Trade talk: Mavs’ master plan takes a hit; Devin Harris on the block

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Tuesday was not a good day for the Dallas Mavericks, or their master plan.

The defending champions opened the second half of the season with a 93-92 home loss to the New Jersey Nets. Dallas played without forward Lamar Odom, still away from the team as he tends to a personal issue.

Despite their championship pedigree, the Mavs played with little urgency, trailing for most of the night and turning on the switch only when the game needed to be reeled in. That couldn’t have left a positive vibe on Nets guard Deron Williams, one of their offseason targets.

And Dallas was dominated inside by Brook Lopez, who scored an eyebrow-raising 38 points. Lopez is considered the key piece in any trade New Jersey makes in an effort to land Orlando Magic superstar center Dwight Howard, another one of Dallas’ offseason targets.

In all, there was plenty of intrigue and speculation swirling around the American Airlines Center on Tuesday night.

From Kevin Brolan of HoopsAddict.com: Another fire of a story burns bright as the league trade deadline nears. In case you haven’t heard, New Jersey point guard Deron Williams, who has long flirted with comments of how he wouldn’t mind playing back in his hometown of Dallas, is a free agent this summer. As has been thoroughly covered by most forms of local and national media, the Dallas Mavericks haven’t exactly been secretive of their plans to chase Williams, and Dwight Howard for that matter, this summer. Nets coach Avery Johnson made a few waves yesterday after mentioning how Dallas would probably be aggressive in pursuing Williams this offseason, but backed off those remarks before Tuesday’s game. “I believe (Williams) has every intention of re-signing with (New Jersey),” Johnson firmly stated after clarifying some of the comments he made yesterday that he believes were misconstrued by the media. Still, that didn’t do much to keep most of North Texas dreaming and the rest of the nation wondering what a Dirk/Deron/Dwight trio would look like. Local media like DallasBasketball.com all the way up to Sports Illustrated scrambled for blueprints on potential possibilities for formation of what would be the latest “Super Team.”

Johnson’s backpedaling obviously toes the company line.

But there may be another reason he believes Williams will remain with the Nets.

From Brandon George of the Dallas Morning News: “I talked to Williams’ younger brother Friday. Kendall Jones is a senior starting guard for The Colony’s boys basketball team, which will play in the Class 4A Region I quarterfinals tonight. I asked the talented Jones where he will play college basketball next season and found his answer interesting as it relates to what Williams might do come the offseason. Jones said he will attend a prep school in New Jersey next season “and I’ll see where it goes from there.” Jones said that Williams has only been able to attend one of his high school games in four years because of his busy NBA schedule. “He wants me to be closer to him so he can help me and watch some of my games,” Jones said.

As we touched on Tuesday, the Mavericks need a lot of dominoes to fall in their favor to land both Howard and Williams. Some are personnel-related, some are financially related, and many are entirely out of their control.

However, it was assumed that their plan could work if they held a fire sale on their roster, dumping everyone except Dirk Nowitzki and the kids under rookie deals.

But Zach Lowe of SI.com took out his calculator, and his math might surprise you: “There is no way I or anyone else I chatted with can see Dallas being able to offer both of these guys max-level contracts. Both would have to take a pay cut if they decide to sign with Dallas together, and that pay cut multiplies over the years. Over a four-year contract that starts at $15.95 million and carries the maximum 4.5 percent annual raises that Dallas can offer, Williams and Howard would earn about $68.2 million each over four years. Howard could earn about $81.27 million on a max-level four-year deal from a non-Orlando team with cap room to offer one — or from Dallas, if the Mavs decide to only offer one huge deal instead of two. Williams could earn about $73.49 million on such a deal over four years. The four-year haircut isn’t so severe for Williams — about $5 million total — but it’s quite severe for Howard. The tax situation in Texas can offset some of that, and the Mavs can also offer the appeal of Nowitzki, a well-liked and very successful coach in Rick Carlisle, first-class facilities, a popular owner, a creative front office and a long track record of winning. But they cannot offer the max to both guys.”

Among matters they cannot control, the Mavs may have caught a break Tuesday as ESPN Radio’s John Ireland reported that Howard and agent Dan Fegan have told the Lakers that he will not sign an extension if he were traded to Los Angeles.

However, their inability to control Lopez’s dominance of the paint was not good. If Lopez – who returned just last week from a broken foot – starts putting together monster games like this, he might just convince the Magic to take him back in a deal that sends Howard to the Nets.

Howard’s list of teams he would sign an extension with are down to the Nets and Mavs (and the Magic, who remain somewhat viable in this mess). But that short list hasn’t stopped other teams from inquiring about the big man.

NBA.com’s Scott Howard-Cooper tweeted Tuesday that Golden State – believed not to have a sniff at re-signing Howard – nevertheless continues pushing: “Warriors continuing push for Dwight Howard deal even without DH commitment to re-signing. Not backing off from risky move, source says. … Biedrins has zero trade value, so GSW offer has to be 3-4 key pieces. Imagine moving Monta, Klay, others and DH walks. But Dubs staying in.” (Hat tip to Ball Don’t Lie)

Although considered a long shot, the Magic are still in the picture because the new CBA allows them to pay Howard significantly more money over a longer deal than any other team.

They also are considered contenders, although the belief is they would have to bulk up their roster to make a serious run.

Which is exactly what Brian Schmitz of the Orlando Sentinel is suggesting: “Nobody wants to see Dwight Howard traded — not the franchise, not the fans, not the media (contrary to public opinion). So, we’re approaching the 11th hour, two weeks before the trade deadline and maybe the Magic can attempt a Hail Mary pass, if Dwight’s open to it. Can Otis Smith pull off a trade to save the franchise and keep Dwight? Does he have enough assets?”

One thing is for sure – it is becoming less and less likely that Howard lands with the Lakers, whose roster issues at the outset of this season are the proverbial chicken coming home to roost.

More from Howard-Cooper: “Somehow this turned into Kobe Bryant dunking on management, Pau Gasol’s feelings, an instant referendum on Jim Buss as future owner, Bryant standing brothers-in-arms with Gasol and Mitch Kupchak issuing a statement. Except this latest Lakers’ storm is none of that. The kind of grand theater that comes all too natural to the Lakers, sure. And it might be noteworthy that Bryant is in the general-manager business again. But it’s little more. The real issue is the tangible: The team with roster concerns at the beginning of the season is the team with roster concerns returning from the All-Star break. The front office is keeping trade options open, no matter how much Bryant pushes for a resolution that allows Gasol to move forward, a stance by Bryant that unnecessarily puts general manager Kupchak in a bad spot. The concern inside the locker room should have been if Buss and Kupchak weren’t weighing trade options. (By the way, how’d things work out last season with a settled roster?) Very little so far is a surprise, apart from an inability to win on the road that borders on refusal.”

So while Kupchak continues to explore deals for Gasol, the leveraged Lakers look for quick fixes. Before the All-Star break, the name being tossed around was Gilbert Arenas.

Now it is Rasheed Wallace, whose ability to play both big spots and desire to win might not be such a bad fit.

From Jim Cavan writing for the New York Times’ Off the Dribble blog: “Whether or not they end up dealing Pau Gasol before the trade deadline, the Lakers need to light a flame under their visibly unnerved power forward. Who better than Wallace, the emotional and spiritual cornerstone of those boringly fantastic Pistons squads, and the guy who nearly helped the Celtics overcome substantial odds and stifle the Lakers in 2010?”

Elsewhere …

Wolves rally to defeat Clippers in starting make/break stretch

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We are going to learn a lot about the Minnesota Timberwolves and the Los Angeles Clippers in the month ahead, especially in the week ahead.

What we learned last night is that the Wolves are a lot deeper than many give them credit for.

After trailing for most of the first three quarters, reserves Michael Beasley and Derrick Williams led the way the as the Timberwolves made their first 10 shots of the fourth quarter and rallied to defeat the Clippers 109-97 Tuesday night.

Williams and Beasley each had 13 points in the fourth. Williams finished the game 9-of-10 from the field, while making all four of his 3-point attempts and all five of his free throws. Beasley was 11-of-15 from the field, making all three of his 3-pointers.

The game began a stretch in which the Wolves will play the Clippers, Lakers and Trail Blazers twice apiece during their first seven games after the All-Star break.

At 18-17, they are tied with the Denver Nuggets for ninth in the Western Conference, a  half-game behind Portland.

Blake Griffin scored 30 points, Chris Paul added 27 and DeAndre Jordan had 14 points and 14 rebounds for the Clippers, who also faltered in the fourth quarter of a 101-98 home loss to the Wolves on Jan. 20. “We’ll see what we’re made of now,” Clippers coach Vinny Del Negro said. “We have a tough road trip coming up. We’re going to have to play on a higher level, especially on the road now, but maybe that will help us come together more.”

From Arash Markasi of ESPN Los Angeles: “The Clippers are a different team now than they were when they last lost to Minnesota a month ago. Paul and Caron Butler were injured, Chauncey Billups was healthy, and Kenyon Martin was in China, trying to figure out a way back to the NBA. The biggest difference with the team outside of roster moves between then and now, however, was supposed to be the Clippers’ ability to close out games. It was a staple of this team in late January and into February. The Clippers had come back from double-digit deficits to win six times, including an 18-point deficit at Portland this month. It was a refreshing change for the Clippers, who had found a variety of ways to squander double-digit leads in the past and simply give up after falling behind by double digits. Suddenly these new-look Clippers, who were supposed to make everyone forget about the past, have drawn comparisons to the Clippers of old in three of their past four losses, to San Antonio, Golden State and Minnesota. All three games were blown in the fourth quarter due to costly errors and horrendous defensive play down the stretch. What was once an aberration is beginning to look like a scary trend for the Clippers as they go on the road for the next six games and play 20 games in 31 days in March. After the game, even Clippers owner Donald Sterling had to shake his head as he looked up at the final stats from Tuesday’s game in the press room. He’s seen his fair share of meltdowns in the past but he usually didn’t have to back one of the highest payrolls in the league to see his team disappoint him.”

One team that found a way to finish at the end was the Boston Celtics, who got Kevin Garnett isolated in the low block against Kyrie Irving on a key late possession for the key bucket in an 86-83 victory that snapped their five-game losing streak.

“It was a win, that’s all it was for us,” Boston coach Doc Rivers said. “It was a good way to end the losing streak, but we have to be better than that. That was awful.”

What Rivers was referring to was Boston failing to hold a 16-point lead in the first quarter, which became a five-point deficit in the third quarter, making the last 12 minutes a possession-by-possession game.

From Steve Bulpett of the Boston Herald: “Rajon Rondo came back from his two-game suspension to go scoreless with 11 assists and five turnovers, while Brandon Bass returned after a six-game injury absence with 12 points as the Celts rebounded after seven losses in their last eight games. Rondo played nearly five minutes less than his average, giving the ball up and missing shots. Avery Bradley got a longer than usual look and had six points, three assists and no turnovers in 16 minutes. “I thought (Rondo) got down on himself because of the turnovers, and you just can’t do that,” said Rivers. “We’re all human; we’re not going to play well every night. But you have to grind every night, and that’s what this team’s going to have to be. We’re going to have to be a grind-it-out basketball team every night.” Rivers was quite aware things could have been quite different had (Anderson) Varejao been here. So when the Cleveland big man passed by the coach’s postgame interview in the hallway, Rivers looked up and said, “Thank you.”

The most stunning result of the night — the Nets defeating the Mavericks 93-92 — came out of Dallas, where Deron Williams prefers the comforts of the Mavs’ home arena to the Nets’ temporary purgatory in Newark. One of the key stories until the March 15 trade deadline is going to be whether the defending champions lop Shawn Maron Marion off their roster in return for an expiring contract, which will give them the flexibility to create to max-salary slots to go after Williams and Dwight Howard.

From Colin Stephenson of the Newark Star-Ledger: “The day after Avery Johnson called Mavericks owner Mark Cuban “a threat” to sign away point guard Deron Williams as a free agent this summer, the Nets shifted into damage control mode. Johnson, at his pregame media briefing, let reporters know he didn’t appreciate the fact everyone focused on that part of the quote rather than the second part, where he talked about how much influence Williams has on everything the Nets are doing these days. And GM Billy King first went on the radio, then talked to reporters, saying he wouldn’t characterize the Mavericks as a threat. “I don’t look at it as a threat,” King said. “I mean, it’s reality. They’ve got cap space, and he’s obviously from Dallas. So I think if you follow Avery, the whole quote, he says ‘But I do think he’ll be playing in Brooklyn next year.’ So … it doesn’t worry me.” Even (Mark) Cuban himself downplayed the notion that the Mavericks will go hard after Williams when he becomes available July 1. “Let me say this: There’s a lot of presumptions going on about what we’re going to do this summer, but you shouldn’t pay attention to anything you’ve read or heard because that’s not the way we approach things,” Cuban said. “We’re the last organization to get one thing in our mind and that’s the only thing we’re going to do … I’m going be opportunistic. We’re going to try to create a championship team, or continue to be a championship team, and that’s evaluating everything in front of you and making the right decisions with the new CBA.”

Elsewhere in the NBA:

  • Derrick Rose’s high-arching shot from the corner with 19.4 seconds to play Tuesday night put the Chicago Bulls ahead and was part of a closing 8-0 run as they defeated the New Orleans Hornets 99-95. Rose had 32 points, six in the finishing run that came after the Hornets had scored 13 straight to take a four-point lead.
  • Ersan Ilyasova tipped in Brandon Jennings’ miss with 2.2 seconds left and the Bucks beat Washington 119-118, handing the Wizards their fifth consecutive loss. Jennings dribbled the ball off his foot with 12 seconds left, then allowed John Wall to get by him and score on a running, 8-foot jumper for a 118-117 Wizards lead with 6.8 seconds to go. After a timeout, Jennings took an inbounds pass and drove left of the lane, attempting a short jumper. It bounced off the rim, but Ilyasova had position and tipped in the miss for the winning points.
  • Isaiah Thomas had 18 points and eight assists and sparked a second-half surge for the Kings, who celebrated a possible new arena deal with a 103-96 victory over the struggling Utah Jazz. The city, the Kings and the NBA announced a tentative deal Monday to finance a new arena that would be built by 2015 and keep the team in Sacramento for many years, quieting talk that the franchise would be moving to Anaheim or Seattle at the end of the season. The City Council will vote on the plan March 6.
  • Danny Granger scored 25 points to help Indiana beat Golden State 102-78 for their fifth straight win. The Pacers topped 100 points for the fourth straight game after doing so just six times before the current stretch. The Warriors finished with season lows in points and field-goal percentage (.341) as Stephen Curry sat out with a strained tendon in his right foot. The Warriors missed him, making just 1 of 17 3s in the first three quarters.
  • Kyle Lowry scored 26 points, Luis Scola  had 15 points and 10 rebounds and the Rockets beat Toronto 88-85. Houston has won four in a row and five of its last six to move seven games over .500 for the first time this season. The Rockets have had to sweat out the last three wins, coming through with clutch baskets and key defensive stops at the end to hang on. Kevin Martin missed a free throw with 11.7 seconds left that gave the Raptors a chance to tie it. But Linas Kleiza missed a long 3-point try, Martin corralled the rebound and the Rockets won for the 18th time in the last 25 games.
  • Doug Collins left the bench between the third and fourth quarters because he felt lightheaded, but gave himself a clean bill of health after the 76ers beat Detroit 97-68 to snap a five-game losing streak. ”I think I got dehydrated,” Collins said. “It’s nothing related to what I had with vertigo. It’s all good.” He missed two preseason games last year because of symptoms related to a concussion, then had neurological testing and treatment for what was diagnosed as vertigo. Collins said he broke a promise to himself by thinking about his team during the All-Star break when he spent time with his family, leading to him not sleeping well for days before resuming the season.

Fantasy Spin: Wednesday Feb. 29

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Nobody saw that coming. In L.A., the Timberwolves clipped the Clippers, behind a career night from rookie Derrick Williams: 9-10 (including 4-4 from deep) for 27 points. Almost as surprising was Michael Beasley getting 30 minutes and scoring 27 of his own. That’s the good news. The bad is, Kevin Love left the game with sore ribs. He says nothing is broken and will try to play tonight, but we’ll see.

Tuesday Reflections

BOS @ CLE: Despite an 0-6 shooting night from Rajon Rondo, the Celtics prevailed. It was Brandon Bass getting the start at C (12 & 7) and Chris Wilcox (5 & 11) coming off the bench, which may continue for a while. Kyrie Irving left briefly with what looked like an elbow injury, then returned to lead the Cavs with 24, while Tristan Thompson (a Spin fave) had 13 and 10.

GSW @ IND: No Stephen Curry, no chance for the Warriors. Nate Robinson got the 25+ minutes I expected, just didn’t do much. My other hunch Brandon Rush did OK, with 14 & 7. It was all over in the third quarter, so once again the Pacers starters got plenty of rest at the end – Frank Vogel used all 13 of his players.

PHI @ DET: Forget what I said about the Pistons showing signs of life. That was a cadaverous effort, getting blown out of their own gym by 29. Ben Gordon shot 1-10, Tayshaun Prince 2-10. For the Sixers, Elton Brand returned with 10 points in 22 minutes and the bench was great as usual.

WAS @ MIL: I’m not really high on owning Trevor Booker (especially with Andray Blatche returning soon) but you have to admire his motor. 20 points and 11 boards was almost enough to lead the Wizards to an upset. Nick Young had just 7 PTS in 20 minutes and was benched in the second half, as veterans Roger Mason and Maurice Evans sparked the near-upset. Mike Dunleavy, out of nowhere, had 28 points off the Bucks bench.

TOR @ HOU: Not sure where to begin. Jose Calderon and DeMar DeRozan sat glumly on the bench as Anthony Carter and Leandro Barbosa played the fourth quarter of a close game. Linas Kleiza did play, but was out-of-sync, and it remains to be seen if he can handle back-to-backs. It was the Kyle Lowry show, as he played even better than the great (25 PTS) box score line.

NOH @ CHI: Hmm, we thought Emeka Okafor and/or Jason Smith would play. Maybe tonight? Instead, it was Chris Kaman (17 & 11) almost sparking a huge upset. Derrick Rose (32) and an energetic Joakim Noah (15 PTS, 16 REB, 2 BLK) led the Bulls.

NJN @ DAL: Speaking of upsets, if you had the Nets to win in Dallas, you’re buying today. Brook Lopez made up for lost time with a 38-point explosion and Kris Humphries pulled down 15 boards. Deep leaguers take note: Gerald Green played 19 minutes and scored 10 points off the NJ bench. For the Mavs, Vince Carter was all but useless. Rodrigue Beaubois got 24 minutes in his return, and may have a few big nights until Delonte West returns.

UTA @ SAC: DeMarcus Cousins (22 & 18) led the way, Isaiah Thomas (18 PTS, 8 AST) ran the show. The Jazz big men were strangely quiet, particularly  – Paul Millsap — 4 PTS and only 2 REB in 25 minutes. On a more positive note, Devin Harris owners can breathe easier after his 18 & 7 and with Earl Watson getting less than 17 minutes.

Leaps of Faith

ORL @ WAS: As the Dwight Howard trade watch becomes 24/7, we’ll see how he and his teammates respond. “I am done with young guys,” said Randy Wittman last night, with JaVale McGee and Nick Young — not exactly rookies — the main targets of his frustration. Consider benching both tonight if you have options.

OKC @ PHI: A tough assignment for the Sixers. If only there were “sneaky” fantasy players on the Thunder. Instead, it’s stars like Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook every night, capably supported by Serge Ibaka and James Harden.

GSW @ ATL: This could get ugly for the road Warriors. Tired, apathetic and missing Stephen Curry, they may be facing a full Hawks lineup as an optimistic Joe Johnson is a game-time decision.

CLE @ NYK: The time off can only help the Knicks jell; the more Jeremy Lin plays with both Amare Stoudemire and Carmelo Anthony, the better they should get. We’re watching the SG spot, where Landry Fields continues to start but J.R. Smith is looming. It could get even more crowded when Iman Shumpert is 100%.

CHA @ DET: Let’s guess that the Pistons will be somewhere between embarrassed and ashamed. Let’s assume they won’t turn the ball over 23 times. The Bobcats still have a chance. You couldn’t pay me to watch this game, but as a Bismack Biyombo speculator, I’ll check the box score. Gerald Henderson is expected to play and should be owned, if not started.

TOR @ NOH: Both teams will be tired but the Hornets played better last night and the Raptors’ rotation is very hard to figure. Andrea Bargnani was on the bench in street clothes; just his presence on a road trip is encouraging but we have no idea when he’ll play.

MIL @ BOS: Drew Gooden took a hard fall last night and didn’t return. At best, he has a sore back to go with his sore wrist. Ersan Ilyasova remains the best Buck to own, though it will be interesting to see if Mr. Dunleavy can repeat last night’s very impressive performance.

DAL@ MEM: Zach Randolph participated in all but the contact portion of practice. Marreese Speights is still the starting PF, for now.

POR @ DEN: There are rumblings that Ty Lawson and Nene will return, and Danilo Gallinari is close. Corey Brewer maintains very temporary fantasy value. The Blazers may continue to start Jamal Crawford over Raymond Felton, an interesting experiment in playing without a playmaker.

CHI @ SAS: Manu Ginobili did participate in practice, though his return is indefinite. Gary Neal, Kawhi Leonard and Tiago Splitter are gimpy. T.J. Ford might play, and is a possible add for deep leaguers. For the Bulls, Richard Hamilton started last night; how Rip is used in a back-to-back might give us a read on his health.

HOU@ UTA: Two teams going in opposite directions. I might play Josh Howard, who appears to have taken over the starting job of injured Raja Bell, perhaps more than temporarily.

MIN @ LAL: Check the updates on Kevin Love, who may sit this one out. Nikola Pekovic would be in big trouble against Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol with anyone else at PF. Michael Beasley could be showcased, as rumors of a trade to the Lakers continue to swirl.

It’s the night of reckoning in my Elimination Roto league, discussed at length here on Sunday. My season could be over, or I could add an all-star tomorrow, for nothing. Either way, the Spin will be here, and on Twitter.

Tuesday’s Post-Game Notes

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  • Rajon Rondo had 11 assists, 5 turnovers, and did not score. Only three other players have had scoreless, 5 turnover games this season, but the three combined for only eight assists.
  • Brandon Bass and Chris Wilcox both returned to Boston’s lineup.
  • Monto Ellis, expected to pick up production with Curry injured, shot just 1-6 in the second half.
  • Derrick Rose looked fantastic right out of the All-Star Break, scoring 32 points with 9 assists, 3 steals, and 2 blocks.
  • The Houston Rockets have been out rebounded in seven consecutive games.
  • Mike Dunleavy scored 28 points in their one point win over the Wizards.
  • Jason Terry took over 6th place on career 3-pointers made. He is only shy 40 more to pass Peja Stojakovic.
  • Tyson Chandler still remains the only Maverick to not receive his ring.
  • The Jazz are 3-12 on the road this season.
  • According to Elias Sports Bureau, TimberWolves rookei Derrick Williams went 9-10 from the floor, 4-4 from long range, and 5-5 from the free throw line. He is the first player in NBA history to shoot 90% from the field (min. 10 fga), perfect from 3-point range (min. 4 att.) and free throws (min. 5 att.)  in a single game.

Tweet of the Day: John Wall

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Great fight as a team tonite but came up short wit a 1point lost...Put that lost on me to many turnovers...#wiznation
@John_Wall
John Wall

I respect taking the blame for such a close loss. Turnovers can kill you, and really determine who wins or loses a game. But Wall has been spectacular lately, and he truly cannot be blamed at all for the terrible season Washington is having. They fell to 7-27 on the season, and theres not much Wall can do about it. Javale Mcgee is not getting it together, Nick Young is not looking like anything more than an offensive scorer, and the rest of the team is simply role players. John Wall has some bright days ahead of him, but his team really needs to help him out.