Sources: Jamal Crawford asks for trade
Frustrated the Atlanta Hawks have not offered him a contract extension, Jamal Crawford will ask the club to trade him, according to sources with knowledge of the situation.
Crawford, who is in the final year of a contract that will pay him $10 million this season, approached the Hawks the first week of July about an extension. Hawks general manager Rick Sund has not made Crawford an offer, a source with the organization told ESPN.
The sides are scheduled to meet next week and if the Hawks do not make Crawford an offer he considers reasonable, he will ask to be traded, according to sources. Crawford is looking for a three- or four-year extension worth about the same annual amount he will make this season, sources said.
Crawford, the NBA's reigning Sixth Man of the Year, told the Hawks that if they don't want to extend his contract, they should trade him, sources said.
The Hawks offered Joe Johnson an extension last year, but Sund does not typically give extensions, preferring instead to let players complete their contracts. Crawford is expecting Sund to take that approach in their meeting, sources said. But with a potential lockout looming and the next Collective Bargaining Agreement expected to be less favorable to the players, the 30-year-old Crawford, who averaged 18 points last season, wants security.
Crawford is the latest in a growing chorus of top players this summer to express a desire to be traded. In July, Chris Paul was looking to leave New Orleans, and more recently, Carmelo Anthony has reportedly told the Denver Nuggets that he wants out.
Some of Crawford's frustration, according to sources, is that the Hawks gave All-Star Johnson a six-year, $119 million contract, but have yet to offer Crawford anything.
Though Johnson led the team in scoring during the regular season, he struggled during the Hawks' second-round sweep at the hands of the Orlando Magic. Johnson averaged 12 points a game against the Magic; Crawford led the team with a 17-point average.
BOSTON (AP)—Delonte West(notes) is returning to the Boston Celtics.
The team announced Wednesday that it has signed the 6-foot-3 guard, who was suspended for the first 10 games of the 2010-11 season after pleading guilty to weapons charges in Maryland.
West played his first three seasons with Boston before being traded to Seattle in 2007 in the deal that brought Ray Allen(notes) to the Celtics.
Maryland authorities said he was carrying two loaded handguns, a loaded shotgun and an 8 1/2-inch Bowie knife while speeding on a three-wheel motorcycle on the Capital Beltway last September. He was sentenced to home detention but may travel to games.
West has averaged 10 points and 3.7 assists over his career. He was waived last month by the Minnesota Timberwolves, who had acquired him only a week earlier in a trade with Cleveland.
Report: Etan Thomas near deal with Hawks
Wed Sep 01,2010 4:35 PM ET By Kurt Helin
The Atlanta Hawks locker room could use a little poetry.
It looks like it's about to get some, because the Hawks are about to sign Etan Thomas as their third string center, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution's Michael Cunningham.
Obviously Al Horford gets the lion's share of minutes at the five, with Zaza Pachulia and Jason Collins backing him up. So don't draft Thomas on to your fantasy team, he's not going to see a lot of court time. He's there to bang bodies in practice, play some minutes here and there, and be a good guy in the locker room. He will be good in the locker room -- he's "More than an Athlete." (The league could use more people like him in that regard.)
On the court, it will be fun to see who can have a lower PER at the end of the season, Collins or Thomas. Last season, Thomas was a dreadful 6.9, but Collins was a legendary 0.9.
Still, for the end of the bench, not a bad signing.
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—Unwanted by the NBA, Allen Iverson(notes) is considering playing in China.
Gary Moore, Iverson’s personal manager, said Iverson has not been contacted by any NBA team with training camps set to open in less than two weeks. Moore said there is “legitimate interest” between Iverson and a team in China to work out a deal. Moore did not know the team’s name and was vague on details.
“We’re very astonished, to say the least, that not one team has contacted us with any interest,” Moore said. “I just don’t understand it.”
Iverson played three games for Memphis last season before he returned for a second stint with the Philadelphia 76ers. He averaged 13.9 points for the Sixers before he took a leave of absence in March because of family issues.
In his prime, Iverson boasted top-selling jerseys and sneakers and was a global superstar. His popularity never waned even as his production dipped— Iverson was voted an Eastern Conference All-Star starter last season. Iverson would be a drawing card overseas, and might see a familiar face in former NBA All-Star Stephon Marbury(notes). Also discarded by the NBA, Marbury played last season for Shanxi Zhongyu in the Chinese Basketball Association.
Moore says a Chinese team first approached the 35-year-old Iverson last month.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=AkQVRJOm0pQG9_EycIE5tha8vLYF?slug=mc-williamscavs092010Mo Williams(notes) is 27, healthy and has three years and $26 million remaining on his Cleveland Cavaliers contract. But none of that mattered much to him this summer after he watched LeBron James(notes) leave the Cavs to join the Miami Heat. Williams said he was so depressed by James exit that he considered walking away from the NBA.
Thats how bad it got, Williams said. I contemplated it. I really sat down and envisioned life after basketball. I really saw myself not playing.
Mo Williams teamed with LeBron James to lead the Cavs to the NBA's best record from 2009-10.
(NBAE/Getty Images)
It just didnt make sense to me. It doesnt make sense to me.
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Williams played alongside James the past two seasons, serving as the Cavs starting point guard and second-leading scorer as they finished with the NBAs best record two years in a row. Clevelands regular-season success, however, didnt translate to the playoffs, where the Cavs fell short of reaching the NBA Finals both times. Still, Williams felt comfortable in his role next to James. He was named to the All-Star team in 2009 and remained hopeful that, together, they could deliver a championship to Cleveland in the 2010-11 season.
Those hopes all but disappeared on July 8 when James announced he was leaving. By the time of James televised special, Williams had heard from enough people around James to know his days of playing next to the two-time reigning MVP were over even if Williams didnt want to admit it.
As anyone tied to the Cavs, you want to be in denial, Williams said. You never want to say, Yeah, OK, hes gone.
Williams didnt hide his disappointment, even tweeting in the hours after the announcement that he hoped James would change his mind. Williams also publicly expressed his regret for how James broke the hearts of Clevelanders and for the earlier firing of coach Mike Brown, who had lost James support.
I had to get it off my chest, he said.
Williams said he and James remain friends, but hes also tried to use the past two months to move on.
You get back here to Cleveland, get around the new coaching staff, start a few workouts, get around the young guys and basically accept the fact that we are not what we once were, he said. We dont have the No. 23 jersey hanging in the locker before every game now.
James wasnt the only key figure in the organization to leave in the offseason. Brown was fired and eventually replaced by Byron Scott. Former general manager Danny Ferry parted ways with the franchise, and his assistant, Chris Grant, was named the new GM. Assistant GM Lance Blanks left to help run the Phoenix Suns. The Cavs didnt make any headline moves, acquiring role players in guard Ramon Sessions(notes) and center Ryan Hollins(notes), while trying to preserve future roster flexibility. Veteran forward Antawn Jamison(notes) is still on the roster, but both he and Williams could eventually find themselves on the trade block as the Cavs continue to rebuild.
This summer was very, very stressful for me, Williams said. I really lost a lot of love for the game this summer.
You play this game for one reason. You play to win games and win championships. I couldnt understand why a lot of things were happening to our organization, to a really good basketball team. I couldnt really understand it. And when you dont understand things, it can really stress you out.
Williams is slowly adapting to the new Cavaliers, who, along with their new coaching staff, will have a new offense that will be heavy on pick-and-rolls. Scott might play Williams at shooting guard with Sessions or Daniel Gibson(notes) running the point. In addition to being relied upon to score more, Williams inherits additional leadership responsibility with James and veteran center Zydrunas Ilgauskas(notes) gone.
Its crazy because ever since [James left], everybody I see, they approach me and say, Hey, youre going to be able to play your game now, Williams said. You are going to be able to show everybody what you got, or youre going to be able to do this. I was happy with my role. We were winning basketball games. I was coming home every night a winner.
Who cant love that? That is what playing a role on a team is all about. Everybody cant be the star. I was perfectly comfortable being that piece.
How long will it take for Williams to grow comfortable with his new role? Not even he knows. But after two months, he also understands it doesnt make much sense to sit around pining for his departed teammate.
We just got to go to work, man, Williams said. At the end of the day we still have to move forward because the only people who feel sorry for us are the ones who have the Cavs uniform on and whoever is in the stands rooting for the Cavs. Thats it. Everybody else could care less.
Sources: Keith Smart to coach Warriors
By Marc Stein
ESPN.com
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The Golden State Warriors, with just a few days to go before the start of training camp, are on the verge of making a coaching change.
Sources with knowledge of the Warriors' thinking told ESPN.com that the club's new owners, Joe Lacob and Peter Guber, have decided to part company with Don Nelson -- who late last season became the winningest coach in league history -- and replace him with assistant Keith Smart.
The move is scheduled to be finalized by the end of the week, sources said, with Smart taking charge of the team in time for media day Monday and the team's first practice of the season Tuesday.
CSNBayArea.com and the Contra Costa Times newspaper reported that Nelson will technically resign, but sources close to the situation said Nelson was hoping to be enthusiastically received this week after returning to Oakland from his offseason home in Maui.
Nelson, though, has always been a big Smart supporter and urged Lacob, according to sources, to give the job to Smart once it became apparent that there was sentiment within the organization for making a change.
Earlier Tuesday, when asked about Nelson's status by Tim Kawakami of the San Jose Mercury News, Lacob said: "There'll be clarity on Monday. That's all I can say right now. ... Understand, I'm working on it. We know what we're doing."
The final season remaining on Nelson's contract is valued at $6 million. Sources said Nelson, as per the terms of his contract, will receive his full salary.
Although the sale of the Warriors from the much-maligned Chris Cohan to Lacob and Guber has not been formally ratified by the league, sources said that Cohan's successors have had their say on the bulk of the team's moves for much of the summer.
Sources said it was the new owners' preference to make the change before camp started and replace Nelson with Smart, who has previously served as a head coach in Cleveland before joining the Warriors as an assistant in 2003.
Lacob told the San Jose Mercury News that Smart will receive a multiyear contract.
The Warriors and Nelson did not immediately return messages seeking comment.
Nelson has said for months that he intended this season to be his last in coaching if the Warriors' new regime did want him back. One source close to the situation told ESPN.com on Thursday that Nelson, after celebrating his 70th birthday in May, is unlikely to coach again now that the Warriors have informed him that they want Smart to take over in conjunction with the ownership change, which could be made official through league ratification as soon as next month.
In July, Nelson told ESPN.com that he hoped to coach newcomer David Lee alongside Stephen Curry and serve out the final season remaining on his contract, despite persistent speculation about his new bosses winning immediate favor with disgruntled Warriors fans by making a change.
But Nelson also said at the time that he would "understand" if Lacob and Guber decided to start over by hiring their own coach.
"I'd love to coach another year, but I understand that it's a possibility [I won't be retained]," Nelson said in the interview. "I want to do what's best for the organization. If I have to be a part of the change, I will understand."
After a messy end to his first stint as Warriors coach -- he landed in court with Cohan in a dispute over money -- Nelson was stunningly brought back to Golden State by Cohan and then-GM Chris Mullin for the 2006-07 season.
Fueled by a late-season surge after the acquisition of Stephen Jackson, Nelson guided the long-suffering Warriors to their first playoff appearance since 1993-94, which was Nelson's last full season with the club. The 42-40 Warriors then ousted the 67-win Dallas Mavericks -- another team Nelson left in acrimony -- in the first round of the playoffs to record the first triumph in league history by a No. 8 seed over a No. 1 seed in a seven-game series.
Golden State won 48 games in the following season, only to narrowly miss the playoffs in an ultracompetitive Western Conference.
The past two seasons, however, have been filled with turmoil and injuries, costing Mullin his job along the way and resulting in records of 29-53 and 26-56. One of the few bright spots in that span was Golden State's 5-3 record in April, when a collection of youngsters and D-Leaguers led by rookie of the year runner-up Curry ultimately enabled Nelson to surpass Lenny Wilkens for the most coaching wins in NBA history on April 7 at Minneapolis.
In stints with Milwaukee, New York, Dallas and two tours with Golden State, spanning 31 seasons, Nelson posted a record of 1,335-1,063, winning three NBA Coach of the Year awards with a reputation for innovation. Nelson, however, had his share of critics as well and fell shy of taking his oft-unconventional teams to the NBA Finals, settling for trips to the conference finals with the Bucks and Mavericks after winning five rings as a player with the Boston Celtics.