Chattanooga Times Free Press

LeBron to join Lakers

- BY TIM REYNOLDS

Kevin Durant, Paul George and Chris Paul all made quick decisions to stay put and remain in the Western Conference.

And now LeBron James is joining them.

Just like that, the West got even wilder.

The first day of NBA free agency was not lacking for fireworks or firepower, led by James’ decision to leave Cleveland for a second time and join the Los Angeles Lakers. James agreed to a fouryear deal worth $154 million Sunday, meaning his streak of eight consecutiv­e Eastern Conference championsh­ips — four with Miami, four with the Cavaliers — will end next year.

He could still go to the NBA Finals, of course. He’s just going to have a much tougher time getting there out of the West.

Compared to his past freeagent decisions, James moved super swiftly — it took him eight days to reveal in 2010 that he was going to Miami and 11 days in 2014 to say he was going back to Cleveland. This time, it took about 20 hours.

Durant, George and Paul were way faster than that.

The bonanza started late Saturday night when Durant decided to sign a two-year, $61.5 million deal with the Golden State Warriors. He’ll make $30.5 million this season with the franchise that has won three of the past four NBA titles. The terms were confirmed by a person familiar with the situation who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the deal cannot become official until the league’s offseason moratorium ends this week.

The deal comes with a player option for 2019-20, so Durant can — and likely will — become a free agent again next summer.

George and Paul made their announceme­nts known not long afterward. George told a party in Oklahoma City that he’s staying with the Thunder, after agreeing to terms on what is a $137 million, four-year deal that comes with an option for the final season. Paul made his intentions known on Twitter at exactly midnight EDT Sunday, saying he’s staying with the Houston Rockets after agreeing to a four-year contract worth $160 million.

All three of those players will have designs on a title next season.

As if getting through one another won’t be tough enough, James is now coming to join the party. By the time he announced, just more than $900 million worth of new deals had been agreed upon, based on figures confirmed to the AP by people involved in the various decisions — with almost all of that money getting committed by teams in the West.

And all of those clubs — Golden State, Oklahoma City, Houston, the Lakers, even Denver by locking up Nikola Jokic for $150 million and Will Barton for $54 million — could definitive­ly say they were thrilled. More big moves in the West are possible, especially with DeMarcus Cousins still available in free agency and a candidate to return to New Orleans.

Durant’s move means the Warriors not only got to keep the 2017 and 2018 NBA Finals MVP, but they also get some financial flexibilit­y in the deal because he could have gotten more money had the deal been structured differentl­y.

For the Thunder, the win was that their risk paid off. Trading for George a year ago was panned by some critics, presumably because of the belief he was already focused on joining his hometown Los Angeles Lakers in free agency.

That move isn’t happening.

Not now, anyway, and barring a trade not for at least three years in what will be considered a massive victory for the Thunder and general manager Sam Presti.

“I’m here to stay,” George told the crowd at the party.

In Houston, Paul told Rockets fans the same thing.

“UNFINISHED BUSINESS,” he wrote on Twitter at the exact moment that the calendar flipped to July 1 in the East, meaning the NBA’s free agency frenzy was officially open for the summer.

Houston took Golden State to seven games in the Western Conference finals back in May. Paul missed the last two games of that series with an injury, and the Rockets wasted big leads in both of those games — then had to watch the Warriors sweep Cleveland for the NBA title.

Paul averaged 18.6 points and 7.9 assists last season with the Rockets, who went 65-17 while led by Paul and newly minted NBA MVP James Harden. ESPN reported he is signing a four-year deal that will be worth $160 million.

They were the initial wave. Sunday evening, James made his move.

He flew to Los Angeles on Saturday, creating a frenzy without saying a word.

Turns out, James was flying to his new home after he spent the week vacationin­g in Anguilla. He’s the next superstar to follow in the legacy that Wilt Chamberlai­n, Jerry West, Shaquille O’Neal, Kobe Bryant and Magic Johnson built for the Lakers.

Philadelph­ia star Joel Embiid weighed in on Twitter saying, “The Lakers are FOREVER gonna be Kobe’s and Magic’s team…. Process that.”

The 76ers met with James’ representa­tives Sunday, obviously to no avail. Embiid’s opinion notwithsta­nding, the Lakers are James’ team now.

And the East, for the first time in nearly a decade, will have a new king next spring.

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