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Hoopsworld.com: Ranking the 2013 Free Agents

Jeffrey32

Well-Known Member
1. Dwight Howard, UFA – 20.6 points, 14.5 rebounds, 1.5 steals, 2.1 blocks

One of the few players in the game that can take a weak team into the playoffs and turn a good team into a contender, Dwight Howard will be this year’s most sought after free agent. The only blemish on Howard’s prospects is last year’s season-ending back surgery, but that is supposed to be okay for next season.

2. Chris Paul, UFA – 19.8 points, 3.6 rebounds, 9.1 assists, 2.5 steals

Another All-Star that is playing out his contract to test free agency or possibility to just get a maximum five-year deal, Chris Paul has been an impact player and a top-five point guard for nearly his entire NBA career. There are few teams where Paul wouldn’t be a huge upgrade at point guard.

3. Andrew Bynum, UFA – 18.7 points, 11.8 rebounds, 0.5 steals, 1.9 blocks

At just 24-years-old, Bynum still has room to improve his already over-powering offensive game and overcome the immaturity label that is most likely the result of having abilities beyond his years. Bynum is one of the few true dominate game-changing centers in a game where the phrase dominate-center is not often used.

4. Josh Smith, UFA - 18.8 points, 9.6 rebounds, 1.4 steals, 1.7 blocks

In many people’s minds, Josh Smith should already be a multiple-time All-Star. There are few players in the league with Smith’s size, athleticism and ability to impact the game at both ends of the court. At 26-years-old, Smith is just coming into the prime of his NBA career.

5. Serge Ibaka, RFA – 9.1 points, 7.5 rebounds, 0.5 steals, 3.7 blocks

On a stacked Oklahoma City team, Serge Ibaka averaged just 27.2 minutes a game, but few players had a bigger impact at the defensive end of the floor. Add in a developing jump shot and Ibaka looks like a prime candidate for a huge poison-pill offer sheet next summer that could cost the Thunder more in future luxury tax than that team can afford.

6. James Harden, RFA – 16.8 points, 4.1 rebounds, 3.7 assists, 1.0 steals

James Harden was a sixth man in Oklahoma City, but he would be a first or second option in the starting unit of many other teams. This young developing guard is another Thunder player that should be anticipating a big poison-pill offer sheet next summer.

7. Paul Millsap, UFA – 16.6 points, 8.8 rebounds, 1.8 steals, 0.8 blocks

As a RFA, Paul Millsap received a lucrative offer sheet that the Jazz wisely decided to match and after proving he was worth every penny on that deal, Millsap heads into UFA as a proven impact player.


8. Taj Gibson, RFA – 7.7 points, 5.3 rebounds, 0.4 steals, 1.3 blocks

Stuck behind the massive contract of Carlos Boozer on the Bulls, Taj Gibson came off the bench for 20 effective minutes a game last season and was often the better power forward in the game. The Bulls might be hoping the rest of the league hasn’t noticed Gibson’s performance, but that isn’t likely and this is another RFA who should receive the dreaded poison-pill offer that is designed to steal young talent off luxury tax challenged teams.

9. Tony Allen, UFA – 9.8 points, 4.0 rebounds, 1.8 steals, 0.6 blocks

Tony Allen has been an important two-way player for the Grizzlies and if he can keep newcomer Jerryd Bayless from taking too many of the minutes that used to belong to O.J. Mayo, Allen is in for a big season. There are not a lot of guards that can impact the game defensively and Allen will be in demand next summer.

10. Al Jefferson, UFA – 19.2 points, 9.6 rebounds, 0.8 steals, 1.7 blocks

It seems Al Jefferson can never do enough to satisfy his critics, but there are few centers that can consistently put up the big numbers Jefferson does. Not a franchise player, but definitely an impact player, Jefferson is a very good consolation prize for those teams who miss out on Howard and Bynum.


Honorable Mention

These are not the only free agents expected to draw a lot of interested next summer. The list next year is long and enticing and offers many teams an opportunity to upgrade their talent if they can attract one of these free agents.

RFA: Ty Lawson, Jeff Teague, Stephen Curry, Jrue Holiday, Tyreke Evans, Nikola Pekovic, Tyler Hansbrough, Tiago Splitter

UFA: Manu Ginobili, David West, Kevin Martin, Elton Brand, Chris Kaman, Mo Williams, Jose Calderon, Darren Collison, O.J. Mayo (PO), J.J. Redick, Samuel Dalembert

Special Cases

There are a handful of players who would generate significant interest as free agents if they gave up the guaranteed money they have for next season and opt out of their current deals. With the uncertainty of the impact from the implementation of the new rules in the CBA next summer, giving up lucrative guaranteed money is probably a big mistake.

1. Andre Iguodala, ETO – $16.15 million in 2013
2. Monta Ellis, ETO – $11 million in 2013
3. Emeka Okafor, ETO – $14.5 million in 2013
4. Trevor Ariza, PO – $7.7 million in 2013
5. Marvin Williams, ETO – $7.5 million in 2013

https://www.hoopsworld.com/ranking-the-2013-nba-free-agents/
 
Right. Because no one who has seen him play would think he is a top free agent. Got it.

Right. Because Hoopsworld is such a reputable site for opinions. Got it.

To add, if he was such a top center, wouldn't he be ranked higher than 9?

The guy is lazy on defense (watch how he "defends" the pick and roll), doesn't block out on rebounds, and is an inefficient scorer. He was 10th in FGA per game but 83rd in FTA per game. That is unacceptable for an "inside" player and screams "soft". But please, continue with your fantastic insights to Al's game. Got it.
 
Right. Because no one who has seen him play would think he is a top free agent. Got it.

How is this relevant? With so many people on earth, I'm sure you'll find someone who would think anything about anyone. What's important is that this opinion is clearly based on his stat sheet. It is fair to say that every single person on these forums have seen a lot more of Jefferson than this guy, and that the opinions expressed, whether you agree with them or not, are based on something deeper than "he puts up good numbers".
 
Taj and Tony Allen should not be ahead of Jefferson on that list.

Also, who the **** ever uses the term "poison-pill offer sheet"
 
Unless you count that one time when he used it. You remember? I believe he said "Also, who the **** ever uses the term "poison-pill offer sheet"".

I don't count that. It's like being told to use a word or term in a sentence and saying "I don't know what (insert word or term) means."
 
To add, if he was such a top center, wouldn't he be ranked higher than 9?

this. (except that it was actually 10th, not 9th.)

he was ranked behind taj gibson and tony allen and ahead of ty lawson and jeff teague. that hardly justifies him as a superstar. "hey man, you're better than tyler hansbrough" is not something i want my 15M-per-year center to hear, especially when he's keeping better players from getting on the court and improving.
 
this. (except that it was actually 10th, not 9th.)

he was ranked behind taj gibson and tony allen and ahead of ty lawson and jeff teague. that hardly justifies him as a superstar. "hey man, you're better than tyler hansbrough" is not something i want my 15M-per-year center to hear, especially when he's keeping better players from getting on the court and improving.

I don't really like that phrasing. Big Al doesn't decide who plays and who doesn't. That's on Ty for playing him and KOC for him still being here. And even though it looks like Favors will be better than Big Al, it's at least a bit of a stretch to call Kanter better than Big Al.
 
With only a 3-day window to match, I say we offer Ibaka an offer sheet on Day 1 to make OKC overpay to keep him. Then we slide in on Day 5 and sign Harden - the guy we really want - to a large offer sheet. The chance of OKC matching 2 big offers is slim.
 
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