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  1. #3001
    Scrumtrulescent
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    Picking him up off waivers doesn't give him a permanent roster spot. It keeps him on his extremely team-friendly deal and gives him a spot in training camp.

    Also, despite the belief that Anderson hasn't improved since his rookie year, the numbers say otherwise. Every one of his advanced and per-36 stats went up with the exceptions of block percentage and defensive rating (and it's a good thing for that to go down). He went from failed starter to viable bench player. He'd be great wing insurance, and he probably would eventually get the minutes at the backup three. And if he's not, he just won't make the final roster. Doesn't seem like a big risk at all.
    You're just a lot higher on Anderson than I am. I don't think he's a viable bench player at all. He couldn't crack the rotation here and in Houston he just got garbage minutes and was the occasional injury replacement for Parson or Delfino. I agree with you that there's no risk, but IMO there's also no point. He's certainly not good enough to beat out Green/Manu/Belinelli for minutes.

  2. #3002
    Veteran rjv's Avatar
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    i agree with CG. i must have never seen the james anderson that chinook is speaking of.

  3. #3003
    Machacarredes Chinook's Avatar
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    i agree with CG. i must have never seen the james anderson that chinook is speaking of.
    Did you watch him in his brief return to the Spurs last season? He was actually pretty good then. A lot of us didn't really expect the team to release him.

  4. #3004
    Bruce Almighty Bruno's Avatar
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    He was signed to a minimum deal according to Sham.
    Not really. He was signed for the minimum salary but not to a min contract.

    The max length for a min contract is 2 years and Anderson signed for 2 and half years by Houston with their cap space. A player with that kind of contract need a trade exception/cap space to be claimed from waivers.

  5. #3005
    Veteran rjv's Avatar
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    Did you watch him in his brief return to the Spurs last season? He was actually pretty good then. A lot of us didn't really expect the team to release him.
    yes, and he was no one that i missed in any way, shape of form after his release or ever thought could have helped us had he still been here.

  6. #3006
    Machacarredes Chinook's Avatar
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    Not really. He was signed for the minimum salary but not to a min contract.

    The max length for a min contract is 2 years and Anderson signed for 2 and half years by Houston with their cap space. A player with that kind of contract need a trade exception/cap space to be claimed from waivers.
    Indeed. So does that apply to trades as well? The CBA FAQ does use the term "minimum salary contract" for waivers, but it just uses "minimum-salary players" trades.

  7. #3007
    Machacarredes Chinook's Avatar
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    yes, and he was no one that i missed in any way, shape of form after his release or ever thought could have helped us had he still been here.
    Fair enough. We just disagree. I saw a guy who performed well when given decent minutes.

    http://www.basketball-reference.com/.../gamelog/2013/

    That's his game history from last season. If you look at the games were he played more than 14 minutes, he did quite well. I remember him fondly from that Miami game last season.

  8. #3008
    Spurs fan in Las Vegas Drom John's Avatar
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    Last year, with few minutes, James Anderson's WS/48 was a bit above league average at .106
    Below league average, from better to worse were De Colo, Neal, Baynes and Jackson.

    IOW, Anderson could be a huge upgrade over Jackson, and it's Jackson's slot that the Spurs are trying to fill with Kirilenko or Thomas.
    We haven't seen Thomas play SF defense yet. (Thomas should get to defend Mike Scott tonight.) It would be nice to see a training camp where Anderson and Thomas had to play each other alot.

  9. #3009
    Veteran ace3g's Avatar
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    Marc Stein @ESPNSteinLine
    Hearing: Free-agent PG John Lucas informed other suitors today that he has committed to Utah. Deal w/Jazz on course to be sealed this week



  10. #3010
    Bruce Almighty Bruno's Avatar
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    Indeed. So does that apply to trades as well? The CBA FAQ does use the term "minimum salary contract" for waivers, but it just uses "minimum-salary players" trades.
    Yep, it does.

  11. #3011
    Scrumtrulescent
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    Not really. He was signed for the minimum salary but not to a min contract.

    The max length for a min contract is 2 years and Anderson signed for 2 and half years by Houston with their cap space. A player with that kind of contract need a trade exception/cap space to be claimed from waivers.
    I dunno. The exact quote from Coon's FAQ is "The player has a minimum salary contract." The two year limit is just for teams over the cap wanting to use the minimum player salary exception. Teams can give minimum salary contracts for longer than two years, they just can't use the minimum player salary exception to do it. If Coon is quoting directly from the CBA here, it sure looks to me like the Spurs would be able to claim Anderson who does have a contract that pays him a minimum salary. But, we don't know if this is a direct quote. This could be a case where Coon's attempt to "dumb it down" for the average folk loses something in translation.

  12. #3012
    Veteran tesseractive's Avatar
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    Invite him to training camp? Why not? He's signed for two more years that are fully non-guaranteed. So if he doesn't make the team cut him. If he blows up, he's really cheap still.
    Oh, that explains it. I was thinking guaranteed contract, not someone we might cut in camp. Of course that makes sense then.

  13. #3013
    Veteran rjv's Avatar
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    Fair enough. We just disagree. I saw a guy who performed well when given decent minutes.

    http://www.basketball-reference.com/.../gamelog/2013/

    That's his game history from last season. If you look at the games were he played more than 14 minutes, he did quite well. I remember him fondly from that Miami game last season.
    don't get me wrong. i'd take him over colo at this rate.

  14. #3014
    txstbobcat TXstbobcat's Avatar
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    Would rather have Thomas take a roster spot over James Anderson.

  15. #3015
    Veteran rjv's Avatar
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    Would rather have Thomas take a roster spot over James Anderson.
    ..as would i. anderson had his moment. if thomas is the equivalent to anderson, i'd rather give the shot to the former.

  16. #3016
    Bruce Almighty Bruno's Avatar
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    I dunno. The exact quote from Coon's FAQ is "The player has a minimum salary contract." The two year limit is just for teams over the cap wanting to use the minimum player salary exception. Teams can give minimum salary contracts for longer than two years, they just can't use the minimum player salary exception to do it.
    To claim a player from waivers, you have to use cap space or an exception (trade exception, disabled player exception, min salary exception). If a player doesn't fit the min salary exception, he can't be claimed with it.

    From the CBA:
    Minimum Player Salary Exception. A Team may sign a player to, or acquire by assignment, a Player Contract, not to exceed two (2) Seasons in length, that provides for a Salary for the first Season equal to the Minimum Player Salary applicable to that player (with no bonuses of any kind).

  17. #3017
    Gif-ted LakerHater's Avatar
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    Nobody is Happy!


  18. #3018
    Veteran rjv's Avatar
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    a pic truly is worth a thousand words in the case of the boston press conference pic

  19. #3019
    Scrumtrulescent
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    To claim a player from waivers, you have to use cap space or an exception (trade exception, disabled player exception, min salary exception). If a player doesn't fit the min salary exception, he can't be claimed with it.

    From the CBA:
    That just sounds odd. Exceptions, and even cap room for that matter, only look at what's happening in the current year. Past years and future years aren't considered. A team with cap room this year but not next gets to use their current year cap space to sign free agents to multi year contracts. Teams that have to match salaries in a trade only have to worry about current year salaries. Teams can sign a guy to a multiyear MLE contract that will result in that player getting paid more than the MLE in future years. It just seems wierd that waivers would look at contracts as a whole instead of just focusing on the current year as all the other NBA transactions do.

    I'm not saying you're wrong, BTW, just that it seems inconsistent.

  20. #3020
    Believe. Plum Island's Avatar
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    Championship!

  21. #3021
    Machacarredes Chinook's Avatar
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    That just sounds odd. Exceptions, and even cap room for that matter, only look at what's happening in the current year. Past years and future years aren't considered. A team with cap room this year but not next gets to use their current year cap space to sign free agents to multi year contracts. Teams that have to match salaries in a trade only have to worry about current year salaries. Teams can sign a guy to a multiyear MLE contract that will result in that player getting paid more than the MLE in future years. It just seems wierd that waivers would look at contracts as a whole instead of just focusing on the current year as all the other NBA transactions do.

    I'm not saying you're wrong, BTW, just that it seems inconsistent.
    Signing exceptions cover the whole deal by setting parameters for the first year. So the MLE allows teams to offer a contract starting at $5.15 Million that lasts up to four years. So it's not that $5.15 Million is the MLE; it's the whole $22M/4 which comes from extrapolating the first year under the MLE's parameters. The minimum-salary exception allows teams to sign players for a deal that starts at the minimum and lasts no more than two years. In that regard, it's a mini-mini-mini MLE. Just as a team can't sign a player for three years using BAE, so too are they unable to sign a MSE player for three years.

    That's why the Spurs needed to keep some of their MLE to sign Thomas/Denmon/Richards to a minimum deal longer than two years.

    As far as trades go, I'm actually not sure where Bruno got the information from, but on waived players, the CBA FAQ is very clear to mention that the players must be on minimum-salary contracts, which Coon specifically define as Bruno said. He didn't say that for trades, but that could just be an oversight on his part. I don't think it's inconsistent of the NBA to do so. If anything, it's generous, since a team can't use the MLE to acquire players in trades, for example. I should have read more carefully the first time.

  22. #3022
    Veteran ace3g's Avatar
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    Jared Zwerling @JaredZwerling
    Knicks' Smith out 3-4 months after surgery ... More here -- espn.go.com/new-york/nba/s… #Knicks



  23. #3023
    Veteran tesseractive's Avatar
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    Caption: I got dumped to a rebuilding team as cap ballast and all I got was this lousy shirt.

  24. #3024
    Veteran ace3g's Avatar
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    Jake Pavorsky @JakePavorsky
    Sixers acquire James Anderson, Tim Ohlbrecht off waivers. sbn.to/13eV6Bi



  25. #3025
    Veteran cd021's Avatar
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    Come on now. Anderson would be injury insurance / garbage time player if he came here, not a 12mpg rotation player.
    One spot open, A SF need. He is an SF....

    Unless you're down with Manu, Diaw or Beli playing the 3.

    Its not like he would be a disaster. Shoot defend and head to the bench. He can do all three in the short amount of time.



    Edit: He's going to the 76'ers so it doesn't matter.

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