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Pursuit of free agents a waiting game
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns/articles/2008/06/29/20080629suns.html
by Paul Coro - Jun. 29, 2008 10:54 PM
The Arizona Republic
The NBA free-agency contact window will open at 9 p.m. Monday Arizona time, and the Suns will make the obligatory calls of interest for certain free agents.
And then wait . . . and wait . . . and wait.
For the Suns and many teams facing a luxury tax, it will take more than an eight-day moratorium for free agency to play out. Teams can sign free agents starting July 9, but the Suns will wait for a trickle-down effect before filling their roster.
First-round draft pick Robin Lopez gives the Suns 10 players. If second-round pick Goran Dragic can't break his contract in Spain this year, the Suns would need to add at least three players. That likely would be done with one-year, minimum-salary deals to two veterans and a free-agent rookie who could come out of a summer team coached by new assistant coaches Dan Majerle and Igor Kokoskov.
At minimum, the Suns' payroll figures to exceed the projected luxury-tax threshold by $3 million to $5 million. Teams must pay a tax based on how much they have surpassed that threshold in February.
The Suns have a mid-level exception but are unlikely to use it. Fewer teams are using the exception, which allows teams over the salary cap to spend up to $5.8 million on a free agent. The Suns do not have a biennial exception because they signed forward Grant Hill with it last year.
Phoenix will target a backup point guard, a shooter and a big man in free agency. The Suns are determined to lighten 34-year-old point guard Steve Nash's load.
"One thing we'd like to do with Steve is not just cut down on his minutes but maybe cut down on his games, too," Suns General Manager Steve Kerr said. "He's played about 80 games almost every year. I'd like to see that go to 70. I think it'd help Steve to get a night off occasionally. It's easier when you have a guy you can rely on. D.J. (Strawberry) has a chance to play some minutes there, but we need to make sure we have a veteran in that role who can start some games and play some big minutes."
The point-guard target list includes 31-year-old Tyronn Lue. The speedy 6-footer is a 39 percent career 3-point shooter and friend of Suns center Shaquille O'Neal. In March, he considered the Suns before signing with Dallas.
Anthony Johnson, a 33-year-old who has switched teams nine times, and Chris Duhon, a pricier prospect, also interest the Suns.
For a wing player, the Suns like Jarvis Hayes. He played for the Detroit Pistons last season when new Suns coach Terry Porter was an assistant there.
Hayes, a sturdy, 6-8 forward, hit 37.6 percent of his 3-pointers last season and averaged 6.7 points but played only once in the Eastern Conference finals.
The need for a shooter makes a Gordan Giricek return feasible.
Retired guard Allan Houston still is a possibility. He has been at US Airways Center recently to work out with Suns athletic trainers he met through Hill.
Houston, 37, retired in 2005 due to knee injuries with a career scoring average of 17.3. He tried a comeback last season in New York after considering the Suns, but it ended after one preseason game.
The Suns hope to fill the big-man role by bringing back Brian Skinner or Sean Marks.
An uninspiring free-agent class, tighter budgets and few teams with salary-cap room will slow the process.
It might be August before the Suns can effectively recruit with the good-team, good-city card.
Trade rumors involving Leandro Barbosa and Boris Diaw won't die, especially now that they soon will shed their status as base-year compensation players. That limited their outgoing value to half their salaries in a trade.
Barbosa is enticing to other teams, but the Suns said they have not come close to dealing him or Diaw, who could be the Suns' starting small forward.
In the next four years, Barbosa is owed $27.4 million, while Diaw is due $36 million.
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns/articles/2008/06/29/20080629suns.html
by Paul Coro - Jun. 29, 2008 10:54 PM
The Arizona Republic
The NBA free-agency contact window will open at 9 p.m. Monday Arizona time, and the Suns will make the obligatory calls of interest for certain free agents.
And then wait . . . and wait . . . and wait.
For the Suns and many teams facing a luxury tax, it will take more than an eight-day moratorium for free agency to play out. Teams can sign free agents starting July 9, but the Suns will wait for a trickle-down effect before filling their roster.
First-round draft pick Robin Lopez gives the Suns 10 players. If second-round pick Goran Dragic can't break his contract in Spain this year, the Suns would need to add at least three players. That likely would be done with one-year, minimum-salary deals to two veterans and a free-agent rookie who could come out of a summer team coached by new assistant coaches Dan Majerle and Igor Kokoskov.
At minimum, the Suns' payroll figures to exceed the projected luxury-tax threshold by $3 million to $5 million. Teams must pay a tax based on how much they have surpassed that threshold in February.
The Suns have a mid-level exception but are unlikely to use it. Fewer teams are using the exception, which allows teams over the salary cap to spend up to $5.8 million on a free agent. The Suns do not have a biennial exception because they signed forward Grant Hill with it last year.
Phoenix will target a backup point guard, a shooter and a big man in free agency. The Suns are determined to lighten 34-year-old point guard Steve Nash's load.
"One thing we'd like to do with Steve is not just cut down on his minutes but maybe cut down on his games, too," Suns General Manager Steve Kerr said. "He's played about 80 games almost every year. I'd like to see that go to 70. I think it'd help Steve to get a night off occasionally. It's easier when you have a guy you can rely on. D.J. (Strawberry) has a chance to play some minutes there, but we need to make sure we have a veteran in that role who can start some games and play some big minutes."
The point-guard target list includes 31-year-old Tyronn Lue. The speedy 6-footer is a 39 percent career 3-point shooter and friend of Suns center Shaquille O'Neal. In March, he considered the Suns before signing with Dallas.
Anthony Johnson, a 33-year-old who has switched teams nine times, and Chris Duhon, a pricier prospect, also interest the Suns.
For a wing player, the Suns like Jarvis Hayes. He played for the Detroit Pistons last season when new Suns coach Terry Porter was an assistant there.
Hayes, a sturdy, 6-8 forward, hit 37.6 percent of his 3-pointers last season and averaged 6.7 points but played only once in the Eastern Conference finals.
The need for a shooter makes a Gordan Giricek return feasible.
Retired guard Allan Houston still is a possibility. He has been at US Airways Center recently to work out with Suns athletic trainers he met through Hill.
Houston, 37, retired in 2005 due to knee injuries with a career scoring average of 17.3. He tried a comeback last season in New York after considering the Suns, but it ended after one preseason game.
The Suns hope to fill the big-man role by bringing back Brian Skinner or Sean Marks.
An uninspiring free-agent class, tighter budgets and few teams with salary-cap room will slow the process.
It might be August before the Suns can effectively recruit with the good-team, good-city card.
Trade rumors involving Leandro Barbosa and Boris Diaw won't die, especially now that they soon will shed their status as base-year compensation players. That limited their outgoing value to half their salaries in a trade.
Barbosa is enticing to other teams, but the Suns said they have not come close to dealing him or Diaw, who could be the Suns' starting small forward.
In the next four years, Barbosa is owed $27.4 million, while Diaw is due $36 million.