West grades: Who did best, worst in NBA draft and free agency?
With July and the bulk of free agency in the books, now is a good time to look back at the moves teams have made to try to improve for the upcoming 2017-18 season and beyond.
Here are my grades for Western Conference teams based on how well they took advantage of the opportunities they had to add to their roster via free agency, the draft and trades. Teams are graded on what's in their control, not the decisions of free agents to go elsewhere.
So how did your favorite team grade out? Let's take a look.
Dallas Mavericks
: A
With other West teams loading up, Mark Cuban has been content to stand pat. The Mavericks used a trade exception to acquire
Josh McRoberts from the
Miami Heat in a deal that netted $5.1 million cash and haven't signed any outside free agents as they wait to come to terms with restricted free agent
Nerlens Noel on a long-term deal.
So the most important part of Dallas' offseason has been the draft, and the Mavericks look to have gotten a steal at No. 9 in North Carolina State point guard Dennis Smith Jr. Smith was
as impressive as any rookie at the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas and could be the centerpiece of the next great Dallas team.
Denver Nuggets: A-
Quietly, the Nuggets added one of the most accomplished players to change teams this summer, signing All-Star
Paul Millsap to a three-year, $90 million deal with a team option for the final season. Millsap's elite defense and ability to stretch the floor make him
an ideal complement for budding star
Nikola Jokic in the Denver frontcourt.
Alas, adding Millsap gives the Nuggets a crowd at power forward after they swapped the No. 13 pick to the
Utah Jazz for young power forward
Trey Lyles and the No. 24 pick, used to draft another 4 (Syracuse's
Tyler Lydon). Still, Millsap's addition makes Denver a favorite to return to the postseason.
Golden State Warriors: A+
Thanks to
Kevin Durant's willingness to take a pair of pay cuts for a combined $9.7 million less than his maximum salary, the defending champs were able to add to the core of the team that went 16-1 in last year's postseason.
The Warriors re-signed key free agents
Andre Iguodala and
Shaun Livingston and also brought back starting center
Zaza Pachulia and reserves
JaVale McGee and
David West. To them, Golden State will add
Omri Casspi and
Nick Young, who provide upgraded shooting off the bench. Oh, yeah, the Warriors also re-signed
Stephen Curry to the largest contract in NBA history, and did so without giving him a no-trade clause or a player option on the final season.
Houston Rockets: A+
A remarkable offseason has positioned the Rockets as perhaps the greatest threat to the Warriors this season. After
Chris Paul passed on free agency, Houston was able to add the best player who changed teams all offseason via trade, pairing another top-10 star with MVP runner-up
James Harden.
While trading for Paul cost the Rockets several key players, it maintained their midlevel exception, allowing Houston to sign swingman
PJ Tucker. The Rockets also picked up Paul's former teammate
Luc Mbah a Moute, adding another versatile defender, and re-signed valuable backup center Nenê. Houston is taking some risk that Harden and Paul are
unhappy sharing the ball. If they can navigate that concern, the Rockets should be one of the league's best teams.
LA Clippers: B-
The Clippers bounced back from the news that Paul was headed elsewhere to put together a team that should remain competitive in the Western Conference. That started with landing three rotation players in the Paul trade, guards
Patrick Beverley and
Lou Williams and forward
Sam Dekker. The Clippers also added
Danilo Gallinari in a sign-and-trade that cost them a first-round pick, then signed longtime European star
Milos Teodosic to help fill the void at point guard.
Long-term contracts for the injury-plagued Gallinari (who already injured his right thumb while punching an opponent during an exhibition for the Italian National Team) and
Blake Griffin (five years at the max) could ultimately hinder the Clippers' flexibility, but for now they've built as good a team as could have been expected without Paul.
Los Angeles Lakers
: A-
The best part of the Lakers' offseason is how it sets them up to be players in the summer of 2018. The Lakers used
D'Angelo Russell as a carrot to get the
Brooklyn Nets to take on the contract of
Timofey Mozgov, clearing nearly $20 million in 2018 cap space. To preserve that room, the Lakers used this year's space to sign shooting guard
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope to a lucrative one-year deal.
The Lakers will pair Caldwell-Pope in the backcourt with No. 2 pick
Lonzo Ball, who lived up to the hype in Las Vegas. The Lakers also got great production from No. 27 pick
Kyle Kuzma as they won the NBA Summer League championship.
Memphis Grizzlies
: C
Limited in spending by the looming specter of the luxury tax, the Grizzlies had tough choices to make this summer. They decided to let go of Grit 'N Grind stalwarts
Zach Randolph and
Tony Allen, the latter of whom remains unsigned.
Memphis made a decent-sized bet that
Ben McLemore will be more effective outside, paying him $10.7 million over two seasons despite no track record of good NBA performance. The Grizzlies got good value with
Tyreke Evans on a one-year deal for $3.3 million and should be able to re-sign starting power forward
JaMychal Green at a reasonable price now that his options as a restricted free agent are limited.
Minnesota Timberwolves: A
The Timberwolves look like a good bet to end the NBA's longest playoff drought (13 seasons and counting) after trading
Kris Dunn,
Zach LaVine and this year's No. 7 pick to the
Chicago Bulls for
Jimmy Butler and the No. 16 pick. Dunn was ineffective as a rookie, and LaVine's poor defense meant Minnesota remained competitive without him last season, so Butler should be a huge upgrade.
Adding Butler made
Ricky Rubio a poor fit in the backcourt, so the Timberwolves sent him to the
Utah Jazz for a possible future first-round pick and signed
Jeff Teague as a replacement. Minnesota's other signings look like worse values. The Timberwolves gave aging
Taj Gibson $28 million over two years and signed
Jamal Crawford with their room exception instead of a 3-and-D contributor who might have better complemented their starters. Still, the Butler trade was good enough that this was an A offseason as a whole.