The Reporter (Vacaville)

Warriors’ Cauley-Stein traded to Mav’s.

- By Wes Goldberg Bay Area News Group

SAN FRANCISCO >> The Warriors have agreed to trade center Willie Cauley-Stein to the Dallas Mavericks, league sources confirmed with Bay Area News Group. The deal was first reported by ESPN.

Dallas will send Utah’s 2020 second-round pick to the Warriors.

Cauley-Stein, 26, signed a twoyear $4.4 million deal with a player option for the second season with Golden State last summer. In 41 games (37 starts), Cauley-Stein averaged 7.9 points, 6.2 rebounds, 1.5 assists and 1.2 blocks in 22.9 minutes per game.

The move frees up a roster spot for the Warriors and gives them $2.57 million in space under the hard cap. Golden State can use the roster spot and cap space to promote one of their two-way contract players — guard Ky Bowman or center Marquese Chriss — to a standard contract. The Warriors will also gain a $2.17 million trade exception.

Without Cauley-Stein, who started the last four games, Omari Spellman and Chriss, and possibly rookie Alen Smailagic, will absorb his minutes at center. Kevon Looney remains sidelined with an abdominal strain, and there is no timetable for his return.

Earlier on Friday, the Mavericks traded rookie Isaiah Roby to the Thunder for center Justin Patton, who they will waive to clear a roster spot for Cauley-Stein. For Dallas, they acquire a center after Dwight Powell suffered a season-ending Achilles tear against the Clippers this week.

SPELLMAN’S FRESH START RESCUED HIS CAREER >> Right arm outstretch­ed, Omari Spellman proudly held the pose as the ball swished through the net.

As a rookie with the Atlanta Hawks a year ago, Spellman hesitated to be anything more than a stand-still shooter. Through work, he feels now he can do more. Making his second start at center this season in the Warriors’ Jan. 12 loss to the Grizzlies, Spellman back-peddled to the corner, called for the ball, and scored the first three points of the game.

After one frustratin­g season in Atlanta that made him question whether or not he belonged in the NBA, Spellman has found a nurturing environmen­t in Golden State that has helped him rediscover his confidence.

Down 55 pounds from when the Warriors acquired him last summer, Spellman, 22, is posting career-highs in points, rebounds and shooting percentage­s. Having emerged as a floor-spacing big apt to crash the offensive glass and deliver highlight-worthy dunks, Spellman’s third-year option was exercised in October.

“All you have to do is look at him physically, to see where he’s come from starting training camp to now. He looks like a different human being,” head coach Steve Kerr said. “I’m really proud of him. He’s earned some minutes going forward for sure.”

After drafting him 30th overall in 2018, the Hawks had hoped to get a player who could space the floor and guard multiple positions. Instead, Spellman struggled with the adversity that often meets the firstyear pro. By midseason, he gained 40 pounds and lost minutes and the trust of Atlanta’s organizati­on.

In July, the Hawks traded him to the Warriors for center Damian Jones and a 2026 second-round pick. Spellman, a five-star recruit who won a national title in one season at Villanova, wondered if he had peaked in college.

“At first I was like ‘Bro, you’re just a salary cap trade,’” Spellman said of when he was dealt. “And then I was like, ‘Why do you think like that?’”

With Golden State, Spellman overhauled his diet, eliminatin­g guilty pleasures like pizza and chicken wings, and rededicate­d himself to his craft. He works closely with player developmen­t coach Aaron Miles, who helped him channel his emotions into better work habits.

After games early in the season, Miles would text Spellman video clips of missed scoring opportunit­ies like taking an open jumper or posting up a smaller player. “You’re leaving food on the table,” Miles would say. In the last 11 games, Spellman is averaging 11.1 points on 47.6% shooting, including 48.7% from 3-point range.

“Being in a great mental space is important when you’re playing the game,” Miles said. “A lot of these guys already have the skillset. There’s some things you can tweak and fine-tune and whatever, but a majority of this game is mental — mindset and approach to the game.

“Once you develop that, that’s when the skillset is able to take over. I think he’s making that stride.”

Spellman looks back on his year in Atlanta and realizes his behavior almost ended his NBA career. He admits now he was in a rut. He saw counselors, nutritioni­sts, and therapists but to no avail. He struggled to develop the discipline necessary to get in shape or ward off outside criticism from social media.

With the help of his coaches and renewed urgency, he slimmed down. In a matter of three months, he’s gone from wearing a size XXL jersey to a large, and looks forward to how he can complement a team with a healthy Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson next season.

“I’m blessed to survive,” Spellman said. “I was in a situation that could have easily ended me. I’m glad I survived.”

 ??  ?? NBA
Sports >> B1
NBA Sports >> B1
 ?? BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Warriors’ Willie Cauley-Stein, center, was traded to Dallas. Dallas will send Utah’s 2020 second-round pick to the Warriors.
BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Warriors’ Willie Cauley-Stein, center, was traded to Dallas. Dallas will send Utah’s 2020 second-round pick to the Warriors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States