Bucks’ deal for Redick headlines quiet NBA trade deadline

J.J. Redick went from Orlando to Milwaukee in a multi-player deal. (Fernando Medina/NBAE via Getty Images)
The trade deadline has come and gone. The biggest name traded? J.J. Redick, who went from Orlando to Milwaukee.
Just as notable was the list of players not traded. Despite weeks of rumors, Josh Smith remained in Atlanta, pushing the Hawks’ decision on the 27-year-old soon-to-be free agent to this summer. Other big names who stayed put included Utah’s Al Jefferson and Paul Millsap; Boston’s Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce; the Lakers’ Dwight Howard; Milwaukee’s Brandon Jennings and Monta Ellis; Toronto’s Andrea Bargnani; and Charlotte’s Ben Gordon.
Here’s a list of all the trades from the past two days:
• The Magic trade J.J. Redick, Gustavo Ayon and Ish Smith to the Bucks for Tobias Harris, Beno Udrih and Doron Lamb.
• The Wizards trade Jordan Crawford to Celtics for Leandro Barbosa and Jason Collins.
• The Bobcats trade Hakim Warrick to the Magic for Josh McRoberts.
• The Knicks trade Ronnie Brewer to the Thunder for a 2014 second-round pick and cash considerations.
• The Thunder trade Eric Maynor to the Trail Blazers for the draft rights to Giorgio Printezis and a trade exception.
• The Heat trade Dexter Pittman to the Grizzlies for the rights to Ricky Sanchez and a trade exception.
• The Hawks trade Anthony Morrow to the Mavericks for Dahntay Jones.
• The Suns trade Sebastian Telfair to the Raptors for Hamed Haddadi and a protected second-round pick.
• The Warriors trade Jeremy Tyler to the Hawks for a second-round pick and trade Charles Jenkins to Sixers for a second-round pick.
• The Rockets trade Marcus Morris to the Suns for a 2013 second-round pick.
For a full recap and analysis of the trade deadline, see below.
4:01 p.m.: Warriors cut salary in two trades
The Warriors dipped below the tax line with two deals, sending Jeremy Tyler to the Hawks and Charles Jenkins to the Sixers.
Golden State indeed made its two tax-shaving trades before 3 PM deadline: Jeremy Tyler to Atlanta and Charles Jenkins to Philly—
Marc Stein (@ESPNSteinLine) February 21, 2013
3:29 p.m.: Jazz stand pat
With a major logjam in the frontcourt, the Jazz were expected to be active at the trade deadline. But Utah was surprisingly quiet, keeping Al Jefferson and Paul Millsap, both of whom will be free agents this summer.
3:27 p.m.: Thunder get Brewer from Knicks
The Thunder have received swingman Ronnie Brewer from the Knicks in exchange for a second-round pick, per multiple reports.
Brewer will go for a future second-rounder. Clearing roster spot to sign a buyout guy. Also doing favor for a good guy.—
Marc Berman (@NYPost_Berman) February 21, 2013
Trading Ronnie Brewer opens a roster spot and allows the Knicks to add a player. Kenyon Martin is available.—
Frank Isola (@FisolaNYDN) February 21, 2013
3:13 p.m.: Bobcats send Warrick to Magic
The Bobcats have traded Hakim Warrick to the Magic for Josh McRoberts, according to the Charlotte Observer‘s Rick Bonnell.
BREAKING: Bobcats dealing Hakim Warrick for Josh McRoberts.—
Rick Bonnell (@rick_bonnell) February 21, 2013
3:03 p.m.: Josh Smith to stay in Atlanta
According to multiple reports, Josh Smith will stay in Atlanta. Smith, the most high-profile player on the block, will be an unrestricted free agent this offseason.
Josh Smith will stay in Atlanta, league source tells Y! Sports. No deal.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
The Hawks did not trade Josh Smith, sources tell ESPN—
Brian Windhorst (@WindhorstESPN) February 21, 2013
Atlanta is out of Josh Smith talks with Milwaukee and out of Josh Smith talks, period. The Hawks will not trade him today.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
The Hawks did, however, trade Anthony Morrow to Dallas for Dahntay Jones, per ESPN.com’s Brian Windhorst.
The Hawks have traded Anthony Morrow to Dallas for Dahntay Jones, sources tell ESPN—
Brian Windhorst (@WindhorstESPN) February 21, 2013
Reports are that the Hawks pulled out of a possible three-team trade as the last minute.
Hearing Hawks pulled out of 3 way deal with Bucks & Magic that would've sent Josh Smith to Milwaukee at 2:59 p.m.—
Chad Ford (@chadfordinsider) February 21, 2013
2:58 p.m.: Magic trade Redick to Bucks in three-team deal
The Bucks have acquired J.J. Redick from the Magic, according to a report from Yahoo! Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski. Milwaukee will receive Redick, Gustavo Ayon and Ish Smith; the Magic will receive Doron Lamb, Beno Udrih and Tobias Harris.
Orlando has traded J.J Redick to the Bucks, league source tells Y!—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Milwaukee sends Orlando Doron Lamb, Tobias Harris and Beno Udrih, source tells Y!—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Orlando sends Ayon and Ish Smith to Milwaukee as part of deal for Redick, source tells Y!—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
The Redick deal is part of a three-way trade with Charlotte. As @SpearsNBAYahoo reported, Hakim Warrick goes to Magic for Josh McRoberts.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: One can only hope that this deal comes as a precursor to Monta Ellis’ Milwaukee exodus, but one can never be sure of the Bucks’ cross-wired motivations. We’ve seen the Bucks make moves in the past that seemed to move in several directions at once, and though this summer affords GM John Hammond a chance to start with a relatively clean slate, it seems possible that Milwaukee would attempt to re-sign both Ellis and the newly acquired J.J. Redick when they hit the open market this summer.
Still, Hammond has pawned off a few decent rotation types to acquire the Bird rights of a single, more finished player in Redick, along with some serviceable roster filler in Ish Smith and Gustavo Ayon. It doesn’t hurt that Redick makes far more sense as a component of the Bucks’ reboot than Ellis ever could, but let’s not pretend that the arrival of a good player on an expiring deal is some dream scenario for Milwaukee. Even if the Bucks are able to convince Redick to stay beyond this season, they’ll have to pay him a competitive wage that could complicate their long-term financial outlook. Rebuilding a team isn’t just about finding the right players, after all, but committing to them at the right time; this isn’t necessarily the best time for Milwaukee to be paying high on a solid role player, even if doing so is preferable to breaking the bank for Ellis.
2:57 p.m.: Nets officially out of Smith derby
Despite their best efforts, the Nets are reportedly out of the Josh Smith derby, reports David Aldridge of NBA.com.
Nets are "done" and are officially out of Josh Smith talks, per source.—
David Aldridge (@daldridgetnt) February 21, 2013
2:51 p.m.: Magic discussing three-team trade?
J.J. Redick may yet be traded. Joshua Robbins of the Orlando Sentinel reports that the Magic are working on a three-team trade that would include Redick and the Bucks.
The Magic are working on a 3-way trade, which would include J.J. Redick. Milwaukee is one of the teams.—
Josh Robbins (@JoshuaBRobbins) February 21, 2013
Unclear if it'll get done, but it seems like one last-ditch effort before the 3 p.m. deadline.—
Josh Robbins (@JoshuaBRobbins) February 21, 2013
2:49 p.m.: Thunder send Maynor to Blazers
The Thunder are sending backup point guard Eric Maynor to the Trail Blazers, according to multiple reports.
Eric Maynor going from OKC to the Blazers is 100 percent happening, sources say—
Marc Stein (@ESPNSteinLine) February 21, 2013
League source confirms OKC has traded backup point guard Eric Maynor to Portland for a draft pick.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
Blazers will send the draft rights of Giorgio Printezis to the Thunder as part of the Eric Maynor deal, source tells Y!—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: Eric Maynor has been injured and ineffective since the 2011 playoffs, but even with those asterisks he immediately becomes the best player on Portland’s bench. That says far more about the Blazers than it does about Maynor, but as Portland’s newest import inches back toward his previous form, he’ll give the Blazers a decent option behind standout rookie Damian Lillard.
A move of this ilk seemed inevitable from Oklahoma City’s perspective, as the Thunder have no need — and clearly had no interest — in paying Maynor as a restricted free agent this summer. Instead, they’ve come to rely on the slightly more inconsistent Reggie Jackson, an impressive athlete still feeling his way through the NBA game. The drop-off has ultimately been negligible, and thus the Thunder shave some salary and unload a player who had no place in their long-term plans.
2:46 p.m.: Bargnani staying in Toronto
The Raptors said earlier this week that they expected former No. 1 pick Andrea Bargnani to stay with the team until this summer. That prediction appears to be reality, according to NBA.com’s David Aldridge.
Hearing nothing on potential Bargnani deals. Raptors seemed resigned a week ago that they wouldn't be able to move him.—
David Aldridge (@daldridgetnt) February 21, 2013
2:37 p.m.: Spurs trying to find landing spot
With a logjam in the frontcourt, the Spurs are still trying to find a landing spot for DeJuan Blair, reports CBSSports.com’s Ken Berger.
Spurs are trying "right up to the wire" to find a landing spot for DeJuan Blair, league source says. No deal yet.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
2:32 p.m.: Warriors to stand pat
Despite earlier discussions regarding backup big man Jeremy Tyler, the Warriors will not make any moves, reports Yahoo! Sports’ Marc Spears.
Barring last minute surprise, source says Warriors will not trade seldom-used F-C Jeremy Tyler or make any move. Kings had interest in Tyler—
Marc J. Spears (@SpearsNBAYahoo) February 21, 2013
2:08 p.m.: Smith talks continue
The Bucks and Hawks are still discussing a possible trade for Josh Smith, reports Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports. Wojnarowski reported earlier in the day that Monta Ellis and Ekpe Udoh were among players discussed for Smith and Devin Harris.
Atlanta and Milwaukee still seriously engaged on Josh Smith, league sources tell Y! Sports.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
USA Today Sports‘ Sam Amick confirms Wojnarowski’s report and adds that the Suns aren’t expected to land Smith.
The Suns don't expect to land Atlanta's Josh Smith before deadline, "Won't happen," I'm told. Milwaukee seen as leader in that clubhouse.—
Sam Amick (@sam_amick) February 21, 2013
NBA.com’s David Aldridge notes that the Nets are in talks, but that the Bucks appear to be the favorites.
Nets still hanging on by a thread in Josh Smith talks, while Bucks look like leaders with less than an hour to go.—
David Aldridge (@daldridgetnt) February 21, 2013
2:03 p.m.: Toronto acquires Telfair
The Raptors got the guard they needed, acquiring Sebastian Telfair from the Suns for Hamed Haddadi and a second-round pick, reports ESPN.com’s Chris Broussard.
Sebastian Telfair to Toronto For Hamed Haddadi deal done, source says—
Chris Broussard (@Chris_Broussard) February 21, 2013
In addition to Haddadi, Phoenix also gets 2nd round pick from Toronto for Telfair—
Chris Broussard (@Chris_Broussard) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: This was a natural move, given that rookie guard Kendall Marshall had recently overtaken Telfair as Phoenix’s backup point guard. Telfair had a quietly dependable season for the Suns last year, but has seen his play regress along with the general quality of Phoenix’s roster this season. That — along with his $1.6 million expiring deal — made him imminently tradable, and it just so happened that the Raptors were in the market for an extra ball-handler after dealing steady playmaker Jose Calderon. Telfair doesn’t exactly fill that void, but he’ll lift the burden from an overextended John Lucas III and round out Toronto’s bench for the year.
1:58 p.m.: Nuggets not expected to make a deal
The Nuggets had been shopping third-string center Timofey Mozgov, who was acquired in the deal for Carmelo Anthony in 2011, but CBSSports.com’s Ken Berger reports that the team will stand pat the deadline.
Denver, which had been soliciting offers for Timofey Mozgov, does not expect to make a deal before the deadline, source says.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
1:48 p.m.: Heat send Pittman to Grizzlies
The Heat have traded backup center Dexter Pittman to the Grizzlies for a second-round pick and a trade exception, reports Yahoo! Sports’ Marc Spears.
Heat has agreed to send forward-center Dexter Pittman and a second round pick to the Grizzlies for a trade exception, sources tell Y! Sports—
Marc J. Spears (@SpearsNBAYahoo) February 21, 2013
The Grizzlies will get Miami's 2013 second-round pick in the trade, which would be 59th today, a source said.—
Marc J. Spears (@SpearsNBAYahoo) February 21, 2013
Heat will get rights to Ricky Sanchez, who is playing in Argentina at moment, as part of Pittman deal.—
Brian Windhorst (@WindhorstESPN) February 21, 2013
1:45 p.m.: First deal of the day
We have the first deal of the day. According to NBA.com’s David Aldridge, Jordan Crawford has been traded to the Celtics. Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports reports that the Wizards will receive Leandro Barbosa (who has an expiring contract and is out for the rest of the season with a knee injury) and Jason Collins.
Source: Wizards guard Jordan Crawford will be traded to the Celtics.—
David Aldridge (@daldridgetnt) February 21, 2013
Celtics will send the Leandro Barbosa expiring contract to the Wizards for Jordan Crawford, league source tells Y! Sports.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Wizards also are getting veteran C Jason Collins from Boston as part of Jordan Crawford deal, per source.—
David Aldridge (@daldridgetnt) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: As much as I understand the Wizards wanting to unload Jordan Crawford, I’m not grasping what about him is so rotten that they would just give him away. Crawford is owed a paltry $1.2 million this season and $2.2 million next year, after which Washington could have decided whether he was worth fighting for in restricted free agency (hint: he’s not). In the meantime, the Wizards would have a shot-happy bench player whom they could choose to use or not. Instead, they’ll have the expiring contract of a player who has been ruled out for the season, a marginally decreased payroll and the same nonexistent amount of cap room they had previously. The sole gain here is a more permanent cure for Crawford-induced headaches, but is ditching an asset — even a marginal one — really so preferable to buying some extra Tylenol?
1:28 p.m.: Smith claims he didn’t ask for the max
The Josh Smith trade saga has been months in the making, but the rumors really started to pick up after Smith claimed he was worth a max contract as a free agent this summer. But Smith is now claiming he never asked for the max, per NBA.com’s Sekou Smith.
Josh Smith; "I never asked for the max. Those words never came out of my mouth."—
Sekou Smith (@SekouSmithNBA) February 21, 2013
Sekou further quotes Josh Smith in saying that ”Atlanta will be on my list in free agency.” With no trades on the immediate horizon, it appears the Hawks forward is keeping all his options open.
1:20 p.m.: C’s, Wiz talking Melo for Crawford
The Wizards have been shopping Jordan Crawford all day, and they might finally have a buyer in the Celtics, says Yahoo! Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski.
Celtics, Wizards discussing Fab Melo for Jordan Crawford, league sources tell Y! Sports.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
1:10 p.m.: CBA impacting deadline
The forthcoming luxury tax restrictions are casting a large shadow over the trade deadline, according to several reports.
Doesn't mean big deals won't get done, but teams uncertain about CBA impact, re-signing player it traded for has slowed movement.—
Jeff Zillgitt (@JeffZillgitt) February 21, 2013
Add Pacers to the list of teams squeamish about giving first-round pick for J.J. Redick rental. In new CBA, picks more important than ever.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: The revised collective bargaining agreement can’t stop the truly committed teams from piling up salary, but it does make the luxury tax threshold — which many teams around the league are over or nearing — a bit more fearsome. Taxpaying teams are hindered in the offseason, as tools like the mid-level exception and the sign-and-trade now come with a hitch for those that cross a certain line in terms of overall salary. But even more gruesome is the “repeater tax,” a compounding penalty that applies to teams that fall above the tax line in three out of four consecutive seasons. The repeater tax won’t actually be levied until 2014-15, but this season is still in play as teams grow wary of that “three-out-of-four” criteria, effectively deterring borderline teams from making moves that would put them over the tax line.
On a related note, this could also serve to explain why draft picks are being clutched more tightly at this year’s deadline, despite the fact that some of the picks in play are reportedly in the late 20s. With teams around the league more cost-conscious than ever, the notion of picking up a potential role player on a rookie-scale deal is an incredibly attractive one — even if selecting in that range in the draft rarely produces star-level NBA talent.
1:05 p.m.: Clippers unlikely to shake it up
The Clippers were one of the more active teams in the weeks leading up to the deadline, but reports now say they’re unlikely to make a move before 3 p.m. ET.
Despite 11th-hour push inside for deal, Clippers unlikely to make any big trade today, per source. Team wants to preserve chemistry, depth.—
David Aldridge (@daldridgetnt) February 21, 2013
A person involved in prior iteration of Clippers-Garnett talks said he's detected no renewed push from Clips to revisit deal.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: Precious few teams are able to boast the record and synergy of the Clippers, who have spent large chunks of the season playing at league-best levels. There are surely deals out there if they decided to move Eric Bledsoe or DeAndre Jordan, but for the moment both are important elements of L.A.’s rotation and valued assets for a team rife with aging veterans.
1:00 p.m.: Redick staying in Orlando?
The field for J.J. Redick has been narrowing all afternoon, and now Ken Berger of CBSSports.com says there’s a strong possibility Redick stays in Orlando.
League source involved in J.J. Redick talks now believes there's a strong chance Redick stays in Orlando beyond deadline.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
12:46 p.m.: Deals that won’t happen
Much of the focus today is on the guys who will be traded, but several reports have emerged on guys who will be staying put, including Monta Ellis, who CBSSports.com’s Ken Berger says is “unlikely” to be moved in a deal for Josh Smith.
A possible Bucks deal for Josh Smith is "unlikely" to include Monta Ellis, league source tells @CBSSports. As of now, no deal in place.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
So far, Spurs don't have a deal in place for expiring contract of DeJuan Blair, league sources tell Y! Trade deadline is 3 PM ET.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Portland asking for a 1st round pick for JJ Hickson and finding no takers so far.—
Chris Broussard (@Chris_Broussard) February 21, 2013
Another J.J., Hickson, also has no clear route out of Portland at the moment — even if Blazers downgrade price to second-round pick.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
12:37 p.m.: Hawks to hold on to Smith?
Reports indicated that the Hawks were intent on dealing Josh Smith before the 3 p.m. ET deadline, but ESPN.com’s Chris Broussard is hearing that the probability of a Smith deal has declined.
One exec involved in talks w/ATL for J Smith now saying "50/50 chance he gets traded." That's a downgrade from yesterday.—
Chris Broussard (@Chris_Broussard) February 21, 2013
The Nets still believe they’re in the running for Smith’s services, says the New York Daily News‘ Stefan Bondy.
Nets havent given up on Josh Smith, still believe they're in it, according to a league source.—
Stefan Bondy (@NYDNInterNets) February 21, 2013
12:32 p.m.: Spurs fall out of Redick derby
The stars seemed to be aligning for a J.J. Redick-to-San Antonio trade, but Yahoo! Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski says the Spurs have fallen out of the race for the sharpshooter.
Despite efforts, Spurs will fall short in bid for J.J. Redick, league sources tell Y! Sports.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Judging by earlier reports, that would leave the Sixers, Pacers and Bucks as potential Redick suitors. But Sam Amick of USA Today Sports says don’t rule out Redick staying in Orlando.
Orlando is prepared to hold onto JJ Redick and there's no leader per se, but Pacers, Bucks, Sixers still in mix. Spurs behind at the moment.—
Sam Amick (@sam_amick) February 21, 2013
12:20 p.m.: Wizards’ Crawford drawing interest
The Wizards seem unlikely to make the postseason, but that reportedly won’t keep them from dealing. According to a report from USA Today Sports‘ Jeff Zillgitt, Washington is discussing guard Jordan Crawford with several teams.
While Wizards and Celtics have talked about deal for Jordan Crawford, Mavs and Wizards also discussed Crawford trade.—
Jeff Zillgitt (@JeffZillgitt) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: Jordan Crawford is a nonessential piece for a Washington team that already has its core prospects in John Wall and Bradley Beal. Dallas and Boston both make sense as trade partners looking to add younger pieces at minimal cost. Crawford is primarily a volume scorer at this point, averaging 18.1 points on 16.2 field goal attempts per 36 minutes. The Mavs and Celtics are undoubtedly well aware of this and would be banking on the potential to reform some of Crawford’s worrisome offensive habits in order to make him a more helpful player.
12:13 p.m.: Race for Redick narrowing
We outlined the potential suitors for J.J. Redick below, but according to several reports, that list is getting shorter.
Detroit out of running for JJ Redick, source says—
Chris Broussard (@Chris_Broussard) February 21, 2013
Milwaukee has fallen back in pursuit of Redick, league sources tell Y! Sports. Bucks aren't out of it, but "less likely," one source says.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Going off earlier reports, that leaves the Spurs, Sixers and Pacers as contenders for Redick’s services. Yahoo! Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski, who reported earlier that the Spurs are legitimately in on Redick, further connected the dots with this tweet:
J.J. Redick and his wife own an off-season home in Austin, and with chance to win, prospect of trade to Spurs is beyond appealing to him.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
12:04 p.m.: Smith or bust for Nets
The Nets have been linked with several players this month, but according to a report from Yahoo! Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski if the Nets can’t land Josh Smith, then they’re likely to stand pat.
If Brooklyn doesn't do a deal for Josh Smith — and Nets are a long-shot — they'll probably do nothing at the deadline, sources tell Y!—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
12:00 p.m.: Rockets won’t flip Robinson
There were rumblings that the Rockets acquired Thomas Robinson from the Kings in advance of another deal, but NBA.com’s David Aldridge is hearing that Houston “loves” him and won’t be trading him.
ICYMI: Told unequivocally that the Rockets will NOT flip Thomas Robinson in any trade scenario. Team "loves" him, per source.—
David Aldridge (@daldridgetnt) February 21, 2013
11:49 a.m.: Kings won’t deal Evans, Cousins
Despite reported interest from the Celtics, the Kings have no intention of moving Tyreke Evans or DeMarcus Cousins, reports Yahoo! Sports’ Marc Spears.
Kings Tyreke Evans and DeMarcus Cousins have been given the impression that they would not be dealt, a source said.—
Marc J. Spears (@SpearsNBAYahoo) February 21, 2013
Evans, 23, was the 2010 Rookie of the Year; Cousins, 22, was the No. 5 pick in the 2010 draft. Though Evans will be a restricted free agent this offseason, the pair could serve as the foundation for a Kings team in transition. A Seattle group is expected to purchase and move the Kings to Seattle at the beginning of next season.
11:37 a.m.: Kings’ Evans on the move?
The Kings have already made one surprising move this week. Could another be forthcoming? According to a report from ESPN.com’s Marc Stein, the Celtics are actively pursuing the Kings’ Tyreke Evans, the 2010 Rookie of the Year.
Latest word out of Boston: Celtics making deadline-day run at player they've pursued before … Tyreke Evans—
Marc Stein (@ESPNSteinLine) February 21, 2013
Shortly after that tweet, however, Jason Jones of the Sacramento Bee reported that Evans would not be moved.
Just told Tyreke Evans won't be dealt today by person familiar with the situation. Kings leave for ATL in about 90 minutes—
Jason Jones (@mr_jasonjones) February 21, 2013
11:24 a.m.: Spurs legitimately in on Redick
Several teams are chasing Magic sharpshooter J.J. Redick, but the Spurs could be emerging as a serious threat to land him, says Yahoo! Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski.
I discounted San Antonio-Redick talks a bit earlier, but sources insisting there are legitimate scenarios in play that make Spurs a factor.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: The Spurs don’t have any pressing need for another perimeter shooter, but why miss out on a viable fit who is very much attainable? Redick, Kawhi Leonard and Danny Green would set up the Spurs with a fantastic core of role players to rotate in alongside Tony Parker, Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili, and the acquisition of Redick’s Bird rights would give San Antonio a good shot at re-signing him for the long haul. San Antonio is still an unlikely landing spot, given the poor value of its first-round pick and minimal trade assets, but the team would be a great fit for Redick.
11:17 a.m.: Knicks to stand pat?
According to reports, the Knicks are likely to stay quiet at the deadline, meaning no trade of Iman Shumpert, who was the subject of rumors earlier this month. But ESPNNewYork’s Ian Begley says the Knicks could still make a move, just not a trade.
League source expects #Knicks to mostly stand pat at deadline. One piece of business? Moving a contract in an effort to add Jermaine O'Neal.—
Ian Begley (@IanBegley) February 21, 2013
10:50 a.m.: Phoenix, Milwaukee emerging as Smith favorites?
We outlined the Bucks’ interest in Josh Smith below. The latest report from Yahoo! Sports Adrian Wojnarowski suggests they aren’t the only ones involved, though.
Milwaukee, Phoenix emerging as frontrunners for Josh Smith deal, league sources tell Y! Sports. Boston still a "darkhorse," one source says.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
ESPN.com’s Chris Broussard says that, contrary to prior reports, Monta Ellis will not be involved.
Sources insist Bucks not trading Monte Ellis to ATL in JSmith deal—
Chris Broussard (@Chris_Broussard) February 21, 2013
10:41 a.m.: Redick rumors
Impending free agent J.J. Redick has generated plenty of interest in the weeks leading up to the deadline, and he remains a hot commodity, according to several reports.
Pacers, Spurs, Pistons, Bucks and Sixers all interested in Magic's JJ Redick, a source said. Even so, Magic could still keep sharpshooter.—
Marc J. Spears (@SpearsNBAYahoo) February 21, 2013
Source says Bucks, Pacers, Spurs, 76ers trying hardest on JJ Redick.—
David Aldridge (@daldridgetnt) February 21, 2013
Spurs interested on J.J. Redick, but Magic can do better than San Antonio's late first-round pick in 2013.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Reports out of Orlando suggest that the rebuilding Magic will look to deal him.
Guess here is Magic have decided J.J. Redick's price too high for back-up SG to stay. Want some sort of compensation in trade today.—
Brian K. Schmitz (@MagicInsider) February 21, 2013
As Redick indicated last night, there's no guarantee he'd choose to re-sign w/ the #Magic this summer.—
Josh Robbins (@JoshuaBRobbins) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: It’s not surprising that there’s an extensive market for Redick, who works well playing any style and fits on just about any roster. He’s a low-maintenance offensive piece who is efficient with his touches and can immediately help to space the floor as he picks up the schematic basics of a new team. He’s also a much better defender than most understand. He’s not a star, but he’s an ideal role-playing wing with no salary obligations beyond this season.
10:16 a.m.: Bucks continue to push for Smith
The Bucks have been linked to Josh Smith over the last few days, and, according to Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports, the Hawks and Bucks are now “seriously” negotiating.
Hawks, Bucks seriously talking on Josh Smith deal, sources tell Y! Monta Ellis, Ekpe Udoh among players discussed for Smith, Devin Harris.—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Ben Golliver broke down the cons of a Milwaukee trade on Wednesday: “The Hawks would ideally find a way to get an additional younger asset and/or pick(s) in a Smith deal. Ellis’ shooting inefficiency cuts deeply into his value as a player and he’s not a long-term fit in Atlanta with Lou Williams already in the fold (although he’s currently injured).”
Ken Berger of CBSSports.com also reports that the Bucks are in on Smith, which could lead to another move as well.
Bucks "keep upping the ante" in pursuit of J.J. Redick, source says. Could mean confidence growing that they will land Josh Smith.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
Remember, Bucks' pursuit of Redick based on scenario where Monta Ellis is sent to Atlanta as part of proposed Smith deal.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
9:55 a.m.: Guards on the move
Several guards could be on the move prior to the 3 p.m. ET deadline.
• In need of another ball-handler, the Raptors have emerged as the favorite for Sebastian Telfair, according to Yahoo! Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski.
• The Mavs have been reluctant to add future salary but are reportedly interested in the Bucks’ Beno Udrih, who has a $7.3 million expiring contract, reports ESPN.com’s Marc Stein.
• One guard who might not be on the move: Ben Gordon. CBSSports.com’s Ken Berger reports that the Nets have “pulled the plug” on talks for Gordon.
• The Pacers are shopping D.J. Augustin, according to Yahoo! Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski.
9:20 a.m.: Smith to Rockets?
The Rockets aren’t done dealing, according to Ken Berger of CBSSports.com.
The Rockets, flush with assets, are involved at "high level" in Josh Smith talks, league source says.—
Ken Berger (@KBergCBS) February 21, 2013
But Yahoo! Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski says the price for Smith, the most high-profile player currently on the block, is too high right now.
Houston is still lingering in Josh Smith talks, but Atlanta's desire for Asik and Parsons is a non-starter for Rockets, sources tell Y!—
Adrian Wojnarowski (@WojYahooNBA) February 21, 2013
Rob Mahoney’s take: Houston is certainly the most intriguing destination for Smith still in play. The Rockets provide the most natural fit for Smith and have the potential to furnish the Hawks with good, cheap assets. Atlanta seems to be looking to get a return on Smith without compromising its future cap space, and Houston could offer some combination of the newly acquired Thomas Robinson (who can be flipped immediately because the Rockets are under the salary cap), Donatas Motiejunas, Terrence Jones and Royce White — all of whom are in the first year of their rookie deals.
That said, Houston’s cap space puts GM Daryl Morey in a unique negotiating position. The Rockets will have a chance to make a run at Smith in free agency, and thus Morey can drive as hard a bargain as he pleases. If they land Smith, then they’ll have an upper hand in their attempts to re-sign him this summer via Bird rights. If not, then the Rockets’ season goes on, and they’ll circle back to Smith in a few months.
9 a.m.: Deadline storylines to watch
The ever-active Rockets made the first moves of deadline week on Wednesday night, acquiring Thomas Robinson from the Kings in a six-player deal and sending Marcus Morris to Phoenix for a second-round pick. What’s in store for Thursday? Here are some key questions that will shape deadline day:
• Where will Josh Smith land? The Hawks are committed to dealing the soon-to-be free-agent forward, as SI.com’s Chris Mannix reported. But ESPN.com reported early Thursday that the Hawks were struggling to find a deal they liked for the 27-year-old, who believes he deserves a max contract this summer. Brooklyn, Boston and Milwaukee have been among the teams linked to Smith. CBSSports.com reported that Smith would be open to re-signing with Milwaukee if traded there. (Meanwhile, the Bucks are not dealing Brandon Jennings, according to ESPN.com.)
• What will the Celtics do? Boston reportedly told Rajon Rondo that he won’t be traded, but the Celtics have been active exploring their options amid season-ending injuries to Rondo, Jared Sullinger and Leandro Barbosa. Yahoo! Sports reported that the Celtics and Nets discussed a deal for Paul Pierce, while Boston and the Clippers have had talks about Kevin Garnett, who must give his consent to be traded. Here’s how Steve Bulpett of the Boston Herald characterized the Celtics-Clippers situation:
Sources were saying again [Wednesday] that while no hard bargaining has taken place, the Clips are aware it would cost them Eric Bledsoe and DeAndre Jordan to get Garnett and a greater chance at the 2013 NBA championship.
• Will Utah deal a big man? Jazz starters Al Jefferson and Paul Millsap will be free agents in July, and Utah has young, promising big men Derrick Favors and Enes Kanter played behind the two vets. Many around the league have long anticipated that at least one of Jefferson or Millsap would be dealt this season, but the Jazz have won 12 of 17 and are a half-game behind Golden State for sixth in the Western Conference.
• What happens with J.J. Redick? The Magic shooting guard, in the midst of a career year, will be a free agent in July. Several teams are reportedly interested, from championship-contending San Antonio to playoff-contending Milwaukee to lottery-bound Minnesota. Orlando is said to be looking for a first-round pick as part of a package for Redick, who is making $6.2 million.
• Will the Lakers do something big? Short answer: No. At least that’s the word from GM Mitch Kupchak, who is on record saying the team won’t be trading Dwight Howard or Pau Gasol before the deadline.
8:45 a.m.: Deadline primer
To get you ready for the deadline, here’s a look at SI.com’s recent trade coverage:
• Rob Mahoney examined the wish lists for the top teams in the Eastern Conference and the Western Conference and assessed the puzzle that is Monta Ellis, one of the names on the block.
• Ben Golliver separated fact from fiction and examined the possible destinations for Hawks forward Josh Smith.
• Here was the trade buzz from Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and early Thursday.
• Chris Mannix weighed in on the potential buyers and sellers.
• Ian Thomsen evaluated the development of Orlando shooting guard J.J. Redick, who has blossomed into a solid shooting guard and attractive trade chip.
• And here’s our look at some of the biggest in-season trades in NBA history.
I hate Dahntay Jones. That is all.
For all the fanfare, as best as I can tell, three teams came up better for the immediate, second half of this season.. The Bucs, Dallas, and Houston. Bucs get more depth in the backcourt (a bit up front, also) in a playoff run, and, more options in the backcourt going forward into next season. Dallas gets more long-range firepower (scoring is badly needed). Houston, gets even stronger in its playoff run.