Jordan McLaughlin of Timberwolves comes home to LA to face Lakers

With Jaden McDaniels out (due to punching a wall!), Jordan McLaughlin should get more minutes vs the Lakers.

The NBA play-in games are here after the regular season came to an end on Sunday. The fun begins on Tuesday with the Atlanta Hawks facing the Miami Heat and then the Los Angeles Lakers and Minnesota Timberwolves battling it out.

The Timberwolves have former USC alum Jordan McLaughlin on the roster, although the Wolves’ regular season ended with a ton of drama when Rudy Gobert punched Kyle Anderson in the huddle during Sunday’s game against the New Orleans Pelicans.

McLaughlin has become a consistent role player on the Timberwolves, and he is averaging 3.7 PPG with 3.4 assists in a little less than 15 minutes per game. He has appeared in 43 games this season, but with Gobert suspended and Jaden McDaniels out with a self-inflicted injury, McLaughlin might get some extended run in this play-in game.

Mike Conley’s arrival in Minnesota reduced McLaughlin’s minutes, but he returns home to face the Lakers in this game.

The Lakers have emerged out of the shadows over the past two months following the All-Star break. LeBron James and Anthony Davis should enter this game as favorites to land the 7-seed and move on to face the Memphis Grizzlies in the first round.

Jordan McLaughlin still has to feel good about returning to LA with a lot on the line. He should get a chance to show what he can do.

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All the players who could wear a No. 6 jersey in 2022-23 after the NBA’s plans to retire it to honor Bill Russell

The league recently announced plans to retire Russell’s No. 6 jersey across the league to honor the Celtics great, but some players are excepted.

The NBA and Boston Celtics plan to honor Hall of Fame big man Bill Russell for his unparalleled career in the league and his dedication to fighting for civil rights and social justice by retiring his No. 6 jersey league-wide.

The move — unprecedented in league history — honors the singular life Russell lived on and off the court. Russell was the NBA’s ultimate winner with a record 13 titles to his name as a player or player-coach. He also  achieved or was a part of many milestones, including being a part of the first all-Black starting five and the first Black head coach in league history. Through it all, he used his platform to fight for others in a time when that put his career at great risk.

The players in the league wearing No. 6 jerseys in 2021-22 will be allowed to continue to do so until they either switch to a new number or retire from the game. Let’s take a look at the players who could wear that jersey number next season.

How the Wolves can still avoid the luxury tax

The Minnesota Timberwolves found themselves above the luxury tax line after making several trades ahead of the NBA trade deadline. Being above the luxury tax is not ideal considering the Timberwolves have the league’s fourth-worst record. Teams that …

The Minnesota Timberwolves found themselves above the luxury tax line after making several trades ahead of the NBA trade deadline. Being above the luxury tax is not ideal considering the Timberwolves have the league’s fourth-worst record. Teams that perform this poorly generally avoid it, but the Timberwolves had to take on more incoming salary in order to complete their trade with the Golden State Warriors.

Although the deadline passed more than two weeks ago and all contracts are fully guaranteed for the rest of the season, the Timberwolves can still get under the luxury tax. They are close enough to it ($1,136,269) that they can pull it off through buyouts and/or the waiver/claim process. Not only that, but they can also create significant enough space that allows them to fill out the rest of their roster afterward.

ROUTE A: BUYOUTS

The most straightforward way for the Timberwolves to reduce their payroll right now is through a buyout. Forward Evan Turner is already in the process of meeting other teams with the expectation he will be bought out ahead of the March 1 playoff-eligibility deadline. Guard Allen Crabbe is also a potential buyout candidate.

Players usually give back to their previous teams the amount of money their new team will pay them. For the most part, it is the equivalent to their respective prorated minimum salary. For Turner and Crabbe, their daily cap hits are $13,173 and $11,461, respectively. Each day that passes without a buyout is one less day for a new team to pay them, which means less money being surrendered in an eventual buyout to the Timberwolves.

For example, if Turner and Crabbe both get new teams committed to sign them to prorated minimum rest-of-season deals on February 22, they could finalize buyouts with the Timberwolves that day and sign with their new teams on February 24, two days after clearing waivers. Turner and Crabbe’s prorated minimum salaries on February 24 are $684,988 and $595,971, respectively. Combined, that is $1,280,959 that would be surrendered in their buyouts, which would put the Timberwolves $144,690 below the luxury tax.

Although they would be under the luxury tax after those buyouts, they would eventually go over it again in order to meet the 14-player league minimum roster requirement. This particular route would’ve been successful had they done it right after the trade deadline since both players would have given up more money. However, players usually don’t agree to buyouts until they have a new team lined up, so there wasn’t much the Timberwolves could do.

The expectation is that at least Turner will secure a buyout, but for the Timberwolves’ tax avoidance goal, hopefully, there is a bidding war for him. If a team offers more than the prorated minimum salary, such as one that has their mid-level exception (MLE) or a disabled player exception (DPE) remaining, Turner would give back around the same amount to Minnesota. For example, if the Lakers sign Turner using their $1.75 million DPE, the $1.75 million surrendered in his buyout would put the Timberwolves $613,731 below the tax. That is plenty of space for them to fill out the rest of the roster while avoiding the luxury tax altogether.

ROUTE B: WAIVE A PLAYER THAT ANOTHER TEAM WILL CLAIM

Another path for the Timberwolves to get under the tax and avoid it while fulfilling roster requirements is to waive a player whose salary is large enough to create the space but small enough to be claimed by another team. The Miami Heat did this last season when they reluctantly waived Rodney McGruder. They outright waived him, meaning his entire salary would have stayed on their payroll as dead money but because he was claimed by the Los Angeles Clippers, his cap hit was wiped off the Heat’s payroll.

The Timberwolves have two newly acquired players that so far aren’t in their future plans and could potentially be candidates to be waived: Omari Spellman and Jacob Evans. Both players were acquired alongside D’Angelo Russell so the Warriors can get under the luxury tax, but doing so pushed the Timberwolves over it. Both players are on the second season of their rookie contracts and as of now are only guaranteed for 2020-21, with an upcoming team option for 2021-22.

There is no rush for the Timberwolves to go through this route as it can be done towards the end of the year, just like the Heat did with McGruder last season. Let’s say they decide to waive Spellman ($1,897,800), who earns less than Evans ($1,925,880), and they have assurances of a team willing to put a claim on him. Teams must either have cap space (no one), or a traded player exception (TPE) equal to the amount of Spellman’s salary (Cleveland and Houston, for example) to claim him. If successfully claimed, the Timberwolves would be $761,531 below the luxury tax.

The Timberwolves could look to do a combination of the two routes in order to maximize space below the tax and create additional roster spots. Two-way players Kelan Martin and Jordan McLaughlin have been in the Timberwolves rotation but are limited by their 45-day two-way clock. They could use their post-buyout/waiver space below the luxury tax to sign both players to rest-of-season deals. They could also lock them in for at least three seasons with the remainder of their MLE ($3.7 million remaining as of February 22).

Rookie Wire Power Rankings: Ja Morant leads before the All-Star break

Rookie Wire takes a look at the top rookies through the latest week of the 2019-20 NBA season.

Fresh off of a career performance, No. 1 overall pick Zion Williamson finds himself rising up the ranks in the rookie class as he has proven to be every bit as good as advertised.

Williamson scored a career-high 31 points in a blowout win over the Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday night, becoming just the fifth player in the past 10 seasons to have a 30-point performance in his first 10 career games.

As Williamson continues his stellar play, several other first-year players have stepped up recently and are making an appearance in the latest Rookie Wire Power Rankings heading into the All-Star break.

All stats are through games played on Feb. 11

5. Kevin Porter Jr., Cleveland Cavaliers

Stats: 9.6 points, 3.1 rebounds, 2 assists

Last Rank: N/A

After missing 10 consecutive games due to a knee injury, Porter has played some of his best basketball of the season. The 30th overall pick has scored in double figures in six straight games for the first time this season and is averaging 14.9 points during that span.

He also threw down a windmill dunk that had everyone talking.

No. 4 | No. 3 | No. 2 | No. 1 | Shout Outs

Jordan McLaughlin erupted for a career-high in Timberwolves’ loss

McLaughlin, who logged 22 minutes off of the bench, finished as the second-leading scorer for the Timberwolves in the loss.

Minnesota Timberwolves two-way rookie Jordan McLaughlin recorded a career-high 19 points Monday night in a 113-104 loss to the Golden State Warriors.

McLaughlin, who logged 22 minutes off of the bench, finished as the second-leading scorer for the Timberwolves. The former USC guard scored 12 of his 19 points in the fourth quarter and finished by shooting 7-of-13 from the field while he also added four assists, three steals and two rebounds.

Perhaps his best sequence came with under a minute left in the game. McLaughlin put a nice dribble move on Draymond Green, drove to the basket and then threw it down over Warriors forward Alec Burks for his first poster dunk.

The appearance by McLaughlin on Monday was just his fifth of the season after spending much of the year in the G League with the Iowa Wolves. In 16 G League games, McLaughlin is averaging 15.2 points, 5.9 assists, 4.8 rebounds and 2.3 steals.

McLaughlin struggled in his previous four-game stint with the Timberwolves earlier in the season but some time in the G League helped the guard regain some confidence and that certainly showed on Monday.

With the ‘Wolves losers of 11 straight, McLaughlin could help provide a spark for the team.

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