Trade rumors intel: Kyle Lowry, LaMarcus Aldridge, Ricky Rubio and more

NBA trade updates on LaMarcus Aldridge, Kyle Lowry, and other big names from HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto.

According to multiple NBA executives, the installation of the play-in tournament has made some teams in the middle of the pack less inclined to be sellers at the deadline than in years past. However, several big names could still be on the move by the March 25th trade deadline.

With the trade deadline less than two weeks away, here’s the latest intel HoopsHype has gathered.

Chris Boucher is blocking threes more often than any player ever

The Toronto Raptors have an incredible young player in Chris Boucher, who won NBA G League MVP and Defensive Player of the Year in 2019.

The Toronto Raptors have an incredible young player in Chris Boucher, who won NBA G League MVP and Defensive Player of the Year in 2019.

Boucher is a big man who uses his 7-foot-4 wingspan to make life incredibly challenging for his opponents. In fact, he is currently accomplishing that in a way that has never been done in the NBA.

According to PBP Stats, Boucher is averaging 0.95 blocks on three-pointers per 100 possessions. Based on our research, that is the highest rate (minimum: 200 minutes) among all players since 2000-01. While the data is not available before 2000, based on the influx of three-point shooting in the NBA, it is incredibly unlikely anyone has come close to touching this rate.

The previous best marks came from James Johnson (0.88) in 2012-13 and Mitchell Robinson (0.86) in 2018-19.

Boucher has already recorded 14 blocks on three-point attempts so far this season. For context, that ranks as more than every team in the league except for his Raptors (obviously) and the Philadelphia 76ers. After just 31 games, that is more than seven teams recorded during the 82-game season in 2018-19.

Just watch what Boucher did to Indiana Pacers forward Doug McDermott last month. It is the kind of moment that will make anyone fear getting a shot up if Boucher is even on the floor, let alone if he is guarding them.

As for why this may be the case, first, it is important to understand some context. The league-average team is averaging 34.9 three-pointers attempted per game in 2020-21, which is an all-time high. Meanwhile, for the second year in a row, the Raptors are allowing opponents to take three-pointers more often than nearly any team in the league.

So far this season, per Cleaning the Glass, more than 40 percent of the field goal attempts opponents have taken against Toronto have come from beyond the arc. Put those two factors together and that means there are simply more opportunities to contest three-pointers than ever before.

It is no secret that under head coach Nick Nurse, their defensive philosophy has been predicated on conceding shots on the perimeter but preventing looks near the basket. Toronto’s bigs are often aligned and intentionally positioned close to the hoop.  

Boucher, as explained by Blake Murphy, has displayed the unique ability to properly defend the restricted area yet still showcase his remarkable stride to close out on shooters (via The Athletic):

“The Raptors have an elite suite of players who can cause shooters to panic as limbs come flying at them with abandon. It’s not just that the Raptors have the capability to block five 3s in a game, although that’s surely terrifying on its own. It’s also that the Raptors’ shot-blockers can cover a lot of ground quickly, which gives Nick Nurse security in using the team’s aggressive strategies for limiting primary scorers and sealing off the rim, often at the same time.”

Murphy added that Boucher is doing quite a bit more than just swatting the shots. According to his research, opponents are shooting 26.2 percent in three-point attempts against Boucher. That is the lowest mark of anyone who has recorded at least 100 contests from beyond the arc.

Boucher has played an incredibly significant role as a defensive player for the Raptors. During a seven-point victory on Feb. 21, Toronto outscored the Philadelphia 76ers by 32 points when Boucher was on the floor.

Even though Utah Jazz guard Jordan Clarkson is the frontrunner for NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year in 2021, Toronto’s Boucher is giving him a run for his money thus far due to this kind of massive impact.

Below, you can watch a compilation featuring Boucher swatting away a ton of three-pointers last season:

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How David Nurse combined NBA skills development, mental health

Former Nets shooting coach David Nurse has trained over 150 NBA players for an unshakeable mindset with mental health and skills development

David Nurse, the nephew of Toronto Raptors coach Nick Nurse, is combining NBA skills development and mental health to form an unshakeable mindset to optimize a player’s performance on and off the court.

“The NBA is weird and ever-changing,” as Miami Heat center Kelly Olynyk told HoopsHype. “Sometimes, you feel on top of the world feeling great. Other times, you feel like you don’t know if you’re going to play again. I think in four years in Boston, I don’t think I had one DNP (did not play). When I get to Miami, and you’re healthy and you’re dressed for the game and you get a DNP, that’s tough.”

Nurse, who previously worked for the Brooklyn Nets as a shooting coach, has trained over 150 NBA players, including Olynyk, All-Star Domantas Sabonis, Jeremy Lin, Norman Powell, OG Anunoby, Rui Hachimura, and others.

During his time working with players on the court and speaking with them outside the lines, Nurse realized there’s more to development than just mechanics and repetition.

“I felt like I was shooting the ball really well in drills and practice, but in the game, it just wasn’t connecting,” Powell told HoopsHype. “I wasn’t finding my flow and my rhythm in the games. Since then, me and David have been working on breaking down my game, sending me clips, and asking me different questions that aren’t usually asked when you’re working with your coach and watching film and what I saw from my perspective. He asked me a bunch of questions about what I thought about the game, my confidence level, and gave me a different perspective on how I approach the game and how I viewed myself.”

The key for Nurse was transferring a player’s successful mindset in practice or a private workout into games with fans in the stands and increased pressure to perform.

“He’ll go further into detail and what was my confidence level heading into the game?” Powell added. “How did I feel during my shooting time? Was there anything in the game that I wasn’t so confident about or I didn’t feel right about? Where was my mind at in terms of letting things go? Was I able to stay in the present moment if I had a turnover late in the game? Did I hang my head on that and let it bother me the rest of the game where I couldn’t focus on helping the team get a win?”

Powell, 27, has taken his game to new heights working with Nurse shooting a career-best 49.5 percent from the field last season and 43.8 percent from beyond the arc so far this season. He’s become a consistent 16-point per game scorer the past two seasons and is setting himself up for a potential pay raise if he declines his $11.6 million player option this offseason.

Other players see their names in trade rumors constantly with mobile alerts and fans chastising them with occasional threats after a bad game, turnover, or missed shot during the social media era. To perform at a high level, an athlete needs mental fortitude to block out any distractions. Amid a global pandemic, it’s even more critical than ever with daily changes for all of society.

“So much of the game now is just having confidence,” Olynyk explained. “Whether you’re a star player, you need that confidence out there every night to do stuff, or you’re a role player, someone who might only get three or four opportunities, and you’ve got to make sure you’re making the right decisions. If you only have two shots, you’ve got to step up and shoot those with confidence. If you waver at all, you might not get those opportunities again.”

According to Nurse, there will always be different circumstances on the outside, but in your head, you can control that environment.

“His deal is all about, can you get to that mindset, and that zone as many times as possible?” Olynyk said. “And when you get there, you feel like you can’t be stopped.”

To maintain that belief in a player as often as possible, Nurse outlined seven steps to achieve unshakeable confidence.

Confidence through comparison

In this step, a player compares himself to a player who he believes he can become. Kobe Bryant compared himself to Michael Jordan, studied everything he did on the court and mirrored many of his moves. In Powell’s case, he compares himself to Dwyane Wade.

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Confidence through strength focus

The goal of this step is to focus on a player’s strengths instead of his weaknesses. Some players are elite at one skill like shooting such as Kyle Korver, who became one of the league’s top shooters all-time instead of marginally improving as a better ball-handler or playmaker off the dribble.

Confidence through redefining vocabulary

Often, players will be asked about dealing with failure, pressure, or a  shooting slump. The word slump has a negative connotation. To combat that mindset, Nurse has shown his clients star players they look up to such as Bryant shooting air balls in the playoffs. The purpose is to show a player there’s growth from those moments.

“We don’t call it a slump,” Powell said. “As soon as you start putting that out there, you start believing it. Now, every shot that you miss is like you feel like you’re in a shooting slump. You change the narrative and wording around it so that way your perspective on it changes. I feel like a lot of times people get caught up in what’s being said, and how it’s said to you where it resonates with you differently, and it can affect you performance-wise.”

Nurse will use different vocabulary and call it a “shooting hippopotamus” instead to deviate from a negative mindset and get a laugh from his players.

Confidence through creating your own highlight reel

Here, players enter their swag zone. To do so, players will watch repetitive highlights of themselves in the morning and before practice or a game so their subconscious is at its best and not that the player is coming off a bad game. Nurse wants to instill a state of mind that the player is always who he is at his best, not his worst.

Olynyk also wore a snapback hat backward during pick-up games and his play improved. According to Nurse, that was a trick where it helped put him in the best mindset. Entering the arena, Olynyk routinely wears his hat backward to keep him in that same mindset.

“When a construction worker is going to work, he’s got his hard hat on and you know he’s ready to go to work,” Olynyk explained. “After that, snapback is on, I know I’m ready to work.”

Similarly, Nurse used the same tactic for Brook Lopez, who loves Disney World. While developing his three-point shot, the two would talk about Disney World and Lopez would wear a Disney shirt.

Confidence through pouring into others

The focus is to take the pressure off individual performance by being a part of something bigger in this step. Think along the lines of a screen assist. A player may not get the praise for making a clutch shot down the stretch, but without that screen to free the shooter, the shot may not even happen at all. There’s no statistic for diving for loose balls or hustle, but fans, teammates, coaches, and opponents recognize it.

Confidence through cue word

When you’re in the heat of battle during a game, you can’t watch your highlight reel or wear your favorite hat or t-shirt, so what do you do if a player needs a quick reset? Choose a particular word to help trigger your subconscious mind back into the self-confident person you are.

“I always had a confidence chart that would explain to me different things as my confidence cues to keep me focused and remember the present moment,” Powell said. “David would always send me three cues that I’d always have to remember or go over before I stepped on the court. They were different things that remind me of confident things that can help me stay the course no matter what comes my way. I’ll always get a reminder with that every so often throughout every few games.”

Powell’s cue word is unshakeable. He also is reminded to be as confident as the most confident person he knows, his uncle Raymond, remember Russell Westbrook’s “bring it on” pregame mindset, and remember if something goes wrong in the game, how Bryant embraced those failures to improve.

Confidence through preparation

The glue that ties all the steps together is relentless consistency with daily preparation.

Nurse isn’t focusing on the results in this step. Rather, he and the player are focused on the process and work they put in, so there’s no fear if a player misses a shot because he put in the work and had the right mindset to take it. Even the greatest shooters miss half their shots. Eventually, by tracking the process of whether a player took his best high-level shot, the results will follow organically.

Take Sabonis, who is working on his three-point shot, for example. Sabonis shoots a flat ball, so he needed more of an arch according to Nurse. After every shot, Sabonis and Nurse stopped and assessed his shot to make sure his elbow was to his eyebrow and perfecting every rep after watching his film in slow motion.

This season, Sabonis is shooting 37.1 percent on a career-high 2.8 attempts from downtown.

You can follow Michael Scotto on Twitter: @MikeAScotto

Phil Jackson again has the best winning percentage in history among NBA coaches

During his twenty years leading either the Chicago Bulls or the Los Angeles Lakers, Phil Jackson was one of the most dominant coaches ever.

During his 20 years leading either the Chicago Bulls or the Los Angeles Lakers, Phil Jackson was one of the most dominant coaches ever.

Much like football fans do with NFL legend Tom Brady, who just won his seventh Super Bowl, basketball fans associate Jackson with winning titles. Jackson leads all NBA coaches in total wins (229) during the postseason as well as conference titles (13) and NBA championships (11).

Meanwhile, his overall record (1155-485) during the regular season gives him a winning percentage (.704) that ranks No. 1 all-time as well.

Jackson, who has not been the sidelines for an NBA team since 2011, came into the season trailing Toronto Raptors coach Nick Nurse and Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr.

Nurse took over the pole spot by taking home a title during his first year as a head coach in 2018-19, which catapulted his winning percentage early in his head coaching career.

But the Raptors (10-13) have struggled out of the gates and have a losing record so far this season. Toronto is currently playing out of their Canadian market on account of travel restrictions due to the ongoing pandemic. Their poor record has made a significant hit to Nurse’s career winning percentage (.684 percent), which has fallen from first to fifth-best in league history.

Kerr, as a player, won three NBA championships while playing for Jackson on the Bulls from 1993 until 1998. He also won a title during his first year as a head coach and has since led the team with the best regular-season winning percentage of all-time, coaching the 2015-16 Golden State Warriors (73-9) to an absurd record.

But last year, the organization was hit with significant injuries to franchise stars Klay Thompson and Stephen Curry. Golden State (15-50) finished the season with the worst record in the NBA. Even with the rough showing, his overall winning percentage (.701) currently trails only Jackson’s for the best in league history.

Everyone is entitled to a tough year, of course, but that makes the fact that Jackson never finished a season with a losing record even more impressive.

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Where Lakers, Heat, Raptors and Mavericks stand with Giannis Antetokounmpo

How Bam Adebayo’s extension affects Giannis Antetokounmpo, and the Heat, Lakers, Mavericks and Raptors could sign the Greak Freak in 2021.

With training camp approaching, Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo still has not decided on his supermax extension offer. As of now, that contract is worth a projected $228.2 million, at a minimum, over five years. The deal would keep Antetokounmpo in Milwaukee through 2026.

“That’s a lot of money to leave on the table!” one general manager told HoopsHype.

The one bright spot in the Bucks’ offseason is acquiring one-time All-Star Jrue Holiday from the Pelicans. While the Bucks will likely continue to dominate the regular season, Holiday gives them an edge that could help them get over the hump in the playoffs.

Aside from the Holiday acquisition, the Bucks’ offseason took an unexpected turn for the worse. Three days ahead of free agency, a botched sign-and-trade for Bogdan Bogdanovic was leaked. Whether there was a deal agreed upon or not, the Bucks did not end up getting Bogdanovic, and they had to change their plans dramatically. They filled out their roster instead by adding DJ AugustinBobby PortisTorrey Craig, and Bryn Forbes.

Will the addition of Holiday be enough to offset the botched Bogdanovic acquisition that happened to the Bucks this offseason for Antetokounmpo to extend? Bogdanovic is a good player, but his inclusion shouldn’t be a make-or-break factor in this decision. Still, the Bucks have filled out their roster up to the hard cap, and there’s not much else for Antetokounmpo to wait on. He needs to decide soon whether he can trust Milwaukee’s front office and ownership group to keep the best team around him as possible over the next six years.

While we wait on his decision, let’s take a look at some of the teams that are looking to sign him next offseason. The current salary cap projection of $112,414,200 million for the 2021-22 season will be used in salary cap calculations. The maximum contract other teams can offer Antetokounmpo based on that projection is $145 million over four years, which has a starting salary of $33,724,200.

Sources: Suns to sign Langston Galloway and updates on Aron Baynes, Alex Len and more

Langston Galloway will sign with the Suns, as first reported by HoopsHype. Check out the rest of our latest NBA free agency intel.

The fourth day of NBA free agency included Washington Wizards general manager Tommy Sheppard denying the team has any plans to trade John Wall.

There have also been some notable signings on the market, including Langston Galloway agreeing to a deal with the Phoenix Suns, as first reported by HoopsHype.

Here’s a look at the latest intel HoopsHype has gathered from some other recent free-agent agreements to start the week.

Sources: NBA free agency details on Serge Ibaka, Kent Bazemore, and more

Here’s a look at the latest intel HoopsHype has gathered from some recent free-agent agreements over the weekend.

The third day of NBA free agency has seen several rotation players come off the board.

Here’s a look at the latest intel HoopsHype has gathered from some recent free-agent agreements over the weekend.

NBA free agency notes on Fred VanVleet, Jae Crowder, Avery Bradley and Jeff Green

Take a look at the latest intel HoopsHype has gathered from some of the other top free-agent agreements of the day.

The second day of NBA free agency had several top free agents agree to new deals, including Gordon Hayward, who agreed to a four-year, $120 million deal with the Charlotte Hornets. As HoopsHype reported before the start of free agency, the Hornets were going to make a strong push to land Hayward.

Below is a look at the latest intel HoopsHype has gathered from some of the other top free-agent agreements of the day.

Chris Paul trade scenarios for the Bucks and Giannis Antetokounmpo’s 2021 free agency

https://open.spotify.com/embed-podcast/show/1ttIdLU9DIBJoarp5YXFQb On this episode of the HoopsHype podcast, Michael Scotto is joined by colleague Yossi Gozlan, our salary cap expert. Scotto and Gozlan discuss Chris Paul trade scenarios for the …

 

On this episode of the HoopsHype podcast, Michael Scotto is joined by colleague Yossi Gozlan, our salary cap expert. Scotto and Gozlan discuss Chris Paul trade scenarios for the Bucks and teams who could sign Giannis Antetokounmpo in 2021. They also discuss whether it makes sense for the Bucks to trade Antetokounmpo if he declines a super-max extension.

0:55 – What went wrong for the Bucks against the Heat

3:17 – Giannis and the supermax extension scenarios

Gozlan: “From Giannis’ perspective, if he doesn’t take the supermax, two things: One, If he’s really interested in signing a supermax and wants the long-term security, wants the money, I think he would want it, but what could be holding him back could be what the salary cap is going to be. We still haven’t gotten any guidance from the NBA. The recent cap projection was $115 million. The following year was $125 million. Now, it could end up being the same salary cap figure for the next two years. If it were to be much lower and closer to what it is now, even less, then I would imagine Giannis would want to hold back on signing the supermax because that’s a lot less money to lock down versus what he was expected to get earlier. Under the $125 million salary cap, he was going to get around $250 million over five years. If it’s going to stick closer to the current $109 million salary cap or lower, he’s looking at closer to $210 or $220 million. That’s a big difference right there.”

6:31 – Should Milwaukee consider trading Antetokounmpo?

Scotto: “If I’m Milwaukee, purely from a basketball standpoint in trying to win a championship, whatever he says (about an extension), he’s not going anywhere in my opinion, because Milwaukee’s never been a traditional free agency destination. It’s a cold-weather city, and it’s not a location that’s really been desired by a bunch of free agents in the past. If you try to trade him, you’re not going to get equal value back for the reigning MVP in a trade. For me, it’s never going to get better for the Bucks. I think you’ve got to push all the chips into the center of the table and really go for it.”

7:35 – Is Chris Paul the missing piece for a Bucks title run?

10:33 – What a CP3 trade could look like

Gozlan: “Eric Bledsoe, Ersan Ilyasova – assuming you guarantee his $7 million salary for next season – and then you can do a variation of George Hill. I don’t think they want to trade George Hill. I think he was awesome for them, and they want to keep him. In that case, you can get away with Robin Lopez and DJ Wilson. After that, then you start talking about the incentives, maybe Donte DiVincenzo. On OKC’s side, they’d love to get a lot of picks and young players.”

Scotto: “At that point, if you’re OKC, you’re signaling you’re fully rebuilding, and you’re going to really start to gut that roster. If you get rid of Chris Paul, Steven Adams will probably be talked about in trades. Dennis Schroder as well. Danilo Gallinari (free agent) probably wouldn’t be brought back at that point, or you try a sign-and-trade to get him to a certain destination.”

16:00 – Evaluating Milwaukee’s current roster

20:00 – Where Milwaukee ranks in the East if the acquire Paul

23:11 – Are there other trade targets for the Bucks who could make sense?

27:10 – Which teams could make a run at Antetokounmpo in 2021 free agency?

31:40 – The Miami Heat’s chances of landing Giannis

Gozlan: “The interesting thing about how the Heat positioned themselves is that they’ll have a maximum contract slot for 2021, but they’ll also still be able to re-sign Bam Adebayo, Duncan Robinson, and Kendrick Nunn while still having Jimmy Butler and Tyler Herro still on the roster. Robinson and Nunn have minimum free agent cap holds. They can just keep their Bird Rights, and it won’t cost them anything or take away their max cap space. Bam, who I think is an unbelievable talent and the modern center of what centers will be over the next decade, he deserves a max contract or close to it. Unfortunately, the Heat are not likely to give him the extension now just because then they would lose that cap flexibility to sign Giannis later in 2021. But with the way they positioned themselves, they can hold off on the extension, sign Giannis and then re-sign all those guys I was talking about, including Bam.”

34:28 – The Toronto Raptors’ chances of landing Giannis

Scotto: “They’re going to have an interesting decision with Fred VanVleet. I think Fred is a guy who can command a Malcolm Brogdon type of contract. A couple of general managers I’ve spoken with and executives around the league agree with that.”

37:48 – The Dallas Mavericks’ chances of landing Giannis

Gozlan: “They don’t need to do that much. Under that $125 million projection, they don’t have to do anything. If it’s closer to the $115 million, they’d be around $8 million short. They would just have to trade one guy like Delon Wright, Maxi Kleber, or Seth Curry.”

38:53 – The Golden State Warriors’ chances of landing Giannis

Gozlan: “They have one of the more difficult paths to getting Giannis because they’re not going to have cap space as long as they have Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green. They’re not going to be able to sign him outright. Their easiest path to getting him would be a midseason trade or a trade during this offseason. What they’re probably hoping to do is trade Andrew Wiggins, whose salary alone will basically equal Giannis’ this year and package the No. 2 pick, the Wolves’ pick and maybe some more future picks. Maybe they throw in Eric Paschall? Throw in everything they’ve got now for Giannis.”

42:53 – The Los Angeles Lakers’ chances of landing Giannis

45:00 – Ranking the teams that can land Antetokounmpo in 2021

MORE: What’s next for Antetokounmpo, Mike Budenholzer and the Bucks? NBA GMs and executives weigh in

You can follow Scotto and Gozlan on Twitter by clicking their names.