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lbtriggerman2
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Raja Bell will sign a three year bond worth $10 Million with the Utah Jazz.
Utah Jazz acquires Al Jefferson for center Koufus.
Nice grab for the Jazz.
Raja Bell will sign a three year bond worth $10 Million with the Utah Jazz.
Utah Jazz acquires Al Jefferson for center Koufus.
I really doubt that this is ever going to happen and I think it's just wishful thinking by Hardaway.
1) Hardaway hasn't played any competitive basketball since end of 2007.
2) He turns 39 tomorrow (Happy b-day Penny)
(When Malone was playing with the Lakers at that age he was still in great physical shape and had been playing in the league for like 19 consecutive seasons)
3) From 2004-2008 he played a total of almost 100 games (in 4 seasons) since he was plagued with injury or waived by his teams (Ironically it was the Heat who last waived him in December 2007).
I know Miller is good. I mean, he's got good statistics. But personally, I've never liked his game too much. I always seems indecisive to me. Still, at least there is a big man behind Yao now. The last one Yao had was Kelvin Cato.Rockets sign C Brad Miller. Finally a capable backup for Yao.
I know Miller is good. I mean, he's got good statistics. But personally, I've never liked his game too much. I always seems indecisive to me. Still, at least there is a big man behind Yao now. The last one Yao had was Kelvin Cato.
Heat agree to terms with James Jones
-A league source says that the Miami Heat have convinced forward James Jones -- who they just bought out two weeks ago to clear additional cap space for LeBron James and Chris Bosh -- to return to the Heat next season. Terms of the new deal were not immediately available.
Miami bought out the final three years of Jones's five-year, $23 million deal, paying approximately $1.8 million to Jones this year to get out of the rest of his old deal, which would have paid him $4.65 million next season. The savings gave the Heat enough cap space to convince James and Bosh to take less than maximum deals to join Dwyane Wade next season. The 29-year-old Jones had played his last two seasons in Miami but was injured for large stretches of the last two seasons.
When healthy, Jones has been a strong 3-point shooter, including a career-high 44 percent from behind the arc in 2007-08 with Portland. He would provide Miami with a solid role player who could relieve either Wade or James at either wing position.
After using the team's remaining cap space to sign free agent Mike Miller and re-sign forward Udonis Haslem, Miami can only offer veteran minimum contracts to other players as it fills out its roster. A seven-year veteran like Jones would be eligible for a minimum of $1.146 million next season. The Heat signed former Cavs center Zydrunas Ilgauskas to a two-year, $2.8 million deal earlier this week, with a player option for the second year, and agreed to terms with veteran center Joel Anthony, who had opted out of his old contract before the July 1 start of free agency.
Michael Jordan led the Chicago Bulls to six titles. And while he had Scottie Pippen, there is little question the Bulls were Jordan's team.
So what does Jordan, one of the best-ever in the NBA, think of LeBron James joining with All-Stars Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh to form a super team in Miami?
"There's no way, with hindsight, I would've ever called up Larry, called up Magic and said, 'Hey, look, let's get together and play on one team,' " Jordan said after playing in a celebrity golf tournament in Nevada. "But that's ... things are different. I can't say that's a bad thing. It's an opportunity these kids have today. In all honesty, I was trying to beat those guys."
James, who played his first seven seasons with his home state Cleveland Cavaliers, was part of one of the most celebrated free agent classes in history this summer. He met with the Cavs, Chicago Bulls, Los Angeles Clippers, Miami Heat, New York Knicks and New Jersey Nets.
James let the world know he was taking his talents to South Beach in an hour-long TV special on July 8.
TNT analyst Charles Barkley said James' decision may change his legacy.
"He'll never be Jordan," Barkley told 790 the Ticket in Miami earlier in the week. "This clearly takes him out of the conversation. He can win as much as he wants to.
"There would have been something honorable about staying in Cleveland and trying to win it as 'The Man' ... LeBron, if he would've in Cleveland, and if he could've got a championship there, it would have been over the top for his legacy, just one in Cleveland. No matter how many he wins in Miami, it clearly is Dwyane Wade's team."