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 By Chad Ford
 ESPN Insider
 
 The free-agent frenzy is over and a number of high-profile teams have a lot to
 show for it. With NBA spending at an all-time high and trades going down in
 frantic pace, there is a growing parity in the league that gives hopes to
 franchises that have had little to cheer about the past few years.
 From Boston to Utah to Orlando and even Cleveland, GMs can stand up credibly
 after a busy summer and tell fans that hope is on the way.
 Unfortunately, not everyone can say that. A number of teams that still need help
 have done nothing. A few more have made only minor, lateral moves that won't
 likely affect the win column once the season begins.
 With all the focus the past few weeks on what a handful of teams have done in an
 effort to improve, it's just as instructive to look at what a handful of teams
 haven't done. A number of teams on the list, including the Grizzlies, Knicks and
 Hawks, came into the summer with high hopes. With nothing to show for it (yet),
 is it time to write them off or will they still make a big splash this summer?
 Insider takes a look 10 teams that still need a major overhaul this summer. Can
 the Mavs land Jason Kidd? With the Grizzlies finally get their hands on a big
 man -- Eddy Curry? Will Isiah Thomas finally make the big move he's been
 promising? Here's our take.
 
 Dallas Mavericks
 Cash remaining: None
 Players signed/added: Calvin Booth, Marquis Daniels, Devin Harris, Didier
 Ilunga-Mbenga, Pavel Podkolzine
 Players lost: Danny Fortson (Sonics), Steve Nash (Suns)
 Skinny: Are the Mavericks rebuilding? That's the question everyone in the league
 is asking in the wake of their decision not to match the Suns' six-year, $60
 million offer to Steve Nash. With the exception of Booth, all four players the
 Mavs signed this summer are either rookies or have just one year of experience
 in the NBA. The team has no money left. They had to spend their mid-level
 exception to re-sign Daniels and their $1.6 million exception to sign rookie
 Mbenga.
 
 Where do they go from here? Their one major asset is Antoine Walker. Walker is
 in the last year of his contract and has received heavy interest from the Knicks
 and 76ers. The Mavs still need a veteran point guard and some defensive
 toughness in the paint. Can either team deliver? The Mavs want Samuel Dalembert
 in any package the 76ers put together -- but there's no way Sixers GM Billy King
 is going to do that. Dalembert is too valuable. The Knicks are trying to sell
 the Mavericks on a package that includes Kurt Thomas. The Mavs are interested,
 but only if they take back Jerry Stackhouse, not Walker, in return.
 The most attractive option for the Mavs? Working out something with the Nets.
 The team is cutting costs like crazy right now and it's evident that Jason Kidd
 no longer wants to stick around for the rebuilding process. A Walker/Josh
 Howard/Tony Delk for Kidd and Alonzo Mourning trade works under the cap and
 would give the Nets more than $20 million under the cap next season -- even if
 they do re-sign Richard Jefferson.
 
 However, given owner Mark Cuban's sudden fiscal responsibility, is he really
 willing to swallow the last five years, $85 million of Kidd's contract given his
 recent knee surgery? Probably not, unless, that is, the Nets also are willing to
 take back at least one big salary in return. The Nets have a $10 million trade
 exception and could easily swallow a player like Calvin Booth, Jerry Stackhouse
 or Tariq Abdul-Wahad in return.
 
 Memphis Grizzlies
 Cash remaining: $1.6 million exception
 Players added: Antonio Burks, Brian Cardinal, Andre Emmett
 Players lost: None
 Skinny: Brian Cardinal may be the hardest-working guy in the NBA, but he isn't
 going to be the player who puts the Grizzlies over the top next season. Jerry
 West has been looking for a legit big man for the past two seasons but still
 keeps coming up empty. The Grizzlies were the front-runners to land Erick
 Dampier in a sign-and-trade earlier in the summer, but the Warriors aren't
 willing to make a trade, leaving Memphis no real options for Damp.
 Late last week the Grizzlies turned their attention to landing a younger, but
 riskier big man -- Eddy Curry. League sources told Insider this weekend that the
 Grizzlies and Bulls had discussions about Curry and that GM John Paxson is
 willing to trade him for the right price. The Grizzlies have a ton of assets to
 throw at the Bulls, and a trade that would send Bonzi Wells and a re-signed
 Stromile Swift to Chicago for Curry, Eddie Robinson and Chris Jefferies works
 under the cap.
 
 Paxson has grown weary of Curry's inconsistency and lack of conditioning. He
 reportedly showed up at the Bulls' training facility 35 pounds overweight two
 weeks ago -- after vowing to get in the best shape of his career as the season
 ended. The team is beginning to think that Curry, with all the distractions of
 living and playing in his hometown, needs a change of scenery to succeed.
 Getting a combo of Wells (who is in the last year of his contract) and Swift
 allows the Bulls to save some face.
 
 On the Grizzlies' side of things, Curry has the ability to be a dominant
 low-post scorer in the league. But does he have the head? The Grizzlies believe
 that coach Hubie Brown can turn his career around. If Brown can do it (the fact
 that Curry is in a contract year also provides some motivation) the Grizzlies
 could move into the top tier in the West. Without Curry or a similar dominant
 big man on board, the Grizzlies could end up sinking a bit this year given the
 major improvement of several non-playoff teams in the West.
 
 New York Knicks
 Cash remaining: Mid-level exception; $1.6 million exception
 Players added: None
 Players lost: None
 Skinny: Isiah Thomas has been in hot pursuit of every free agent on the planet
 this summer -- but so far he's come up empty. By now you know about the
 high-profile attempts to work out a sign-and-trade with the Warriors for Erick
 Dampier, the Bulls for Jamal Crawford and even the Lakers for Kobe Bryant. All
 three deals look dead at the moment.
 
 The Warriors are telling everyone that they aren't inclined to take on more
 salary just to get Dampier more money on the open market. Bulls GM John Paxson
 is insisting that he won't do a deal with the Knicks unless Thomas takes back
 Jerome Williams and Eddie Robinson. Paxson wants only expiring contracts and
 Shandon Anderson back in return. The team has also tried hard to pry away
 Antoine Walker from the Mavericks to no avail.
 
 On the likely chance that all of Isiah's pursuits fall through . . . what's
 left, Knicks fans? The Knicks still have their mid-level, though it appears
 they're on the verge of giving three million of it to Vin Baker. It doesn't
 appear there are any unrestricted free agents out there are worth Isiah's time
 with the extra $1.9 million he'd have left. The team does have the valuable
 expiring contracts of Dikembe Mutombo, Othella Harrington, Frank Williams and
 Cezary Trybanski to work with, which gives Thomas one shot, if he combined all
 four players, of taking on a contract worth roughly $10.3 million. The Mavs are
 also pushing Jerry Stackhouse their way if the Knicks would give up Kurt Thomas
 in return.
 
 New Jersey Nets
 Cash remaining: Mid-level exception; $1.6 million exception
 Players added: Rodney Buford, Nenad Kristic, Jacque Vaughn
 Players lost: Kerry Kittles (Clippers), Kenyon Martin (Nuggets)
 Skinny: I don't think there's much hope, Nets fans. There's talk that help is on
 the way in the form of free agents Eric Williams and Ron Mercer. But don't kid
 yourselves. Neither of those players replaces Kittles, let along Kenyon. The
 Nets are burning down the house and team president Rod Thorn is distraught.
 Whether Jason Kidd officially demands a trade is irrelevant. The team needs to
 trade him this summer if it wants any real chance of cap flexibility down the
 road. The Nets are already talking about a near-max extension with Richard
 Jefferson (6 years, $75 million) that puts them right up against the cap next
 season. Assuming they also re-sign Jason Collins, give Williams the three-year,
 $11.5 million deal they've been talking about and use some of the first-round
 picks they got in the Kenyon Martin deal next year, they're likely be over the
 cap again.
 
 What's the point? Without a legit center or power forward the Nets are no longer
 championship contenders in the East -- even with a healthy Kidd. As Kidd gets
 older and his contract keeps escalating by 12.5 percent, their flexibility is
 gone. The challenge for the Nets isn't whether to trade Kidd, it's whether they
 can right now. He's coming off knee surgery and might not be able to go by
 training camp.
 
 Is there an owner out there willing to swallow his deal, send expiring contracts
 or talented young players back in return with that much uncertainty? The
 Mavericks are the only team to come to mind (though you have to wonder if
 they're really interested given the contract they refused to match for Nash).
 The Nets may have to wait until mid-season, when they can prove Kidd is healthy,
 to trade him.
 
 It's too bad ownership didn't listen to Thorn before the trade deadline when he
 advocated moving Kidd to San Antonio for Tony Parker and expiring contracts.
 Thorn saw the writing on the wall and wanted to give the Nets a shot at keeping
 Martin. Now, the Spurs wouldn't touch that deal and the Nets are in ruins.
 
 Atlanta Hawks
 Cash remaining: $10.7 million
 Players added: Josh Childress, Jason Collier, Al Harrington, Josh Smith
 Players lost: Michael Bradley (Magic), Stephen Jackson (Pacers), Jacque Vaughn
 (Nets)
 Skinny: A member of the Hawks' ownership group objected to my characterization
 last week in a chat that the front office was a mess and that the ownership
 group didn't see eye-to-eye on everything. The information came directly from a
 number of GMs and player agents who have dealt with the Hawks this summer.
 However, he rightly pointed out the team has made progress. They've cleared more
 than $10 million in cap space, hired an up-and-coming head coach in Mike Woodson
 and made a great trade for Harrington.
 
 Given where the Hawks were last season, those are all improvements. Still, cap
 space is only meaningful if you use it. The Hawks' excuse is that teams are
 overpaying for free agents and they don't want to fall into the same trap. It's
 tough to argue with that premise (I've been railing on teams for overspending
 all summer) but . . . cap space and a team full of shooting guards and small
 forwards (they've drafted six in the past two years -- Boris Diaw, Travis
 Hansen, Childress, Collier, Donta Smith and Royal Ivey) don't win games.
 Whatever GM Billy Knight's vision is, so far it includes no bigs and no true
 point guard (Jason Terry will always be more comfortable at the two) -- a recipe
 for disaster in the NBA. The team has made two high-profile attempts to land
 free agents. Both have failed. Kenyon Martin turned his nose up at a max
 contract with the Hawks, choosing the Nuggets instead. Erick Dampier continues
 not to commit to the Hawks despite the fact that they're the only team with cap
 room willing to pay him more than the mid-level exception.
 
 With the free-agent market thinning, the Hawks are running out of options. Damp
 will always be a possibility as long as a team he actually wants to play for
 doesn't figure out a sign-and-trade with the Warriors. Stromile Swift could be
 another option if the Grizzlies don't use him in a sign-and-trade first.
 After that, there isn't much left. The Hawks can always try to use their cap
 space or Jason Terry to facilitate a trade. Short of that, however, the team is
 on the verge of challenging the Bobcats for worst record in the league next
 season. That's not exactly the progress I'm sure the new ownership was looking
 for when it headed into the offseason.
 
 Houston Rockets
 Cash remaining: $5.4 million trade exception; Mid-level exception; $1.6 million
 exception
 Players added: Reece Gaines, Juwan Howard, Tyronn Lue, Tracy McGrady
 Players lost: Kelvin Cato (Magic), Steve Francis (Magic), Cuttino Mobley (Magic)
 Skinny: The Rockets pulled off the second-biggest trade of the summer when they
 swapped Francis and company for Tracy McGrady. A combo of T-Mac and Yao Ming
 should easily get the Rockets into the postseason next year. But you don't make
 a blockbuster trade like this unless your gunning for a championship. To that
 end, the Rockets still have a couple of major holes to fill. Losing Francis left
 the team very thin at the point guard position. Lue is a backup and Gaines isn't
 even that yet.
 
 So far their search for a legit, veteran point has come up empty. They flirted
 with Eric Snow, Derek Fisher, Brent Barry and even Mike James, but all of them
 are now somewhere else. There isn't an obvious solution to their problem left on
 the free-agent market. A guy like Charlie Ward might be serviceable, but he
 isn't ideal either.
 
 The team also has no depth at center. Yao averaged just 33 mpg last season. Who
 plays the other 15? The good news is that the Rockets have a huge trade
 exception and their full mid-level to work with. The bad news is there aren't
 many bigs on the market (free agent or trade) worth wasting their time on.
 
 Sacramento Kings
 Cash remaining: $1.6 million exception
 Players signed: Kevin Martin, Greg Ostertag
 Players lost: Vlade Divac (Lakers)
 Skinny: We're still scratching our heads at the Kings' decision to let Vlade
 Divac go only to replace him with Greg Ostertag. The Kings cited money concerns
 at the time, but Insider has learned that the Kings actually guaranteed more
 money to Ostertag than the Lakers did to Divac. Divac's deal is for two years,
 $10.3 million, but only $2 million of his contract is guaranteed for his second
 season, bringing his guaranteed money down to $6.9 million over two years.
 Ostertag's deal is for two years, $8.8 million.
 
 Maybe it had something to do with Chris Webber's diatribe in the Sacramento Bee
 where he seemingly called out Divac a number of times for being soft, not
 lifting weights and not having a serious attitude in the locker room. Webber
 claims that it wasn't Peja Stojakovic he's was railing on in his post-playoff
 rant but other players who play like their from the "suburbs."
 "It's time to stop playing soft and (like) suburban kids. That's what we play
 like. We play like we're from the suburbs and the best basketball is played in
 the city. Everybody knows that."
 
 Webber's list of tough guys? Stojakovic, Bobby Jackson, Doug Christie, Mike
 Bibby and Darius Songaila. That leaves just one player, Brad Miller, left on the
 team in CWebb's doghouse. It isn't likely that the Kings will trade Miller,
 given that he and Ostertag are the only big guys left on their roster. However,
 Stojakovic and Christie have been offered around the league. If a trade doesn't
 work, it appears that the team has some serious interest in bringing Nuggets
 free agent Rodney White into the fold.
 
 Minnesota Timberwolves
 Cash remaining: Mid-level exception; $1.6 million exception
 Players added: Fred Hoiberg, Troy Hudson
 Players lost: None
 Skinny: The Timberwolves shook off that first-round playoff hex and made it all
 the way to the Western Conference Finals last season. Do they have what it takes
 to go all the way this year? The only player who may not be returning is
 starting two guard Trenton Hassell. The Blazers gave him a six-year, $27 million
 offer sheet that may be too rich for the Wolves' blood. Hassell's defensive
 intensity will be missed, but his loss shouldn't be a major impediment to the
 Wolves' quest for the Finals.
 
 Still, with so many teams improving in the West, should the Wolves stand
 completely still? They have their full mid-level exception at their disposal and
 one very valuable trade asset -- Wally Szczerbiak. The Blazers have been after
 Wally for a while. A combo of Wally and Michael Olowokandi for Shareef
 Abdur-Rahim or a combo of Derek Anderson, Vladimir Stepania and a re-signed
 Darius Miles could help put the team over the top next season.
 
 New Orleans Hornets
 Cash remaining: Mid-level exception; $1.6 million exception
 Players added: J.R. Smith
 Players lost: Robert Traylor (Cavs)
 Skinny: Yawn . . . . Once again it's a relatively quiet offseason for the
 Hornets. They did make a bold run at restricted free agent Morris Peterson, but
 the Raptors quickly matched, putting an end to that quest. There was heavy
 speculation last week that the Hornets were making a play for Vince Carter, but
 Raptors GM Rob Babcock blew that out of the water claiming there was nothing to
 the rumors.
 
 The team has plenty of money to spend and one semi-valuable asset in Jamal
 Mashburn they're trying to trade. Short of that, there isn't much going on. A
 new high-profile coach, Byron Scott, and hot shot rookie J.R. Smith, who lit up
 the summer league (for whatever that's worth), will have to be enough to propel
 the Hornets out of mediocrity in the Western Conference this season. Right now,
 the odds of that don't look too hot.
 
 Seattle SuperSonics
 Cash remaining: Mid-level exception; $1.6 million exception
 Players added: Danny Fortson, Robert Swift
 Players lost: Brent Barry (Spurs), Calvin Booth (Mavs)
 Skinny: The Sonics are in perpetual rebuilding mode. They made no significant
 improvements to a team that won just 37 games last year and lost its starting
 point guard, Brent Barry, to the Spurs. Fortson should give the Sonics some
 needed toughness in the post, but there's a reason he couldn't get off the bench
 in Golden State or Dallas the past two seasons.
 
 Jamal Crawford and Stromile Swift both would make some sense in Seattle, but the
 team knows that the mid-level won't be enough to land either guy. There is
 significant trade interest in a number of their players from Ray Allen to
 Rashard Lewis to Vladimir Radmanovic. However, the only guy they've been close
 to moving is backup point guard Antonio Daniels. Something has to give in
 Seattle or the team faces the real possibility that they'll challenge the
 Clippers and Warriors for the worst record in the West next season.
 
 Chad Ford covers the NBA for ESPN Insider.
 
 
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