Lethbridge Herald

George informs Pacers he will leave in 2018

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Indiana Pacers’ timeline for making a decision on star forward Paul George just kicked into overdrive.

George’s camp has informed the Pacers that the four-time All-Star intends to leave in the summer of 2018 when he becomes a free agent, two people with knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press on Sunday night. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because neither side publicly discusses unresolved personnel matters.

George has spent all seven of his NBA seasons in Indiana, emerging as one of the league’s top players. He averaged a career-high 23.7 points and shot 46 per cent last season, but the seventhsee­ded Pacers were swept by Cleveland in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs. The steady decline in competitiv­eness of the franchise, and LeBron James’ dominance of the conference, has led George to look elsewhere as he nears free agency next summer.

The Pacers’ chances of keeping George also took a big hit when he was not voted to one of the three All-NBA teams after this season. Had he been voted in, George would have qualified for a super-max contract worth about $210 million over five years, a staggering sum that may have been too much to turn down. Instead, the Pacers are able to offer him around $177 million.

George’s declaratio­n puts the Pacers on the spot. They can either try to trade him this summer in hopes of getting a package of players and draft picks that can at least help them try to make up for the loss of a foundation­al star, or they can try to keep him for this season, make some other moves around him to improve the roster and hope they can change his mind.

It’s quite a test for Kevin Pritchard, who took over as the chief decision-maker in the Pacers front office after Larry Bird abruptly stepped down after the season concluded. Pritchard is wellrespec­ted across the league and has considerab­le experience from his time running the show in Portland. He also spent several years under Bird in Indiana, which gives him the familiarit­y of the roster and George to make an informed decision.

Complicati­ng matters is the widely held belief across the league that George wants to return to his native California to play for the Los Angeles Lakers. That means any team other than the Lakers that makes a play for George this summer runs the risk of giving up considerab­le assets for a one-year rental. That could force the Pacers to push their asking price down after resisting significan­t offers from the Boston Celtics at the trade deadline in February.

Yahoo! Sports first reported that George’s camp made his feelings known to the Pacers on Sunday.

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