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Marquis Daniels
SG/SF - 6'6, 200lbs - 43 years old - 10 years of NBA experience
Retired - Retired after 2014 season
  • Birthdate: 01/07/1981
  • Drafted (NBA): Undrafted, 2003
  • Pre-draft team: Auburn
  • Country: USA
  • Hand: Right
  • Agent: -
Stats
Transactions
DateLeagueTransaction
18th July, 2003NBASigned an unguaranteed one year minimum salary contract with Dallas.
14th July, 2004NBARe-signed by Dallas to a six year, $36,772,500 contract. Included team option for 2009/10.
12th July, 2006NBATraded by Dallas to Indiana in exchange for Austin Croshere.
30th June, 2009NBAIndiana declined 2009/10 team option.
1st September, 2009NBASigned a one year, $1.99 million contract with Boston.
26th July, 2010NBARe-signed by Boston to a one year, $2.388 million contract.
24th February, 2011NBATraded by Boston, along with cash, to Sacramento in exchange for a protected 2017 second round pick (not conveyed).
9th December, 2011NBASigned a guaranteed one year minimum salary contract with Boston.
25th September, 2012NBASigned a guaranteed one year minimum salary contract with Milwaukee.
Career Moves
1999 - 2003Auburn (NCAA)
July 2003Dallas Mavericks (Summer League)
July 2003 - July 2006Dallas Mavericks (NBA)
July 2006 - June 2009Indiana Pacers (NBA)
September 2009 - February 2011Boston Celtics (NBA)
February 2011 - June 2011Sacramento Kings (NBA)
December 2011 - June 2012Boston Celtics (NBA)
September 2012 - June 2013Milwaukee Bucks (NBA)
Articles about Marquis Daniels

December 13, 2013

Marquis Daniels - Turning 33 this month, Daniels's production has tapered off over the last four years, and it is hard to find a role he now fits.

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February 26, 2011

Two of those players were traded - Anthony Carter as a part of the Melo drama, and Marquis Daniels was salary dumped onto Sacramento (due in no small part to the fact that Daniels is possibly out for the rest of the season with a spine injury). Neither played utilised their right to veto - obviously - but perhaps there was a case for Daniels to use his. Daniels stood to gain nothing from the trade - he's probably not going to play this season, and with their depth of younger and/or better wing players (combined with a predetermined need to do it all as cheaply as possible), there is little chance of Sacramento re-signing him this offseason. Given the choice between an expensive seat on the bench of a title contender, with the vague security blanket of Early Bird rights at the end of the season, or a seat on the bench of one of the league's worst teams with an uncertain future, and non-Bird rights in a summer of anticipated league-wide turmoil, Daniels accepted the latter. I'm not sure I understand why.

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August 12, 2010

There follows a Youtube video of a song that signifies everything that is wrong with hip hop music today.



(No, really. It really is him doing the first verse. As proof of sorts, here is Marquis appearing as Q6 in a studio, in the midst of recording another song, with a self-confident man who laments society's portrayal of him as being overly gangster, which he considers to be an unfair misrepresentation of his personal doctrine. He is wearing more than one chain.)

[...] Daniels had signed that one year, $1.99 million deal last summer; it was seemingly the best contract he could get, even though he had put up his best season in 2008/09 since his rookie year. He then proceeded to put up career lows across the board for Boston, averaging only 5.6 points, 1.9 rebounds and 1.3 assists per game, scoring only 11 points per 36 minutes, playing only 51 games due to injuries, rocking a PER of only 9.6, and still being unable to shoot threes. However, he played slightly better than those raw numbers indicated, shooting 50% from the field, playing decent defense at the small forward position (to which he is not really suited), and making a valiant effort at playing as an emergency point guard (at which he is equally unsuited). He was also pretty good in the playoffs, and so although he had played his worst season to date, Boston saw fit to re-sign him.

[continued]

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August 12, 2010

The other type of no-trade clause - the one made famous by Devean George - involves players on one year contracts who will have early or full Bird rights at the season's end are given the right to veto any trades that they may be in, so that they aren't powerless to prevent having their Bird rights taken away from them (which is what happens when such players are traded, for reasons I am not aware of.) The players who qualify for that criteria and thus yield that power are as follows;

1) Jason Collins (Atlanta)
2) Marquis Daniels (Boston)
3) Anthony Carter (Denver)
4) Rasual Butler and Craig Smith (L.A. Clippers)
5) Shannon Brown (L.A. Lakers; this can be avoided if he invokes his player option for next season concurrent to the trade.)
6) Jamaal Magloire and Carlos Arroyo (Miami)
7) Aaron Gray (New Orleans; same as Brown.)
8) Josh Howard (Washington)

Just because they have this power, it doesn't mean they will use it. Devean George did, but that was the exception; players last year who could have done but didn't include Nate Robinson and Royal Ivey. Nor did Aaron Gray, who has achieved the unusual feat of having the right to veto a trade in back to back seasons. It is, however, something to note.

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