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 Pelicans phase Jonas Valanciunas out of future plans
Image credit: ClutchPoints

The NBA’s traditional big-man role has been under attack since Steph Curry stepped into the league. Perhaps it was a bit before the 2009 draft class had their names called but the four-point line (The Curry Curve, if you will) is being implemented onto practice courts by practically every team. That has led teams like the New Orleans Pelicans to phase out their dependable starting centers, to mixed results. Those tactics have left Jonas Valanciunas in the lurch going into free agency.

Sure, Willie Green’s strategies down the stretch got the Pelicans to the NBA Playoffs through the Play-In Tournament. Unfortunately, figuring out how Valanciunas would be used night-to-night was a fool’s bet. In the final six games, the Lithuanian’s game log read as follows under Minutes Played: 28 – 4- 21 – 33 -16 – 7.

That’s a great spread of numbers for a PowerBall ticket. It’s horrible when it comes to building a rhythm through repetitions for the postseason. The universally respected 12-year veteran started every game but sometimes barely broke a sweat. His talents deserve better and the Pelicans can make better use of that cap space.

Valanciunas was averaging 25.5 minutes per game before the NBA All-Star break. The Pelicans were 33-22. New Orleans went 16-11 down the stretch with Valanciunas averaging 19.3 minutes a night. It’s a very simplified way to look at the season but it says something that cannot be ignored totally either. Still, Valanciunas complimented his teammates on the way out of the facility, perhaps for the last time.

However, he did not want to talk about his first venture into unrestricted free agency or a contract extension during the team’s exit interview sessions.

“It’s early and now I’ve got to wind down and spend some time with my family and see my kids. That’s all the focus. Then we’ll make a decision,” Valanciunas said. “…At moments we were really good. It was ups and downs, like every season, but I loved the group I played with. We did some great stuff on the court. It was memorable.”

Jonas Valanciunas paid off in a big way for the Pelicans

New Orleans Pelicans center Jonas Valanciunas (17) looks on against Sacramento Kings forward Harrison Barnes (40) in the second half during a play-in game of the 2024 NBA playoffs at Smoothie King Center © Stephen Lew-USA TODAY Sports

Playing through Valanciunas paid off, especially with Zion Williamson taking a back seat early and Brandon Ingram getting hurt late in the season. The Pelicans were 11-3 when he scored 18+ points and 15-4 when he grabbed 12+ rebounds. Those benchmarks were met once over the final six weeks of the season. Now Valanciunas is being mentioned as an affordable option for other Western Conference contenders by multiple local reporters.

The Athletic’s Will Guillory was clear on a podcast with Mike Scotto.

“I’d be pretty surprised if he was back because of how they were treating his spot in the rotation late in the season,” Guillory stated.

The hits keep coming from the well-tenured locally-born media as well. WDSU’s Fletcher Mackel also suggested the Los Angeles Lakers are a fit should James Borrego win that head coaching job. Green, not Borrego, was making the call to go away from Valanciunas.

A big man at the five who averaged 12.2 points, 8.8 rebounds, 2.1 assists, 1.2 steals/blocks per game in only 23.5 minutes is going to have a fairly robust market for his services. The Pelicans signaled Valanciunas was surplus to requirements though, and that conclusion by the organization was questioned after being swept out of the postseason.

“I hope I helped. You tell me,” challenged Valanciunas. “Do I help? You know, I did everything that I could to increase winning, to be a winner, to be successful. Now, you know, what people see…”

Will fans get to see Valanciunas with the Pelicans again? Probably not going by the public-facing evidence. His presence in the locker room will be missed but too many other teams will pay a higher price and make him a higher priority on offense. The recently turned 32-year-old cannot pass up that kind of opportunity at this point in his career.

This article first appeared on ClutchPoints and was syndicated with permission.

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