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Report: Nuggets to hire Masai Ujiri as GM

Per the Denver Post:

Former Nuggets scout Masai Ujiri will become the team’s new general manager, according to an NBA source.

The door opened for Ujiri when the Nuggets were unable to reach an agreement with David Griffin, a former Phoenix Suns director of basketball operations.

Ujiri, 39, has been a rising star in NBA executive circles. He worked for four seasons in the Nuggets’ scouting department, which included being named director of international scouting for the 2006-07 season. Prior to that, Ujiri worked as an international scout with the Orlando Magic in 2002-03.

A native of Zaria, Nigeria, Ujiri attended prep school in Seattle, went to junior college in North Dakota and attended Montana State. He played basketball in college and then professionally for six years in Europe.

Want to know more? David Thorpe knows Ujiri well and discussed his career with TrueHoop.

One value he definitely brings is that he knows everybody and has no enemies. That’s how deals get done in the NBA. He’s not out late clowning around. He’s very classy. He values character. And I’d bet that one of the biggest things he brings to the Nuggets right now comes in how the team relates to Carmelo Anthony. It’s interesting that the two finalists for that job — David Griffin and Masai — are both from teams that just lost stars in free agency. Going through that is a great learning experience, with tremendous lessons for how to handle the biggest challenge facing the Nuggets in the year ahead. I’m sure Masai will have a very smart approach to convincing Carmelo to stay. He’ll be really good at that.

If the hire does indeed go through, Ujiri will be the first African-born GM in the NBA.

The first order of business is crystal clear — Ujiri has to convince Carmelo Anthony to stay put.

Nuggets plan ‘sit down’ with Carmelo…

…just as soon as they hire a new GM.

Nuggets management is expected to sit down with Melo some time after the team names a general manager, which it is expected to do next week. Former Suns executive David Griffin is the leading candidate.

Denver is certainly taking its sweet time hiring a GM and whoever they hire will be walking into a veritable sh*tstorm. They’ll have the same task that New Orleans GM Dell Demps had when he had to convince Chris Paul that he had a plan to turn the Hornets around. We haven’t heard much about Paul lately because both sides said that the meeting went well, and Paul said that he was hoping to stay in New Orleans.

Will the Nuggets have the same success in their meeting with Carmelo?

First things first — hire a GM already!

Chauncey Billups on the Carmelo situation

Denver Nuggets' Carmelo Anthony (15) and Chauncey Billups (7) argue the call in Game 1 of the Los Angeles Lakers vs. Denver Nuggets Western Conference finals at Staples Center in Los Angeles on May 19, 2009. The Lakers defeated the Nuggets 105-103 to lead the best-of-seven series 1-0. (UPI Photo/Jim Ruymen) Photo via Newscom Photo via Newscom

The Denver Post spoke with Chauncey Billups, who had some advice for Carmelo Anthony:

“It’s tough, but I think that’s the one thing he has to do, is whoever it is in his camp that’s speaking and talking and doing whatever, he has to take that up with them and say ‘Listen, where’s all of this coming from?’ ” Billups said. “That’s something that internally he has to fix.

“Honestly, I think that the publications and things are out of control. None of this stuff has come out of Melo’s mouth. He has not once said he didn’t want to be a Nugget. He loves Denver, he loves the Nuggets, he loves the fans. So, it’s a part of him that I’m sure is eating him up a little bit because he’s taken all this press, and he’s not said one thing to support or to not support what they are saying. He’s just trying to enjoy his summer, chill out.”

The news is leaking out, and that may be planned or unplanned, but according to Ric Bucher and people of his ilk, Anthony isn’t keeping his desire to play for the Knicks a secret.

Hell, even his new bride, LaLa Vasquez, is talking about possibly moving to New York:

“Us being in New York is a possibility,” LaLa told the Daily News’ Amanda Sidman. “It depends on ‘Melo’s career and where it takes him. There’s a lot of talk about the Knicks, I mean, there’s a lot of teams out there, he’s a great player and I think collectively we just need to think about what makes sense for our family. But I would never say that being in New York is not an option, I’d be lying to you if I said that.”

LaLa, who is from Brooklyn, admitted that she’s always been a Knicks fan “until I met my husband, then I jumped ship to the Nuggets. ‘Melo will tell you, and all the players will tell you no matter where their loyalty is, there aren’t many places like Madison Square Garden. They’ll all say that, and it’s nothing against their teams but there is a different energy in there, and you really can’t top that.”

One reason that Carmelo isn’t really discussing his situation is because he will be fined if he publicly requests a trade.

Who holds the cards — Carmelo or the Nuggets?

Denver Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony scores against the Utah Jazz during the fourth quarter of the first round playoffs game two at the Pepsi Center on April 19, 2010 in Denver. Utah beat Denver 114-111 to even the series at 1-1.  UPI/Gary C. Caskey Photo via Newscom

Larry Coon, who developed the uber-valuable NBA Salary Cap FAQ, writes that the Denver Nuggets ultimately have control in the Carmelo situation.

So unlike Cleveland with James, Toronto with Bosh and the Phoenix Suns with Amare Stoudemire, the Nuggets have a trump card. They can leave their extension offer on the table, refuse to entertain trade offers and wait Anthony out. It would then be up to Anthony to choose between a bigger payday and playing for the team of his choosing.

But such a strategy would be very risky, so the Nuggets could decide to mitigate their risk and deal Anthony this season — which also avoids the chemistry issues that go with having an unhappy superstar on their roster.

In a vacuum, I’d agree with Coon that the Nuggets have control. However, if Carmelo officially requests a trade once a new GM is hired, and the Nuggets don’t move him, they’re going to have one very unhappy superstar. That can quickly poison the locker room and waste a perfectly good season of rebuilding.

Coon also discusses how Anthony put himself in position by signing a longer deal than LeBron and Wade did:

Anthony signed a four-year extension in 2006 that took effect in 2007 and runs through the 2010-11 season (he has the option of extending for one additional season, through 2011-12). In contrast, James, Bosh and Wade elected to sign shorter extensions so as to become free agents this summer rather than next.

The difference is potentially staggering — this summer marks the last free-agent market under the purview of the current collective bargaining agreement. When Anthony becomes a free agent, it will be under the terms of the next agreement.

This could represent very bad timing on Anthony’s part. The next agreement isn’t expected to do the players any favors; the owners are seeking significant changes such as some form of hard cap and a dramatic decrease in the percentage of revenues paid to the players. Should Anthony become a free agent in 2011, his chances of being paid commensurate to the extension he turned down might be nil.

Ouch. With the uncertainty of the new (more owner-friendly) collective bargaining agreement looming, Anthony has a difficult task — orchestrate a trade to a preferred team while at the same time signing the three-year extension that’s still on the table.

If this runs into the season, I don’t see the Nuggets trading Anthony by the deadline unless he starts to pout or the team is playing so bad in January and February that the writing is clearly on the wall. It’s more likely that the Nuggets will be somewhere in the Top 4 in the West and no one in Colorado will want the team to trade Melo away when there’s another playoff run on the horizon. I remember going around and around with Raptor fans who thought Chris Bosh was going to re-sign because the Raptors were playing decent ball and were sitting in the #6 spot in the East at the trade deadline. So much for that.

In the end, Anthony holds the cards because he can force a trade with grumpy play and/or mysterious injuries. Or he could accept the fact that he won’t get the extension but he’ll still know that he’ll have the opportunity to make more money in endorsements once he hits the New York market.

This is a player’s league and ultimately the players have control.

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