The Oklahoman

NBA trades:

- BY TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer

• Many names were on the trading block. See who was sent packing.

MIAMI — Paul George stayed put. So did Jimmy Butler, Carmelo Anthony and Derrick Rose.

And as the trade deadline passed Thursday, the NBA landscape seemed remarkably unchanged. In all, seven deadline-day trades were put together by the 3 p.m. Eastern deadline — but no last-minute blockbuste­rs. All-Star DeMarcus

Cousins was traded to New Orleans by Sacramento a few days earlier, yet every trade that followed paled in comparison.

“You know where all those big dominoes are? They’re still home, with the exception of one,” Miami President Pat Riley said. “I’m sure there were people that probably made some pretty significan­t offers . ... When you have that kind of player ... it takes a lot to say, ‘OK, we’re going to let this guy go.’ You stay with the sure thing there.”

George remained with the Indiana Pacers, despite widespread speculatio­n that the Boston Celtics were pursuing the fourtime All-Star. Jimmy Butler stayed with the Chicago Bulls, and the New York Knicks held onto Rose and Anthony — the latter of whom would have had to waive his no-trade clause to make any deal occur anyway.

“I wasn’t concerned,” George said. “At the end of the day, I’m in a good situation . ... I heard the rumors, different rumors, but I can’t control what was going to happen one way or another.”

The biggest moves of this trade season came long before deadline day. Toronto getting forward Serge Ibaka from Orlando last week for Terrence Ross figures to improve the Raptors’ chances in the Eastern Conference, and Thursday’s move to land P.J.

Tucker from Phoenix gives them another outstandin­g on-the-ball defender. And the deal for Cousins that went down on All-Star Sunday — in New Orleans, no less — gives the Pelicans a frontline like no other in the NBA with him now alongside Anthony Davis. Plus, Cleveland snagged Kyle Korver last month. But for the most part, favorites and contenders stayed quiet Thursday.

“It is a delicate balance of short-term goals and long-term goals,” Celtics general manager Danny

Ainge said. Boston has the chance to swap picks with Brooklyn in this year’s draft, and the Nets right now would be favored to win the lottery and hold the No. 1 pick — something the Celtics would grab, and any big addition made Thursday almost certainly would have cost them that chance.

Perhaps the most interestin­g moves Thursday were not trades at all. Dallas put five-time All-Star point guard Deron Williams on waivers, and a person briefed on the situation told The Associated Press that when Williams clears he plans to sign with the Cleveland Cavaliers, which would give LeBron James the extra playmaker he covets for the looming title defense.

Another notable player who may get to choose his next spot is Andrew Bogut, who was traded by Dallas to Philadelph­ia — and figures to be a buyout candidate. Bogut’s injury in last season’s NBA Finals coincided with the start of Golden State’s wasting of a 3-1 series lead against Cleveland, and he’s still considered an elite rim protector.

Of the players traded Thursday, only Roy Hibbert — traded for the second time this month, this time from Milwaukee to Denver — has been an All-Star in the past. Philadelph­ia kept Jahlil Okafor, instead moving Nerlens Noel to Dallas as part of the deal that sent Bogut to the 76ers.

The backlog of big men in Philadelph­ia — Noel, Okafor, Joel Embiid, newly acquired Tiago Splitter and No. 1 overall pick Ben Simmons presumably at some point — made it seem like moves were going to happen, and Noel wound up being the one to go.

 ??  ?? Indiana Pacers’ Paul George, right, remained with the team after the trade deadline passed Thursday.
[AP PHOTO]
Indiana Pacers’ Paul George, right, remained with the team after the trade deadline passed Thursday. [AP PHOTO]

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States