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Beyond the Arc Sports

Deflections: Mike Miller, Josh Akognon, Point Guard Endgame

Mike Miller, back in the day.

I always joke about the Grizzlies making moves when I’m out of town, but this is ridiculous. After a quiet opening month of free agency that provoked murmuring discomfort from considerable swaths of the fan base, the Grizzlies completed three meaningful transactions — trading for the rights to Nick Calathes, signing Mike Miller, and claiming Josh Akognon on waivers — with another potentially on tap while I was on a week-and-a-half-long road trip.

I wrote about the Calathes deal from the road, here. Now back in town, let’s work our way through the team’s other recent and still outstanding business:

1. Mike Miller Signing: This was a coup for the Grizzlies in a number of ways. Let’s count some of them:

A. The team addressed two of its three most pronounced needs: Adding a significant three-point shooter (career 42%) and also more size at the three (Miller is 6’8” and even at this stage of his career produced a significantly better rebound rate than Tayshaun Prince or Quincy Pondexter).

B. They filled both of these needs on the cheap. As an amnestied player, Miller was willing to sign for the minimum ($1.4 million for players with his league tenure). And, because of a league provision designed to remove the financial incentive to sign young players at the expense of veterans, the Grizzlies will only be on the hook for roughly $884,000 of that, with the league paying the rest. The upshot here is that even after the Miller signing, the Grizzlies retain enough space under the tax line (even considering unpublished contract incentives) to sign another free agent at an above-minimum rate.

C. They brought back one of the most popular players in franchise history, giving the team an injection of goodwill that can help soothe at least some of the sore feelings over the departure of Lionel Hollins.

D. Finally, they kept Miller away from a couple of conference rivals — Houston and particularly Oklahoma City — for whom he would have been a major factor.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Deflections: Calathes, Miller, Summer League React

Coming at you live from Narragansett, Rhode Island:

The latest Grizzlies acquisition: Nick Calathes

  • The latest Grizzlies acquisition: Nick Calathes

The Calathes Deal: I promise Grizzlies transactions when I go on vacation and I don’t disappoint. Yesterday, the Grizzlies formalized a deal with the Dallas Mavericks (first reported by ESPN.com’s Marc Stein) to acquire the rights to point guard Nick Calathes, currently with Lokomotiv Kuban of the Russian League. To obtain the rights to Calathes, the Grizzlies removed protections on a 2016 second-round pick already owed to Dallas.

Calathes had a terrific career at the University of Florida and was a highly regarded draft prospect (particularly by then ESPN.com analyist John Hollinger, as I mentioned here a few weeks ago), but ended up falling to the Mavericks in the second round after agreeing to a contract with a Greek team prior to the draft. After four successful years overseas, Calathes seems ready to jump over to the NBA, and when the Mavericks drafted Shane Larkin and then agreed to free-agent deals with veteran Jose Calderon and Israeli rookie Gal Mekel, it was clear Calathes’ rights were obtainable.

There’s some thought that this deal was made in reaction to the poor play of Tony Wroten Jr. in Las Vegas Summer League [more on that to come], but my sense is that this was considered a good value play by the Grizzlies and would have been pursued regardless. The two pressing questions: What are Calathes’ NBA prospects and how likely is he to join the Grizzlies this season?

On the former, Calathes is roughly similar to former Grizzlies’ point guard Greivis Vasquez: He’s 6’5”/6’6” with advanced playmaking skills but is a spotty shooter with middling athleticism. The shooting — a solid three-point shooter at Florida, Calathes’ percentages from both long-range and the free-throw line declined mysteriously over time — is a concern. But Calathes is coming off an MVP performance in the 2012-2013 EuroCup tournament and the Grizzlies think there’s a good chance he can step over and be a quality back-up point guard.