomes the future All-Star?" (Lots of nerd shout outs for the Hoopus today)
  • MarkBlount.com - Unofficial, but worth mentioning since they appear(ed) to love him. At least back in January 2006.

Training Camp Roster: The New Guys

  • Corey Brewer: Brewer's scouting report usually goes something like this: great defender, excellent teammate, can hit the open jumper; must bulk up, must improve shot. That sums up Corey's two preseason games pretty well. He got out on the break and hit a couple shots and he guarded Paul Pierce or Ray Allen against Boston with relative success (rookie versus veteran star usually comes out in favor of the star). The most glaring problem with Brewer is his size. When you read 6'9" and 185 pounds, it looks like a misprint. Sadly, it's not. While Brewer will be able to stick with jump shot oriented forwards, but physical players like Ron Artest will give him serious problems.