LOL at the eastern conference grades. 3 D's and 3 F's.
East grades: Who did best, worst in NBA draft, trades 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.
After grading the West on Tuesday, here are my grades for East 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.
Atlanta Hawks: D+
New Hawks GM Travis Schlenk made the right call in terms of letting All-Star forward
Paul Millsap walk. Still, Atlanta was unable to commit to a rebuilding process and took on too much bad salary in return for center
Dwight Howard. (Replacement
Miles Plumlee has an additional year on his contract, albeit at less money per season.)
Besides using cap space to take on
Jamal Crawford's contract, netting a first-round pick in the process, the Hawks used most of their resources on short-term deals.
Ersan Ilyasova got a one-year deal to return, and
Dewayne Dedmon got a one-year deal with a player option. Unless Atlanta can trade them before the deadline, those players are unlikely to provide much value since the Hawks probably will still be one of the NBA's worst teams this season.
Boston Celtics: B+
The Celtics landed the big prize in free agency, convincing
Gordon Hayward to pick them over the
Miami Heat and the incumbent
Utah Jazz. Because the cap came in lower than expected, clearing room for Hayward required Boston to part with a key player. The Celtics chose to trade ace individual defender
Avery Bradley for
Marcus Morris, a swap that is a financial upgrade and better balances the roster but still might be painful in the playoffs.
Signing Hayward spared Boston harsher criticism for losing out on potential trades for
Jimmy Butler and
Paul George. It's unclear whether dealing for George would have been worth the price because of his ability to leave next summer, but the cost for Butler probably would have been more reasonable with two years left on his deal.
The Celtics will also be graded long term on whether
Jayson Tatum is good enough to justify trading down from No. 1 to No. 3. Despite Tatum's prolific scoring in summer-league play, I'm still somewhat skeptical.
Brooklyn Nets: B
No team was more aggressive using its cap space to add salary than the Nets, who took on long-term contracts for guard
Allen Crabbe, forward
DeMarre Carroll and center
Timofey Mozgov. The latter two deals added valuable young talent to a team in need of it. Brooklyn got a first-round pick to take on Carroll's salary and former No. 2 overall pick
D'Angelo Russell as the price for Mozgov.
The Nets now have an NBA-caliber perimeter rotation but remain thin in the frontcourt. They're counting on undersized
Rondae Hollis-Jefferson holding down the starting job at power forward and have Mozgov and first-round pick
Jarrett Allen as their only options at center.
Charlotte Hornets
: B+
Limited in salary flexibility by their desire to avoid paying the luxury tax, the Hornets nonetheless managed to add Howard while actually reducing their 2019-20 payroll by unloading Plumlee's onerous deal. Howard fills Charlotte's biggest need, another center to anchor the defense when
Cody Zeller is on the bench.
Tax issues did force the Hornets to shop the bargain aisle for a backup to starting point guard
Kemba Walker, and they landed
Michael Carter-Williams on a one-year, $2.7 million deal. Charlotte will be perilously thin at the position should Walker miss an extended period. Still, the Hornets are favorites to return to the playoffs after a one-year absence.
Chicago Bulls: F
With two years remaining on
Jimmy Butler's contract, the Bulls could have held out for a better offer than they got from the
Minnesota Timberwolves: guards
Kris Dunn and
Zach LaVine and the No. 7 pick for Butler and the 16th pick. Dunn will have to improve dramatically from a disappointing rookie season to become an NBA contributor, and LaVine's poor defense limits his value.
After the blockbuster trade, Chicago mostly sat out free agency, re-signing
Cristiano Felicio to an above-market four-year, $32 million deal, and giving
Justin Holiday two years and $9 million to return as a wing defender after a year in New York.
The Bulls might yet get a good deal re-signing restricted free agent
Nikola Mirotic, but he plays the same position as lottery pick
Lauri Markkanen, so it's unclear how Mirotic fits in long term.
Cleveland Cavaliers: C-
So much of the Cavaliers' offseason is about trades not made (they hoped to acquire Butler or George to bolster their chances of beating the
Golden State Warriors) or one potentially on the horizon involving unhappy point guard
Kyrie Irving.
In terms of the moves the team did make, Cleveland seemed to overpay
Kyle Korver to return on a three-year, $22 million deal (albeit with $18 million guaranteed). The Cavaliers signed three players at the veteran's minimum.
Derrick Rose looks like a good value but a poor fit,
Jose Calderon is another weak defender on the second unit and
Jeff Green theoretically fits Cleveland's needs but rarely makes good on that potential.
The Cavaliers could have used a better defender like
Thabo Sefolosha (who got less money than Korver) or
Luc Mbah a Moute (who signed with Houston for the minimum).
Detroit Pistons: D
A history of overpaying role players -- a tradition that continued with a three-year, $20 million deal for backup guard
Langston Galloway -- finally caught up with the Pistons this summer, as luxury-tax concerns were a factor in them walking away from restricted free agent
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope.
Detroit replaced Caldwell-Pope with
Avery Bradley, a move that cost another starter (forward
Marcus Morris). Now the Pistons will have to try to re-sign Bradley as an unrestricted free agent next summer, when he's due a huge raise. In addition to signing (Galloway) and trading for (Bradley) shooting guards, Detroit also drafted one in the lottery (
Luke Kennard), meaning a crowd at that position but little depth at small forward. The Pistons will need
Stanley Johnson to take a step forward this season to return to the playoffs.
Indiana Pacers
: F
While the timing of George telling the Pacers he would not re-sign in Indiana no matter what put them in a tough spot, they still failed to capitalize on his trade value by taking
Victor Oladipo and
Domantas Sabonis over the other deals on the table and ones that probably would have materialized. Oladipo has little if any net value above and beyond his $21 million salary, and Sabonis looks like a role player after an ineffective rookie season.
The rest of the summer has seen the Pacers add veterans on short-term deals. Though
Cory Joseph is still young enough to have upside,
Bojan Bogdanovic and
Darren Collison aren't long-term pieces. Indiana can clear more than $50 million in cap space next summer, but that would leave Oladipo and
Myles Turner as the lone NBA-caliber players on the roster.
Miami Heat
: D
After falling short in their pursuit of Hayward, the Heat decided to bring back the group that went 30-11 in the second half of last season ... at a high cost. After signing smaller one-year deals last summer,
James Johnson (four years, $60 million) and
Dion Waiters (four years, $47 million plus incentives) got paid. So too did newcomer
Kelly Olynyk (four years, $45 million plus incentives).
Add in
Tyler Johnson's salary -- which escalates from $5.9 million to $19.3 million next summer because of the "Gilbert Arenas rule" -- and Miami is capped out for the foreseeable future. We'll see if those contracts prove as tradeable as the Heat think. Johnson's in particular could get ugly on the back end, costing Miami in the long term.
Milwaukee Bucks
: C+
The combination of a strong young core and luxury-tax issues kept Milwaukee out of free agency this summer. After they re-signed restricted free agent
Tony Snell to a reasonable four-year, $44 million deal, the Bucks' only signings have come for the minimum. Don't expect that to change.
Milwaukee currently projects over the luxury-tax line with a 15-player roster but could get under by waiving reserve center
Spencer Hawes and stretching his $6 million salary. Otherwise, the only real business for the Bucks is a possible extension for forward
Jabari Parker, who's still early in his rehab from a torn ACL.