MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- The Houston Rockets made a move to bolster their
depth on the perimeter on Friday, landing veteran swing man Corey Brewer
from the Minnesota Timberwolves.
Houston
lost out to rival Dallas in the bidding for point guard Rajon Rondo on
Thursday, so Morey immediately turned his sights to Brewer, who scored
51 points in a game against them last year. That scoring explosion was
an anomaly, but Brewer is a hard-working veteran who should fit in well
with teammates James Harden and Dwight Howard. Brewer is one of the
NBA's best at stealing the ball, and his ability to get out for easy
transition buckets will allow him to make an easy transition to Houston.
Rockets coach Kevin McHale knows Brewer well. McHale was the GM in Minnesota when the Wolves chose him seventh overall in 2007.
Brewer left and won a championship with the Mavericks before blossoming as an energy guy off the bench with the Denver Nuggets.
He returned to Minnesota last year and was serving as a valuable mentor to youngsters Andrew Wiggins, Zach LaVine, Shabazz Muhammad and Anthony Bennett. On a team beset by injuries, Brewer was even filling in at backup point guard for long stretches.
The Rockets sent shooting guard
Troy Daniels, cash considerations and a pair of future second-round
picks to Minnesota, a person with knowledge of the agreement told The
Associated Press on condition
of anonymity because the trade has not
been officially announced. The Timberwolves will get a second-round pick
in 2015 from Sacramento and a 2016 second-rounder from Houston.
The
trade gives the Rockets another proven veteran defender in Brewer to
compete in the demanding Western Conference, where they were in fourth
place at 19-6 after Thursday's games. Rockets GM Daryl Morey has been in
pursuit of help for weeks, knowing that Golden State, Memphis, San
Antonio, the Clippers all may have superior depth to his roster.
Rockets coach Kevin McHale knows Brewer well. McHale was the GM in Minnesota when the Wolves chose him seventh overall in 2007.
Brewer left and won a championship with the Mavericks before blossoming as an energy guy off the bench with the Denver Nuggets.
He returned to Minnesota last year and was serving as a valuable mentor to youngsters Andrew Wiggins, Zach LaVine, Shabazz Muhammad and Anthony Bennett. On a team beset by injuries, Brewer was even filling in at backup point guard for long stretches.
But
with Mo Williams back playing after missing time with a back injury and
Ricky Rubio possibly returning before January, the Wolves started to
entertain offers for Brewer as they go with a full-on youth movement.
Injuries
to Rubio, Nikola Pekovic, Kevin Martin and Williams have
short-circuited any hopes the Wolves had of being a surprise team in the
first season after trading Kevin Love to Cleveland. They were 5-19
heading into Friday night's game at Boston, the worst record in the
West, so they flipped a valuable asset in Brewer, who has a player
option on his contract next season for more than $5 million for a young
shooter in Daniels and some future draft picks.
The move will
allow them to get an even longer look at Muhammad, who has been their
best player this season but has been stuck in a logjam on the wing
partially because of Brewer's presence.
Daniels
played less than 7 minutes per game for the Rockets this season, but
his ability to shoot the 3-pointer will be a welcome addition to the
Wolves, who are among the league's worst 3-point shooting teams.
It
also could signal the first of many moves as president and coach Flip
Saunders embraces a youth movement he initially hoped to avoid. Saunders
added Williams and veteran power forward Thaddeus Young in the
offseason in hopes of surrounding a young core of Wiggins, Rubio and
LaVine with experienced support.
But
Rubio has been out since Nov. 7 with a sprained ankle, Martin is out
until well into January with a broken wrist and Pekovic continues to be
bothered by soreness in his right foot.
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