Date | League | Transaction |
---|---|---|
30th June, 2006 | France | Signed a three year contract with Pau Orthez. |
20th June, 2008 | France | Left Pau Orthez. |
2008 NBA Draft | NBA | Drafted 20th overall by Charlotte. |
3rd July, 2008 | NBA | Signed four year, $6,379,649 rookie scale contract with Charlotte. Included team options for 2010/11 and 2011/12. |
9th March, 2009 | D-League | Assigned by Charlotte to Sioux Falls Skyforce of the D-League. |
20th April, 2009 | D-League | Recalled by Charlotte from Sioux Falls Skyforce of the D-League. |
29th October, 2009 | NBA | Charlotte exercised 2010/11 team option. |
30th November, 2009 | D-League | Assigned by Charlotte to Maine Red Claws of the D-League. |
2nd February, 2010 | D-League | Recalled by Charlotte from Maine Red Claws of the D-League. |
13th July, 2010 | NBA | Traded by Charlotte, along with Tyson Chandler, to Dallas in exchange for Erick Dampier, Matt Carroll, Eduardo Najera and cash. |
31st October, 2010 | NBA | Dallas declined 2011/12 team option. |
24th January, 2011 | NBA | Traded by Dallas, along with a 2013 second round pick (#41, Jamaal Franklin) and cash, to Toronto in exchange for the draft rights to Giorgos Printezis (#58, 2007). |
2nd November, 2011 | France | Signed a one week contract with Paris-Levallois. |
10th November, 2011 | France | Signed a three week contract with Hyeres Toulon. |
29th December, 2011 | France | Signed for the remainder of the season with Strasbourg. |
12th August, 2012 | France | Re-signed by Strasbourg to a one year contract. |
6th August, 2013 | France | Re-signed by Strasbourg to a one year contract. |
18th December, 2013 | France | Left Strasbourg. |
20th December, 2013 | NBA | Signed a guaranteed minimum salary contract for the remainder of the season and through 2015 with New Orleans. |
9th July, 2015 | NBA | Re-signed by New Orleans to a four year, $19.2 million contract. |
15th October, 2018 | NBA | Traded by New Orleans to L.A. Clippers in exchange for Wesley Johnson. |
15th October, 2018 | NBA | Waived by L.A. Clippers. |
28th December, 2018 | France | Signed for the remainder of the season with ASVEL Villeurbanne. |
8th March, 2019 | France | Released by ASVEL Villeurbanne. |
2003 - June 2006 | Centre Federal (France, N1) |
June 2006 - June 2008 | Pau-Orthez (France) |
June 2008 - July 2010 | Charlotte Bobcats (NBA) |
July 2010 - February 2011 | Dallas Mavericks (NBA) |
February 2011 - June 2011 | Toronto Raptors (NBA) |
November 2011 | Paris-Levallois (France) |
November 2011 | Hyeres-Toulon (France) |
December 2011 - December 2013 | Strasbourg (France) |
December 2013 - October 2018 | New Orleans Pelicans (NBA) |
October 2018 | L.A. Clippers (NBA) |
December 2018 - March 2019 | ASVEL Villerbanne (France) |
June 29, 2017
Alexis Ajinca
C, 7’2, 248lbs, 29 years old, 7 years of experience
Ajinca’s offence stopped growing two years ago, and he is now a very inefficient scorer for his position (.529% true shooting percentage in 2016/17) despite the expanded offensive game he initially showed upon his return to the NBA. He shoots 41.7% on jump shots that almost all take the form of catch-and-shoot straightaway foul-line two-pointers, but that’s about it. He has become a good rim deterrent on the defensive end, and retains a decent rebounding rate. But Ajinca’s pick-and-roll defence is far less good and something opponents target when he is on the floor. Get his man in a high ball screen, take a good run at him, and he’s got no answer. Those feet do not move well.
Player Plan: Two years and circa. $10.2 million remaining. A reasonable price, but may feel the salary pinch the team is looking at if Holiday is retained. Would be moveable.
December 18, 2013
In a surprising move yesterday, the New Orleans Pelicans were said to have come to an agreement with 25-year-old French center Alexis Ajinca, a former first round pick of the Charlotte Bobcats, currently playing in his homeland for Strasbourg. Ajinca has been back in France since leaving the NBA after the 2010-11 season - nevertheless, by deliberately signing a contract with Strasbourg that had an NBA out clause, Ajinca hadn't given up on the big league, and it clearly given up on him.
Ajinca was largely forgotten about in the NBA discourse by fans and media, but has become a prominent figure in European basketball in the past year or so. He has been one of the leaders of a resurgent Strasbourg team, who have struggled in recent seasons yet finished runner-up in the French league last season and found themselves a path to the Euroleague, and while they have struggled there (bottom of group B with a 2-7 record), Ajinca's play has been a bright spot. The one time NBA drop-out has developed noticeably as a player, and not just as the shooter he looked like he was becoming. Indeed, he is headed more towards Chris Bosh than Channing Frye.
(Note that that is a style of play comparison, rather than a level of play.)
Ajinca's NBA career to date has been somewhat unsuccessful, yet also somewhat maligned. Arguably, he wasn't given enough opportunity. He played only 552 NBA minutes in three years, and was distinctly poor in the first two, spending much time in the D-League yielding only mixed results. However, such struggles are to be expected from one so young. There is not much point in drafting a 20-year-old international big man universally acknowledged as being raw, and then not spending the amount of time and patience it takes to develop him. Yet this is seemingly what Charlotte did - after almost not picking up his third year contract option, they dealt him to Dallas as a side part of the already terrible Tyson Chandler deal, thereby getting absolutely no return on their investment except salary relief.
While it is true that Ajinca had shown next to nothing in those first two years, projects rarely do. They need time, and Ajinca didn't get it. After being traded to the Mavericks, Dallas declined his fourth year option, and a subsequent controversial trade to Toronto proved to be only a few months of a reprieve. Neither team committed the necessary time to a project who needed it; neither, it seemed, felt as though he merited it. After all, he wasn't their project - they did not need to save face with him. So when Ajinca started to make progress in his third season, it was mostly overlooked. The 44% shooting stood out more than the 12.6 PER (which, while not great, is sufficiently NBA calibre, a significant improvement on his first two seasons, and altogether not bad from a 22-year-old) and he fell out of the NBA.
Since that time, though, Ajinca has continued to develop. The weaknesses his time in the NBA and the D-League demonstrated have been worked at. One such question surrounded his toughness. Ajinca is still not especially tough - it will be hard for him to ever be truly bulked up, as he just has not the frame for it. His skills are inclined towards that of a finesse player, and he plays accordnigly. But he is tougher. Furthermore, he is more skilled. He is smarter. He makes fewer mistakes. And he is far, far more productive.
Ajinca has developed over the course of his career, particularly his French career, and is deserving of his place back in the NBA. He has found his role as a player - gone (mostly) are the three-point shots, replaced with a mid-range, pick-and-roll based game (admittedly with more emphasis on the roll than the pick) interspersed with hook shots from down low, with shot creation and shot making skills, a much improved offensive talent. He was averaging 17.1 points in only 24.9 minutes per game of Euroleague play - in the toughest league outside of the NBA, Ajinca has shone brightly, emerging as one of the best centers on the continent, and particularly so offensively.
Ajinca would have played more minutes were he not so foul prone still. Certainly, Ajinca still has more to do on the defensive end. Despite his height and wingspan making him a quality shot blocker and unignorable defensive presence, the mistakes and inconsistent decision making remain, and the development has been more offensive than defensive. Nevertheless Ajinca's rebounding rates improve year on year, whilst his shot blocking remains, and the offensive production continually increases. He is now that which he was not quite before - an NBA calibre big man. And aged only 25, further improvements are no doubt forthcoming.
It is rare for NBA teams to pick up players from Europe, and particularly the Euroleague, mid-season. Nevertheless, following in San Antonio's footsteps in picking up Aron Baynes, the Pelicans have hit up that market and potentially shored up their weakest position with a solid prospect.
February 26, 2011
Orlando, Dallas and Portland made no real effort to dodge the tax. In their one deal back in January, Dallas pawned off the excess salary of Jinx Ajinca to Toronto, then promptly spent half of it again on Peja Stojakovic. They didn't even trade Cardinal.
July 8, 2010
Alexis Ajinca
After giving up a pick with very lax protection to get him - in the end, it became the one used on Luke Babbitt - Charlotte have spent two years not playing Ajinca. Jinx played 182 minutes only on his rookie season, and topped that in his sophomore season with only 30 minutes played all year. He spent a lot of the year on assignment in the D-League, averaging 14.6 points, 7.5 rebounds, 3.1 blocks, 3.0 turnovers and 3.9 fouls in 26 minutes per game, showing some signs of scoring and shotblocking ability while committing far too many mistakes and not defensive rebounding much. However, entering his third year, the D-League is now no longer an option. If Ajinca is going to do anything Theo Ratliff-ish, he's going to have to do some of it in his third year. If he doesn't, there might not be a fourth.