Orlando Magic News for August 20th: Kyler: Team Probably Finished Making Moves
- Monday morning, Steve Kyler of HoopsWorld reported the Magic are basically finished making moves this summer. A rumored Tony-Battie-for-Nick-Collison swap isn't happening, his sources assured him. Damn. Collison's the tough, rebound-centric forward the Magic need. I suppose they value Battie's defense more than they would Collison's work on the glass. Either that, or they love Tony too much to banish him to Oklahoma City.
- It's probably just as well the team's finished making moves, though; they'd hate to have to buy any new acquisition a plane ticket to Pennsylvania. Darren Heitner reported yesterday that Magic co-captain Jameer Nelson is hosting the team in Villanova, PA, for his third annual Building Magic program:
Building Magic week's mission is to bring the Orlando Magic organization closer together in the offseason by having a week full of workouts, team-building activities, and other events.
- UPDATE: More on this story from Matt Steinmetz (thanks to 3QC reader Susan for the email assist):
Magic vice president of communications Joel Glass said Nelson and Howard, Orlando's captains, are the ones who deal with getting players together, and that the team has nothing to do with it.
Glass said from what he understands the players work out together during the day, then go out to dinner, comedy clubs, etc., at night.
According to Foyle, the Magic will be bowling, attending a Philadelphia Phillies game and heading down to Atlantic City over the course of the week. Who knows if Foyle will push for next year's bonding session to be in his hometown ... that isle in the Caribbean.
- UPDATE: More on this story from Matt Steinmetz (thanks to 3QC reader Susan for the email assist):
- Last week, the Magic released their preseason schedule, as reported in the Orlando Sentinel. 3QC member Marie noted in the FanPosts three weeks ago that the Magic will host CSKA Moscow in one game. CSKA Moscow employs former NBA-ers Trajan Langdon, Viktor Khryapa, Zoran Planinic, and Terence Morris (who played for the Magic three seasons ago). Former Bucknell standout J.R. Holden also plays for CSKA.
- Dwight Howard posted 6 points and 7 rebounds in Team USA's 116-85 win over Team Australia this morning. Howard played a decent game but -- surprise, surprise -- continues to struggle from the foul line, connecting on just 2 of his 5 freebies today. He also had one of his shots swatted and was late on at least one defensive rotation.
- We all knew the contract Rashard Lewis signed last summer was big. Well, Business Pundit puts it in a historical context, saying it's the 18th-richest sports contract of all-time. Hardwood Paroxysm remains flabbergasted.
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Kurt Thomas and Marcus Williams off the Market; Whom Will the Magic Target Next?
The Spurs re-signed Kurt Thomas, the forward/center whom the Magic coveted at the deadline. Meanwhile, a day after acquiring combo guard Keyon Dooling from Orlando, the Nets sent backup point guard (and object of Magic fans' affection) Marcus Williams to the Warriors for a future first-round pick.
Oh, and the Magic's chances of re-signing Carlos Arroyo -- already a long shot -- took a big hit when he tore a leg muscle during an Olympic qualifying tournament.
But Javaris Crittenton, long connected to the Magic in trade rumors, is still in play. The Grizzlies' young combo guard is likely the odd-man-out in Memphis, which wants to focus on developing O.J. Mayo, Mike Conley, and Kyle Lowry. I think Crittenton would be a home-run acquisition for Otis Smith and the Magic. For one thing, he's tall (6'05"). For another, his presence would make both J.J. Redick and Keith Bogans more expendable than they already are... assuming they weren't the guys dealt for Crittenton in the first place. Finally, it would mean fewer minutes for Anthony Johnson, the Magic's 34-year-old current backup, whose talent level befits that of a third-stringer.
Could Mikki Moore be an option? The Kings spent their full mid-level on the veteran power forward last summer, but might look to unload him to free-up playing time for youngsters Spencer Hawes, Shelden Williams, and Jason Thompson. Kings fan pookeyguru, whom you may know from his participation in the Sactown Royalty community, would swap Moore for Redick and Brian Cook.
I still support the idea of swapping Redick and Cook for Jeff Foster, but I doubt the Pacers would part with him now that they've dealt Jermaine O'Neal to Toronto for T.J. Ford, Rasho Nesterovic, and riff-raff.
Maybe we overestimate the Magic's need for another player at the power positions. After all, Tony Battie will make his return this season, and figures to steal some minutes from Adonal Foyle (at center) and Rashard Lewis/Cook (at power forward). And Marcin Gortat, who played in more post-season games than regular-season ones, showed promise. But you'll forgive me for feeling nervous about a big-man rotation that includes Lewis, Battie, Gortat, Foyle, and James Augustine.
What's the Magic's biggest area of need? Whom should they target to fill that need?
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Orlando Magic Agree to Sign Anthony Johnson

The Orlando Magic reached an agreement to sign free-agent guard Anthony Johnson, who played for them during the 1999/2000 season, as seen above.
File photo by Don Frazier, the Associated Press
The Orlando Magic signed veteran point guard Anthony Johnson to a two-year deal. Denton and Schmitz have the scoop. Schmitz also says that the team expects backup center Adonal Foyle to return, although he will probably not sign for another month. The 2008/09 roster is indeed taking shape, and there could be another deal in the works, as the Magic are still trying to acquire point guard Javaris Crittenton from the Memphis Grizzlies.
Only that last bit of news excites me. Johnson will turn 34 before the season starts and is, at best, a third-string point guard on a contending team. The Magic need to find a younger, taller option to lead the second unit. And as much as we all admire Foyle's hustle and character, he's too much of an offensive liability to effectively back-up Dwight Howard.
Based on today's news, I expect next season's depth chart to resemble the following (inactive players in italics):
| Pos. | Player | Depth |
|---|---|---|
| PG | Jameer Nelson | 1 |
| " | Anthony Johnson | 2 |
| SG | Mickael Pietrus | 1 |
| " | Keith Bogans | 2 |
| " | Courtney Lee | 3 |
| " | J.J. Redick | 4 |
| SF | Hedo Turkoglu | 1 |
| PF | Rashard Lewis | 1 |
| " | Brian Cook | 2 |
| " | James Augustine | 3 |
| C | Dwight Howard | 1 |
| " | Tony Battie | 2 |
| " | Marcin Gortat | 3 |
| " | Adonal Foyle | 4 |
The roster is loaded with bigs, so I expect the team to jettison at least one of them (Cook?) before the season starts. So far, this roster isn't a huge improvement over last year's, which won 52 games and a division title, so maybe we shouldn't complain.
Maybe.
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Orlando Magic News for July 14th: Keyon Dooling Declines "ridiculous" offer; Magic Talk to Grizzlies about Javaris Crittenton
As expected, Keyon Dooling declined the Magic's two-year, $3.8 million offer. Dooling told John Denton that the offer "wasn't acceptable" and "ridiculous." He also had the following to say:
"We're not talking the same language. I don't know if the door is closed (on a return to the Magic), but we're not talking the same language. But I'm not doing any of the door closing. It's being closed in my face."
A similar situation occurred last summer when the Magic, in their efforts to sign Rashard Lewis, didn't even contact Darko Milicic, their own free agent, when the negotiating period began. Marc Cornstein, Milicic's agent, ripped GM Otis Smith in the press for reneging on his promise to at least negotiate with Milicic, whom he deemed a priority heading into the offseason. Unfortunately, it appears as though alienating free agents has become a pattern in Orlando under Smith's watch.
The meat of Denton's article, though, is the Magic have discussed trading for Memphis Grizzlies point guard Javaris Crittenton. The Magic absolutely need a point guard who can defend, and Crittenton, at 6'05", has enough size to hang with the league's taller signal-callers. If acquired, the Magic would become Crittenton's third NBA team in a little over a year. Drafted by the Lakers in 2007, he was sent to Memphis in the deal that yielded Pau Gasol and propelled the Lakers' run to the NBA Finals.
Denton also mentions that Glenn Schwartzman, the agent who represents Magic alums Darrell Armstrong and Michael Doleac, has contacted the Magic to see if they're interested in signing his clients. Additionally, Brian Schmitz reports the Magic have an ongoing dialog with Dan Tobin, who represents free-agent point guard Jason Williams, a veteran of Stan Van Gundy's offense.
What a day.
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Orlando Magic sign Mickael Pietrus: The Morning After
A couple more details from the Orlando Magic's signing of Mickael Pietrus have trickled in. The team will host an introductory news conference to introduce its new starting shooting guard this Thursday, says Brian Schmitz.
John Denton, who first broke the news of Pietrus' signing, has more details. It's a four-year deal worth $25.1 million. If you ask me, the Magic overpaid, but Pietrus fits their system and upgrades their weakest starting position from last season. Here's my favorite nugget from the piece, though:
Also, Pietrus is close friends with Magic small forward Hedo Turkoglu and the two families recently vacationed together in Turkey for a week.
So he's friends with Hedo and knows Otis Smith from his Golden State days. He should be comfortable here, especially since he'll play his natural position.
Sean Deveney of the Sporting News spoke with Bill McCandless, Pietrus' agent, and gives us this information about which other teams pursued Air France:
McCandless said 11 teams were interested in Pietrus but only five were serious. It came down to Orlando or Detroit, with Atlanta also a possibility. For the Pistons, Pietrus would have been a reserve. With the Magic he will start, McCandless was told, not at power forward, but at the more natural shooting guard spot.
"It was not the most lucrative offer," McCandless said. "But the opportunity, combined with the money, to start for an up-and-coming team was too much to pass up. He could have gotten the same money, or more, from Detroit. But he would have been coming off the bench. ... It becomes a matter of timing. Orlando had the perfect spot for him. You have the threat of someone else moving into the spot. We did not want to wake up tomorrow and find that Otis had signed someone else."
First, I love that we beat Detroit to signing Pietrus. I'm sure it's no big loss to Pistons fans, but it feels good to get something from them for once. Jeez.
Deveney notes that the four-year deal includes an Early Termination Option for Pietrus after the third season.
If you're wondering what this signing means for the Magic's chances of re-signing Keyon Dooling, you aren't alone. Dooling himself doesn't even know what's happening. When reached for comment, Dooling told Brian Schmitz the following:
"It looks like they have filled their position at the 2. Pietrus will help us," Dooling said. "I don't know what's going to happen. Things are all over the place."
The switch from third-person to first-person probably doesn't mean much, -- dude was probably a bit frazzled -- but it can't be a good sign that Dooling isn't confident he'll return. And, frankly, why should he be? The Magic made overtures to Chris Duhon, to Corey Maggette, and to Pietrus, but have yet to present him with an offer.
The Magic can sign him, but doing so will bring them close to luxury-tax territory, which they want to avoid. The Magic's best bet is to make Dooling a long-term, front-loaded offer, which would give Dooling the money and security he wants while simultaneously freeing-up cap space as the salaries of Dwight Howard, Rashard Lewis, and Jameer Nelson increase.
Woof. Busy offseason ahead. Either J.J. Redick or Keith Bogans will surely move via trade -- the smart money's on J.J., as he has more value -- and the Magic still have plenty of holes to fill.
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Mickael "Air France" Pietrus Ready to Land in Orlando; Redick Likely on His Way Out (Or So We Think)

Mickael "Air France" Pietrus, seen here taking flight over Kyle Korver, has agreed to terms with the Orlando Magic on a multi-year deal.
File photo by George Widman, the Associated Press
Earlier today, I discussed with another blogger how the Magic's inactivity this summer made me nervous. The moves some of the teams behind them have made -- the Wizards' re-signing their two big-name free agents, the Heat's adding the draft's most talented player, the Raptors' acquiring a dominant low-post defender, to name a few -- coupled with the Magic's not making a peep in free agency just made me... uneasy. I didn't like that we were just sitting back, watching other teams make moves to get better.
The Magic got proactive today by agreeing to sign swingman Mickael Pietrus, which is curious, because he doesn't address either of the Magic's biggest needs: depth at point guard and at the power positions. He lacks the ballhandling and decision-making skills to play point-forward, and although Pietrus, 6'07", played power forward in Don Nelson's nutty, anything-goes offense in Golden State, can't play that spot in Orlando, not with Brian Cook (6'09"), Rashard Lewis, and James Augustine (both 6'10") in front of him.
But, despite not addressing Needs 1 and 1-A, Pietrus makes sense for the Magic. He's an upgrade over their incumbent starter, Keith Bogans, and he should make an immediate impact. The signing also means J.J. Redick is likely on his way out. Already the Magic's best trade asset, he now projects to sit at the back end of Orlando's still sub-par backcourt rotation. He, combined with a future draft pick or two, should net the Magic a solid player at either point guard or power forward. The Magic will look to bolster Whichever position the nigh-inevitable Redick trade doesn't address through free agency with the low-level exception. Of course, they wouldn't have to trade Redick if they drafted a power forward in the first place...
A final note about Pietrus: he's coming off a season in which he regressed. His per-36-minute scoring decreased (14.9-12.9), as did his effective field goal percentage (56.7-52.5). Maybe it's wishful thinking on my part, but I believe Pietrus' problem was focus-related. Getting away from Nelson, with whom he had a sour relationship, might do wonders for his confidence and performance.
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Taking Another Look at the Orlando Magic's Salaries and What the Team Can Do in Free Agency
You may remember this post from May, in which I tried to navigate the NBA's salary cap to see what the Magic could do this summer in free agency. Now that we're closer to the beginning of the free-agent signing period (Wednesday, July 9th), I thought I'd take another look at it. I've presented my findings in a Q-and-A format. For this post, I consulted Larry Coon's NBA Salary Cap F.A.Q., Storyteller's Contracts, ESPN's 2008 NBA Free Agent list, and the Orlando Magic's official roster page. We hope you find this guide helpful.
Question: How many players do the Magic have under contract next season, and what are they owed?
Answer: Currently, the Magic have 11 players under contract, owed a total of $60,553,339 next season. While the league has yet to release its official salary-cap data, we can say with absolute certainty that the Magic are over the salary cap. Here's how everything breaks down by player...
| Guaranteed Contracts | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pos. | Player | Age | Salary | Contract Expires | Notes |
| PF | James Augustine | 24 | $ 972,581 | 2008/09 | . |
| PF | Tony Battie | 32 | $ 5,746,000 | 2009/10 | . |
| SG | Keith Bogans | 28 | $ 2,550,000 | 2008/09 | . |
| PF | Brian Cook | 27 | $ 3,500,000 | 2009/10 | Player option after 2008/09 |
| C | Marcin Gortat | 24 | $ 711,517 | 2008/09 | . |
| C | Dwight Howard | 22 | $ 13,041,250 | 2012/13 | Player option after 2011/12 |
| SG | Courtney Lee | 23 | $ 980,200 | 2012/13 | Team option after 2010/11 |
| SF | Rashard Lewis | 29 | $ 16,447,871 | 2012/13 | . |
| PG | Jameer Nelson | 26 | $ 7,600,000 | 2012/13 | Player option after 2011/12 |
| SG | J.J Redick | 24 | $ 2,139,720 | 2010/11 | Team option after 2008/09 |
| SF | Hedo Turkoglu | 29 | $ 6,864,200 | 2009/10 | Player option after 2008/09 |
| TOTAL | $ 60,553,339 | . | |||
Note: for this table, "Age" refers to a player's age as of October 31st, 2008, when we expect the NBA season to begin.
... and by position...
| Pos. | Salary2 | No. Players | Avg. Age | Avg. Salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PG | $ 7,600,000 | 1 | 26 | $7,600,000 |
| SG | $ 6,699,920 | 3 | 25 | $2,233,306 |
| SF | $ 23,312,071 | 2 | 29 | $11,656,036 |
| PF | $ 10,218,581 | 3 | 28 | $3,406,193 |
| C | $ 13,752,767 | 2 | 23 | $6,876,384 |
| TEAM | 11 | 26 | $ 5,504,849 | |
Make the jump to read the rest of the Q-and-A.
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Orlando Magic News for July 2nd: Maggette Close to Signing with Spurs (!)
- Adrian Wojnarowski has the upsetting news that the San Antonio Spurs are the "front-runners" to sign Corey Maggette. The most the Spurs can offer is the mid-level exception, which happens to be what the Magic can offer. Maybe Maggette will become the first-ever star-caliber player to take a paycut to play on a contending team. Every team in the league will look silly if Maggette indeed signs with the Spurs, but especially the Magic, who are both title-contenders (or would be, if Maggette took the mid-level with them) and play where he started his career.
- Just another reason to hate the Spurs. As if we needed any more. I feel like vomiting.
- And another reason for some people to hate Otis Smith, who hasn't showed much gumption lately, what with staying-pat at the trading deadline and on draft night. Thing is, Otis has displayed aggression before: last summer, he landed two great coaching candidates (Billy Donovan and Stan Van Gundy) and won the services of the best-available free agent (Rashard Lewis). So it's possible he could change Corey's mind... but I doubt it.
- Sean Deveney of The Sporting News says free-agent point guard Chris Duhon will meet with Magic officials today after spending yesterday in New York with Knicks brass. I imagine he's Orlando's safety valve at backup point guard, a contingency in case incumbent backup Keyon Dooling bolts for more money. For what it's worth, Dooling told John Denton that Orlando is "first choice if all the stars align, but in free agency you have a duty to see what value is out there."
- Brian Schmitz, who spoke to Magic GM Otis Smith, says the team will likely divide the midlevel exception in two:
Smith said the club likely will split the $6 million-per-year midlevel exception, meaning they will spend about $3 million apiece on two role players instead of giving it all to one.
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Povtak: Corey Maggette "Encouraging" the Orlando Magic to Make Him a "Competitive" Offer
Confirming a rumor we first heard in March, former Magic forward Corey Maggette might be interested in re-joining the team in free-agency this summer. Tim Povtak of the Orlando Sentinel cites "a Maggette friend who is close to both the player and the Magic organization" as a source for his story in today's paper.
What Maggette's really interested in, I suspect, is making more money. SHOCKING, I know. The more cash-strapped teams he encourages to offer him money, the more leverage he has in negotiating with teams that have more cap room. The most Orlando could offer him is the mid-level exception, which has a starting salary of around $5.5 million (it changes from year to year due to the salary cap). Maggette, coming off a season in which he averaged 22.1 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 2.7 assists, is certainly worth more money than that. Hell, the Magic paid Rashard Lewis a max-level contract worth $118 million over six years after a season in which he averaged 22.4 points, 6.6 rebounds, and 2.4 assists. While no team can afford to offer Maggette that kind of money this summer -- and Maggette knows as much -- Lewis' contract ups Maggette's market value.
I wonder who, exactly, Povtak's source is. Who might be in a position to know players and teams equally well? Perhaps an agent... like Rob Pelinka, who represents both Maggette and Magic free-agent guard Keyon Dooling. We suspect Pelinka floated this rumor himself to increase Maggette's paycheck, not to mention his own. Additionally, by bumping Maggette out of the Magic's price range, Pelinka ensures the team has enough money to re-sign Keyon Dooling. Everybody wins... except Orlando, which loses the prospect of ever using the absurdly talented Jameer Nelson / Maggette / Hedo Turkoglu / Lewis / Dwight Howard starting lineup.
Maggette's coming off a career-best season and, at 28, knows this summer will be his last chance to secure a lucrative, long-term deal. He won't risk losing millions of dollars just for the opportunity to play close to home. The fact is, no borderline All-Star like Maggette has taken the mid-level exception to play for a contending team. Veteran lunchpail-types in their mid-thirties have (see Boston's free-agent crop last summer after it acquired Kevin Garnett), but never players of Maggette's caliber.
Summarily, the odds of Corey Maggette signing with the Magic this summer are slimmer than Shaquille O'Neal's chances of winning the Three-Point Shootout. And I'm pretty sure the previous sentence marks the first time anyone has used "slim" with "Shaquille." Go figure.
UPDATE: Mike Bianchi, writing on his blog, makes a salient point about the Magic's chances regarding Maggette:
Secondly, don't the Magic have more pressing needs than another small forward/shooting guard? They already have zillions tied up in Turkoglu and Rashard Lewis and have spent their last two first-round draft picks on J.J. Redick and Courtney Lee. I guess the Magic conceivably could do some sort of sign-and-trade involving Turkoglu and somebody else, but then you have to ask yourself is Maggette appreciably better than Turk?
That last sentence underscores why I don't understand the logic behind trading Turkoglu for Maggette, although it didn't stop me from making it a poll option, nor did it stop at least one reader from choosing it. For all intents and purposes, Maggette plays the same offensive game Turkoglu does, only without the playmaking ability for others: 68% of Maggette's shot attempts last season were jumpers, compared to 67% for Turkoglu. However, Turkoglu shot a much higher effective field goal percentage (.495 to .418), and created more of those shots off the dribble; just 49% of his jumpers were assisted, compared to 75% for Maggette.
So, really, what advantages do Maggette have over Turkoglu? The biggest one is his ability to get to the foul line, as he averaged more than double the free throw attempts per 36 minutes than Turkoglu did (9.8 to 4.7). But, in many respects, that's Maggette's only advantage. Before you say "age!" keep in mind that Maggette is a shade less than 8 months younger than Turkoglu.
If anyone wants to explain why they'd dump Turkoglu in favor of Maggette, I'm willing to listen. Right now, I'm unconvinced.
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UPDATED: Where Might the Magic's Free Agents Go? Miami a Strong Possibility
I updated this post to reflect the fact that the Magic lost Grant Hill in free agency last summer, which I somehow overlooked earlier. Thanks to commenter OVERWADED for bringing that serious oversight to my attention. Additionally, I updated the list after the jump to reflect the Phoenix Suns' potential interest in one of Orlando's current free agents.
With all the draft nonsense last week, it was easy for us at 3QC to lose sight of the fact that the NBA's free-agency period starts Tuesday.
So I'd like to thank Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald (via Dee Gugel of the Orlando Sentinel) for shocking us out of our stupor with today's Florida Sports Buzz feature. Apparently, the Heat have their eyes on some of our free agents (emphases Jackson's):
Riley said he still might trade for a point guard, with Memphis (Kyle Lowry, among others) considered in play. Otherwise, the Heat believes it can find a stopgap starter from a free agent group including Chris Duhon, Carlos Arroyo, Keyon Dooling, Anthony Johnson, Tyronn Lue, Jannero Pargo and Anthony Carter. And the Heat likes restricted free agent Sebastian Telfair, though Minnesota can match any offer.[....]
[Heat GM Pat] Riley pointed to the potential to lure a player from ''teams that have three or four unrestricted free agents.'' Keep an eye on Orlando (Arroyo, Dooling, Maurice Evans) and Golden State [...]
Last year, the Magic only lost two three players to free agency: little-used point guard Travis Diener to Indiana; more notably, backup power forward Darko Milicic to Memphis; and swingman Grant Hill to Phoenix. Nobody expected Diener or Hill to come back, and although Milicic's departure surprised plenty of people, we should have expected the Magic to ignore him if it meant focusing on signing Rashard Lewis, which they did.
But the circumstances surrounding its summer -- limited cap space, high expectations entering next season, the higher quality of its own free agents -- will magnify the impact of any Orlando's free-agent losses, especially if they eventually sign with archrival Miami.
What follows after the jump is a list of Orlando's free agents, what they can provide, and which teams might be interested in them.
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