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Kori Ellis
03-29-2007, 04:33 PM
The 25 best contracts in the NBA
By John Hollinger
ESPN Insider
Archive

On Wednesday I took a look at the NBA's worst contracts, so it's only fair that today I look at the other side of the coin: The league's most valuable contracts.

But wait … there's a catch. You see, because of the rookie salary scale specified in the league's collective bargaining agreement, picking out the most valuable contracts is like shooting fish in a barrel. LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, Carmelo Anthony … all these guys are making a fraction of their true market value because of the distortions brought about by the rookie salary scale.

Thus, a list of the most valuable contracts quickly degenerates into a list of the league's youngest players. So instead, let's make this a bit more challenging (not to mention more informative) by taking a look at the best non-rookie contracts in the NBA right now. As you'll see, finding a decent player for less than the midlevel exception is a relative rarity, and in the salary-cap era those teams that do it are way ahead of the game.

In fact, you'll notice that most of these contracts belong to the NBA's best and most admired organizations. There are a few exceptions -- the list includes two Bucks, two Bobcats, a Grizzly and a Hawk -- but by and large those who shop wisely have reaped the rewards in the standings.

And in an odd twist, this list changes at a much faster rate than the list of bad contracts. Because most low-dollar contracts tend to be short-term arrangements, the majority of these players will be hitting free agency this summer and looking to get a salary that's more commensurate with their production.

But for now, they're the league's most underpaid players. Here's a look at the guys providing the most bang for the buck this year (figures rounded where necessary):

1. Chauncey Billups, Pistons ($6.4 million)
This was, quite simply, the greatest midlevel exception signing of all time. Billups has made two All-Star teams and won a Finals MVP while becoming the key crunch-time shot-maker on one of the league's most successful teams.

Not bad for a vagabond who had been a backup in Minnesota the year before he came to Detroit. But the gravy train is about to end for the Pistons -- Billups will be this summer's most coveted free agent.

2. Alonzo Mourning, Heat ($2.5 million)
Gotta love those hometown discounts. Mourning knowingly signed for well below his market value this past summer so he could stay with the Heat, providing Miami with one of the league's best defensive players as well as its best backup center.

In a market where even mediocre centers earn four times as much, he's provided the Heat with a tremendous advantage in their title defense.

3. Jose Calderon, Raptors ($2.3 million)
Man, where did that come from? On a per-minute basis, Calderon has been one of the best point guards in all of basketball this season, averaging 16.9 points and 9.4 assists per 40 minutes while shooting 53.4 percent from the floor.

He's a big reason behind the Raps' surprising run to the Atlantic Division crown and, unlike a lot of players on this list, he's still under contract for another season.

4. Chris Webber, Pistons ($407K)
After appearing on Wednesday's bad contracts list, it's time for C-Webb to take a spin on the good side. Going to Detroit for the veteran's minimum propelled the Pistons' second-half surge that has them sitting atop the Eastern Conference and, perhaps, poised for their third trip to the Finals in four years.

Helping matters greatly is C-Webb's uncharacteristically accurate shooting -- he's at 52.1 percent after hitting 39.1 percent, 43.4 percent and 38.7 percent in parts of three seasons as a Sixer. Like Billups, he's due for a big raise this summer.

5. Mo Williams, Bucks ($1.9 million)
An enlightened free-agent pickup three years ago when the Bucks plucked him off Utah's roster, Williams has emerged as one of the league's top young point guards with averages of 17.5 points, 6.3 assists and 4.9 rebounds.

His continued improvement has been a bright spot in an otherwise lackluster Milwaukee campaign, but as with Billups it's time to pay the piper -- he's a free agent after the season and, at worst, will triple his income.

6. Manu Ginobili, Spurs ($8.2 million)
When Ginobili signed his six-year, $52 million deal two years ago, some wondered whether the Spurs overpaid. Not anymore, as the Argentine star is currently having his best season. He's averaging a career-high in points while playing just 27.6 minutes per game, shooting 41.9 percent on 3-pointers, and ranks ninth in the entire league in Player Efficiency Rating -- ahead of Gilbert Arenas, Steve Nash and Tracy McGrady, among others.

He's likely to win the Sixth Man award, and best of all he's under contract for three more years.

7. Steve Nash, Suns ($10.5 million)
Here's all you need to know -- the league's two-time MVP doesn't make the max. Far from it. In retrospect, I don't know what's more amazing -- that Phoenix was able to nab him at this price, or that Dallas thought the offer too rich to match. Either way, his bargain deal is the reason Phoenix has been able to pay its other stars and skirt the luxury tax ... at least for now.

Nash is having his best season yet (47.3 percent on 3-pointers? With almost all of them coming off the dribble? Are you kidding me?) and is under contract for three more years, though the last one is an option year for the Suns. Hmmm … think they'll pick it up?

8. Mikki Moore, Nets ($1.1 million)
One nice thing about the league's recent rule changes is that it's allowed guys like Moore -- inside players who lack muscle -- to have a career. The slender seven-footer cost New Jersey only a second-round pick in 2009 after he was squeezed out of Seattle's frontcourt picture a year ago. Think the Sonics regret that one?

All Moore has done is shoot 60.1 percent to help keep the Nets' playoff hopes afloat after Nenad Krstic was lost for the season.

9. Gerald Wallace, Bobcats ($5.5 million)
He's the Marcus Camby of small forwards -- he comes out of nowhere to block shots, fills up the stat sheet in every category, and misses 10-20 games a year with injuries. Nonetheless, Wallace is the league's most underappreciated star. Though he's the Bobcats' highest-paid player, that's not saying much -- he's way undervalued in the larger market and should remedy that situation by opting out of his deal this summer.

10. Ime Udoka, Trail Blazers ($745K)
Look what we found. Invited to the Blazers' training camp partly because, hey, he lives in Portland so why not, Udoka made the team, won a starting job, and established himself as the team's defensive stopper. Best of all, he's showed he can play some offense too, hitting 41.1 percent on 3-pointers. Not bad for a 29-year-old guy with 12 previous NBA games under his belt. He should get rewarded for it this summer.

11. DeShawn Stevenson, Wizards ($932K)
Stevenson took a financial hit when he opted out of the final year of his contract with Orlando, but his pain was the Wizards' gain. Washington picked him up on the cheap to replace Jared Jeffries, and got a defensive stopper with more scoring ability.

Stevenson has surprised with his long-range shooting (41.5 percent from 3) and should get a lot more attention when he tests the free-agent market again this summer, especially since he doesn't turn 26 'til next week.

12. Caron Butler, Wizards ($7.4 million)
The contract extension Butler signed a year ago already seems looking like a bargain for Washington, as Butler blossomed into one of the game's top small forwards this year and made his first All-Star Game.

While a recent battle with knee problems has slowed him down a bit, his production is undeniable -- 19.1 points, 7.5 boards and 2.1 steals -- and he's done it while shooting a career-best 46.3 percent. Moreover, he's under contract for four more years.

13. Tony Parker, Spurs ($9.5 million)
As with Butler, Parker's contract extension is quickly turning into a bargain. His six-year, $66 million deal is great value for a "1" with his productivity -- he ranks sixth among point guards in PER, is one of the better defenders at his position, and at 24 should offer several more years of production at this level.

He's also en route to a second straight season of shooting over 50 percent (he's at 51.9 percent right now), a remarkable feat for any guard who isn't a Canadian guy named Steve.

14. Matt Carroll, Bobcats ($1.2 million)
Carroll is one of the league's most quietly productive scorers. Note that I didn't say shooter -- I said scorer. In his past three seasons he has averaged 20.8, 18.6 and 19.1 points per 40 minutes. Yes, he can stroke it from outside (43.0 percent on 3s), but it's his knack for getting to the stripe -- where he shoots 90.6 percent -- that separates him from the other catch-and-shoot guys.

At $1.2 million, he's been a bargain for the Bobcats, but he'll get paid this summer.

15. Zaza Pachulia, Hawks ($4 million)
The Hawks have given their critics plenty of ammo in recent years, but they got this one right. While the Chris Kamans and Sam Dalemberts of the world make more than twice as much dough, Pachulia has been vastly more productive with his workmanlike game. This year he's upped his numbers to 17.3 points and 9.9 boards per 40 minutes thanks to an improved mid-range J, and his 46.9 percent shooting is a career-high.

Plus, his deal runs two more seasons at the same price.

16. Charlie Bell, Bucks ($755K)
Nobody showed much interest in Bell coming out of Michigan State because they thought at 6-3 he was too small to play shooting guard. Guess not. Pressed into service as a starter and defensive stopper this season, he's put together a second straight solid campaign and figures to reap the rewards in a couple more months.

Interesting side note: Despite the Bucks' struggles, Milwaukee's backcourt of Bell and Williams is easily the league's most underpaid.

17. Eddie Jones, Heat ($337K)
As with Webber, Jones has one bad contract and one good one. The good one is the deal he signed to join Miami after Memphis waived him, shoring up Miami's wing rotation just as Dwyane Wade checked out with a shoulder injury and allowing the Heat to go on a season-saving winning streak in March.

Since coming to Miami, he's shot better, too. In fact, his 47.2-percent mark from the floor is far better than he fared in any of his other five seasons in a Heat uniform.

18. Jason Kapono, Heat ($1.2 million)
It took a while, but Mr. Kaponovich has established himself as one of the league's most potent perimeter threats. A bystander a year ago while the Heat were winning a title, he won a starting job this season by shooting a blistering 51.3 percent from downtown.

He also won the 3-Point Shootout in Vegas and has posted career highs from both the field (49.6 percent) and the line (88.7 percent). Like most of the other guys on this list, he'll get a big raise this summer,

19. Matt Barnes, Warriors ($788K)
Though Barnes' playing time has greatly diminished of late, he still makes the bargain list thanks to the spark he gave Golden State early in the season. Making the league minimum, Barnes showed a completely unexpected 3-point touch (37.3 percent) and has more than doubled his previous career-best in scoring.

The 27-year-old journeyman should get his first multi-year deal after the season, so maybe he can unpack that suitcase.

20. Chucky Atkins, Grizzlies ($3 million)
A non-story because of the Grizzlies' miserable season, Atkins' performance nonetheless has been remarkable. A 32-year-old, 5-11 guard isn't supposed to have a career year, but Atkins has been fantastic -- 19.3 points and 6.5 assists per 40 minutes, a 57.4 true shooting percentage and, most surprisingly, a career-high 4.1 free-throw attempts per game.

He's on a one-year deal and might have trouble getting paid based on his performance because it's so out of line with his career totals. But it sure as heck doesn't hurt his cause.

21. Rashard Lewis, Sonics ($9.4 million)
The Sonics have been getting near-All-Star performance at below-market rates for the last three years from Lewis, which might explain why he's so itchy to opt out of his deal after the season. Despite an extended injury absence due to torn tendon sheath in his hand, the 6-10 forward is averaging a career-high 22.2 points per game; nearly all his Hollinger stats are career-bests, too.

At 27 years old, he'll be one of the summer's most coveted prizes.

22. Andres Nocioni, Bulls ($4.0 million)
Red Bull is one of the game's better two-way forwards, making the three-year deal he signed with Chicago one of GM John Paxson's best moves. His offensive potency has been a major surprise, getting 21.5 points per 40 minutes this year and hitting 37.9 percent from downtown.

Unfortunately, a severe bout of plantar fasciitis has his season on hold at the moment, and if he can't come back it could negatively impact his free-agent riches this summer.

23. Trevor Ariza, Magic ($3.1 million)
Orlando's second-unit energizer slipped through the cracks in free agency, allowing the Magic to retain him cheaply. Though he missed several weeks with a knee injury, he's been a godsend when healthy.

Ariza is shooting 53.3 percent, rebounding like a power forward and providing wing defense that Orlando's other 2s and 3s simply can't. At only 21 years old, he figures to get a whole lot better, too.

24. Dikembe Mutombo, Rockets ($2.2 million)
It turns out the Rockets weren't just keeping Mutombo around for the unintentional Cookie Monster impersonations. At age 40 (and don't even think about questioning that figure), he's proved to have way more left in the tank than anyone expected.

Taking over for an injured Yao Ming, he helped the Rockets survive by rebounding like crazy -- his 21.8 Rebound Rate is second in the NBA -- and playing his usual finger-wagging defense. No, there hasn't been much offense to go with it, but find me another center this productive for such a low price.

25. Corey Maggette, Clippers ($7 million)
This just in: Corey Maggette is a scoring machine. The Clippers have forgotten this at various times over the past two seasons, but with L.A.'s season in dire straits they seem to have remembered just in time. He's a free-throw generating machine who hits 82.0 percent once he gets there, plus he's a consistent jump shooter and an underrated rebounder.

With 40-minute numbers of 21.7 points and 7.6 boards, one wonders what took the Clips so long to get him in the starting lineup. He comes just as cheaply next season, too.

Kori Ellis
03-29-2007, 04:37 PM
In case anyone missed the worst contracts from yesterday ...


The 25 worst contracts in the NBABy John Hollinger
ESPN Insider
Archive

For about 20 of the NBA's teams, this is the time of year when things get really exciting. They're either pushing for a playoff spot, or already have one sewn up and are gearing up for their postseason run. Either way, the focus is entirely on the here and now.

For the league's bottom-feeders, however, summer can't come soon enough. And inevitably, talk of summer produces talk of free agency. So with visions of offseason glory starting to dance in the heads of the league's lesser lights, it's time to drag out a cautionary tale.

Remember, signing a player to a big-money deal isn't necessarily a good thing -- in fact, sometimes it can be downright disastrous. And until I started researching this story, I didn't realize just how bad it could get.

My task was to come up with the worst contracts in the NBA, and man, there are some doozies out there. Since the season is nearly complete, I'm approaching this task with a particular spin -- those players who gave the least for their team's money in 2006-07.

Amazingly, even though I extended it to include 25 players, it took a jaw-dropping lack of productivity to crack this list. Being merely overpaid wouldn't get you close -- "dead weight" is more what we're looking for here.

As it turns out, there are four different varieties of bad contracts. Thus, I've separated them by group and counted the worst in each category. The envelopes, please:


CATEGORY I: ALREADY WAIVED

These players are still getting paid by their former teams, even though a couple of them haven't suited up in ages. A few others are double dipping, cashing checks from both a former team and a current one.

1. Michael Finley, Mavericks ($16.1 million)
Contrary to what you might think, the worst-case contract scenario isn't paying a lot of money to a guy who can't play. It's shelling out for a guy who can play and then waiving him, allowing him to sign a below-market contract with your closest rival for the championship. That's the case for the Mavs, who are paying Finley superstar money to try to beat them as a Spur. Blame the luxury tax amnesty rule, which offered the Mavs so much savings that they couldn't afford not to cut Finley.

2. Brian Grant, Lakers ($14.8 million) and Celtics ($1.9 million)
Grant is getting paid by two different teams to sit at home and watch his dreadlocks grow. What a country. Chronic knee problems forced him to retire after delivering mighty little as a free agent in Phoenix a year ago (in fact, although the Celtics are cutting the checks, the Suns are the ones paying his salary), but that's a pittance compared to what he's getting from the Lakers.

L.A. made him a luxury tax amnesty cut in 2005 after his salary was included as ballast in the Shaquille O'Neal deal; the outlandish contract to pry him from Portland was originally cut by Pat Riley during his "let's wildly overpay for veteran role players" phase. Speaking of which …

3. Eddie Jones, Grizzlies ($14.9 million)
Riley made the Jones mistake the same summer he picked up Grant, but he's rebounded nicely -- Grant was converted into Shaq, of course, while Jones went to Memphis in the brilliant multiteam deal that netted Jason Williams and Antoine Walker.

Now Jones is back with the Heat while the Grizzlies are stuck with the tab.

4. Chris Webber, 76ers ($17.6 million)
They'll be paying C-Webb next season, too, after reaching a buyout agreement with him earlier this year. Worse yet, Webber miraculously healed as soon as he landed in Detroit.

But as a Sixer, he gave very little -- just 38.7 percent shooting and matador D in 18 contests.

5. Derek Anderson, Blazers ($9.7 million)
Anderson's body started to quit on him almost immediately after he joined Portland on a six-year, $48 million contract in a sign-and-trade with San Antonio. The Spurs got a pair of sharpshooting Steves who went on to announcing careers (Kerr and Smith), and best of all they didn't get stuck with the bitter pill of the final few years on this deal. Anderson ended up being an amnesty cut in 2005 and "won" a ring from the sidelines as a member of last year's Heat.

6. Vin Baker, Celtics ($5.2 million)
I almost hit the floor when I read this, but Baker -- whom Boston released in February of 2004 -- is still getting paychecks from the C's. He's due $5.2 million this year from the leftovers of his behemoth contract, which the Celtics tried to void in 2004 when they released him. The original contract was supposed to expire in 2006, but the two sides agreed to pay out a reduced amount over a longer time period.

Baker also had the privilege of being cut a second time, as the Celtics made him a luxury tax amnesty subtraction in 2005, even though he'd been gone more than a year. Nonetheless, his Boston money will supplement whatever pittance he collected in three appearances in November for Minnesota.

7. Aaron McKie, 76ers ($5.6 million) and Lakers ($2.5 million)
McKie was a luxury tax amnesty cut by the 76ers in 2005, but this didn't deter the Lakers from immediately giving him a two-year, $5 million deal. Unfortunately, this would have been one of those rare times where trusting Billy King's judgment would have been prudent, as McKie has been hobbled and all but worthless for L.A. Between the two bad contracts, he's collecting $8.1 million this year while appearing in 10 games.

8. Calvin Booth, Bucks ($6.6 million)
Booth's still getting the Bucks' bucks after they made him a luxury tax amnesty cut in 2005 -- just months after the Mavs had dumped Booth on Milwaukee in the Keith Van Horn trade.

He's also collecting checks from the Wizards as a third-string center, but he makes only the minimum in D.C.



CATEGORY II: KNICKS :lol

Despite a bevy of buyouts, the league's official dumping ground for bad contracts still has plenty of inventory:

1. Steve Francis, Knicks ($15.1 million this year; two years remaining after this one)

He can still be an impact player when he feels like it, but he's not exactly wowing his latest employers with his effort level.

A quick anecdote: Watching the Orlando-New York game on Monday night, I saw Orlando's J.J. Redick drift out to the 3-point line, catch the ball and calmly drain a triple with no pressure. Stunned, I hit rewind. My eyes didn't deceive me -- there was no screen for Redick, nor any kind of deceptive move or cut off the ball whatsoever. The man allegedly guarding him -- Francis -- just stood there and watched Redick walk out to the perimeter and shoot it.

On the next trip Francis stood like a statue on the weak side while Darko Milicic went down the middle for a screen-and-roll dunk. As I thought to myself, "If I was coaching right now, I'd call timeout just to yank the guy," Knicks coach Isiah Thomas did just that, inserting unheralded rookie Mardy Collins.

Quoth Thomas after the game, in his glass-half-full way, "I just felt [Mardy Collins would] give us more defensively." Um, yes, that's one way to look at it. Zeke just as easily could have said, "I felt a traffic cone would give us more defensively." Methinks there's another buyout in the Knicks' future.

2. Stephon Marbury, Knicks ($17.2 million this year; two years remaining)
He's a rarity on this list in that he still has a pulse, but Marbury's deal is so gargantuan and his reputation around the league so tattered that his deal is still radioactive. Besides, his numbers have dipped the past two years -- he's testing his career lows in scoring and shooting this season -- and they don't figure to get better over the final two years of his contract as he gets into his 30s.

3. Jerome James, Knicks ($5.4 million this year; three years remaining)
A spectacular bust even by the standard of recent midlevel exceptions, almost all of whom have been busts. James did have six points and two rebounds on Monday, but fantasy players shouldn't pick him up thinking he can provide the coveted 6-and-2 combo every night -- it was only the fifth time he's done it this season.

4. Malik Rose, Knicks ($7.5 million this year; two years remaining)
While Rose is still marginally useful as a fifth big man, he's a 6-7 frontcourt player who turns 33 in November, and he's shot 37.4 percent and 38.6 percent the past two seasons. Rose is the one truly bad contract the Spurs have inked in the past decade. :(

They unloaded their mistake, but it came at a price -- one of the draft picks from the Rose trade became David Lee.


CATEGORY III: ALREADY-WAIVED KNICKS

Amazingly, there's enough overlap between the first two categories to produce a third one. The New Yorkers are paying nearly an entire salary cap to guys who haven't played a game for them this season, and that's without adding Francis to the list.

1. Jalen Rose, Suns ($14.6 million)
In a bizarre move, the Knicks bought out Rose less than a year after trading for him, granting the Raptors enough cap space to rebuild their Euro-roster and coming away with only a first-round pick that became Renaldo Balkman.

Had New York hung on to Rose's expiring deal, it might have been able to pry Pau Gasol from Memphis at the trade deadline. Now we'll never know.

2. Maurice Taylor, last seen with Sacramento ($7.5 million)
The veteran big man was well past his prime when Houston unloaded him on the Knicks in a baggage swap -- the Rockets got Vin Baker and Moochie Norris. Let's just say that trade left the league's balance of power unaffected. Like Rose, Taylor was bought out before the season and played 12 games in Sacramento before being waived in January; one presumes that was his last NBA stop.

3. Shandon Anderson, MIA ($7.2 million)
No, that's not a Miami abbreviation, that's "MIA" as in, "We can't prove that he's still alive." Nonetheless, he's collecting $7.2 million from the Knicks this year to do whatever it is he's doing right now.

But he better save up -- his contract expires this year, more than two years after his departure.

4. Jerome Williams, Madison Square Garden Network ($7.0 million)
At least the Knicks are getting something out of him -- he's working as a TV commentator. Also, Junkyard Dog was a luxury tax amnesty cut.

The other players on this list actually cost the Knicks double their contract amounts because of the league's dollar-for-dollar tax on high-payroll teams, which as you've probably guessed is a club the Knicks will belong to for some time.


CATEGORY IV: STILL STUCK

These players' teams are still stuck with their contracts, and in every case but one there are multiple years left on the deal. Good luck unloading them now.

1. Kenyon Martin, Nuggets ($12.1 million, four years left)
Here's what I imagine Nuggets owner Stan Kroenke asking for the next four years. "Is it 2011 yet? No? OK, how about now? No? Um, how about now?"

Martin, who as far as anyone knows is the first player to undergo microfracture surgery on both knees, was a stretch at this dollar amount even if fully healthy. Worse, he gave the Nuggets just one good season before he started breaking down. But he'll be on the books through 2011 thanks to a sign-and-trade deal with the Nets that also also cost the Nuggets three first-round draft picks -- two of which the Nets flipped to Toronto in the trade for Vince Carter. Moreover, the cost of his deal effectively doubles next year, when the Nuggets will be well over the luxury tax line.

2. Raef LaFrentz, Trail Blazers ($11.5 million, two years left)
The Mavs' decision to give LaFrentz a seven-year, $70 million deal in 2002 was generous, yes. But it didn't seem like too obscene a stretch at the time -- people forget now, but he nearly led the league in blocks and was deadly from outside. But what Dallas didn't know was that LaFrentz's knees were about to betray him. He's only 30 now, but it's 30-going-on-90 -- LaFrentz is shooting 23.7 percent in 17 games for Portland.

3. Theo Ratliff, Celtics ($11.7 million, one year left)
Ratliff and LaFrentz were traded for each other this summer as a sidebar to the Sebastian Telfair-Brandon Roy deal. Getting one less year of dead-weight contract was a key reason Boston did it (though I'm guessing the Celtics would take it back if they could).

Nonetheless, I would argue that Ratliff's three-year, $36 million extension from the Blazers was the single worst contract decision of the current decade. At the time he was 31 with a bad hip and was already in severe decline, as anyone in Atlanta could have told them. But he played well for his first few weeks as a Blazer and his giddy new owners overreacted. Hampered by injuries, Ratliff played only two games this season, and that might be two more than he gets in a year from now.

4. Adonal Foyle, Warriors ($8.1 million, three years left)
Chris Mullin has inked some bad contracts in his time as Warriors general manager, but this one takes the cake. Foyle is a prince of a guy, but he's 32, can't score and will soak up over $25 million over the next three years while he lies on the outer fringes of Golden State's rotation. He could be a decent backup center for a team that played a more traditional style, but who would trade for his contract?

5. Larry Hughes, Cavaliers ($13.4 million, three years left)
As with Marbury, Hughes hasn't been horrible -- he just hasn't come close to justifying the dollar figure on his contract. I thought he'd rebound from a disappointing first season in Cleveland, but instead he's been even worse this season. Not only are his numbers down across the board, but he's also forgotten how to make a foul shot (65.6 percent). One bright side: The brittle guard is on pace for 69 games, his most in five years and nearly double what he gave a season ago.

6. Speedy Claxton, Hawks ($6.9 million, three years left)
Despite some warning flags (he's small, injury-prone and can't shoot), Claxton played so well for the Hornets a season ago that the Hawks gave him a four-year, $25 million deal. Oops.

Hampered by bad knees that eliminated his one skill, Claxton's per-minute scoring rate is less than half of what it was last season and he's shooting a ghastly 32.7 percent from the floor.

7. Danny Fortson, Sonics ($6.6 million, expires this year)
Armed with a bad knee and a worse attitude, Fortson has rarely been available for the Sonics this season.

But if you do see him on the court, don't blink -- at the rate he fouls he won't be out there for long. He's averaging nearly a hack every four minutes, and he's a turnover machine because he gets tagged with illegal screen violations so often. But give him this: The dude can still rebound.

8. Austin Croshere, Mavericks ($7.3 million, expires this year)
Sample Size 101: Like a lot of guys on this list, Croshere was paid based off one strong stretch of play (the 2000 Finals), despite a much larger body of work that was far less impressive. Not surprisingly, he's disappointed since.

He's shooting 35.2 percent as a deep sub for the Mavs this season, though he did have one glorious night when he exploded for 34 on the Sonics. But he has only four other double-figure games this season.

9. Eric Snow, Cavaliers ($6.1 million, two years left)
The summer of 2003 is precisely when things started going severely downhill for the Sixers -- they signed Derrick Coleman and Kenny Thomas (a narrow miss on this list) and gave Snow a multiyear extension for no apparent reason.

Thanks to that last decision, he's still earning midlevel money even though he's been a minimum-salary player for about three years now -- in that time, he's averaged 7.0, 6.6 and 7.0 points per 40 minutes. Ecch.

mardigan
03-29-2007, 04:38 PM
Sweet, two in the top 25, shows how good the Spurs FO is

DarrinS
03-29-2007, 04:43 PM
Jalen Rose, Suns ($14.6 million)


:dizzy

Obstructed_View
03-29-2007, 04:46 PM
Zeke just as easily could have said, "I felt a traffic cone would give us more defensively."
:lol :lol

phyzik
03-29-2007, 05:51 PM
:lol I looked at the Parker one and saw the "like Butler" comment and immediately thought hollinger was jock-riding on Jackie again... then I realized he was talking about Caron. :lol

jman3000
03-29-2007, 06:35 PM
i'm surprised devin brown didn't make the top 25 list.

ploto
03-29-2007, 08:34 PM
3. Jose Calderon, Raptors ($2.3 million)
Man, where did that come from? On a per-minute basis, Calderon has been one of the best point guards in all of basketball this season, averaging 16.9 points and 9.4 assists per 40 minutes while shooting 53.4 percent from the floor.

He's a big reason behind the Raps' surprising run to the Atlantic Division crown and, unlike a lot of players on this list, he's still under contract for another season.

He is my second favorite Raptor. :)

lefty
03-29-2007, 09:03 PM
He is my second favorite Raptor. :)
:clap :clap :clap

timvp
03-29-2007, 10:35 PM
The best bargain on the Spurs is Tim Duncan. On a free market, he'd be making four or five times as much. Maybe more.

And he'd still be worth it.

ducks
03-29-2007, 11:16 PM
spurs got lucky tp took the extension......................

DDS4
03-30-2007, 12:40 AM
I can't believe Brian Grant and Vin Baker are still getting paid.

mountainballer
03-30-2007, 02:30 AM
can't belive that I ever say this, but I agree with Hollinger. the list looks pretty accurate.
just some player, who IMO should have made the underpayed list:

Raja Bell:
makes 4.5 Million per year.
considering that he is the starting SG on the 2nd best team in the league and averages 14.4 PPG while playing good defense, this looks like a bargain.

Kile Korver:
4 Million
yes, he is a bit one dimensional, but he is one of the best shooters in the league (if not THE best), averages almost 15 PPG (42% FG for 3s).

Smush Parker:
800K
11.4 PPG 2.7 APG isn't bad for a minimum salary.

Mehmet Okur:
8.2 M
maybe this is a bit of a reach, but I remember that many called it overpaying, when the Jazz signed him to this contract.
compared to many other big man signings, the 8 million per year don't look that bad for a skilled all-star big man, who scores 18+ PPG, despite his deficies on defense.

Admidave50
03-30-2007, 03:04 AM
Thanks a lot Kori for posting the article here, I was dying to read it!