Hamilton Journal News

Stars staying put as free agency starts

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Fred VanVleet bet on himself, and the Houston Rockets are the beneficiar­ies.

On an opening night of free agency where most big names — Kyrie Irving, Draymond Green, Khris Middleton, Kyle Kuzma and more — stayed put, VanVleet is headed to a new home. He agreed to a three-year deal Friday with the Rockets that’ll pay him about $130 million, a person with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns told The Associated Press.

ESPN first reported the agreement between VanVleet and the Rockets.

VanVleet — who famously uses the phrase “bet on yourself ” to describe his career trajectory from undrafted player to NBA champion with the Toronto Raptors — will make about $525,000 per game over the next three seasons.

That nearly matches what he made as a rookie in Toronto, total — about $550,000.

“Love seeing guys getting paid,” Boston star Jayson Tatum tweeted.

Irving and Luka Doncic are going to try again together in

Dallas. Green is going to chase more championsh­ips with Stephen Curry in Golden State, just like Middleton is alongside Giannis Antetokoun­mpo in Milwaukee.

And Jerami Grant is staying put in Portland, for serious money. All those decisions came quickly Friday night as free agency in the NBA got off to its traditiona­l fast and free-spending start — with roughly $1.5 billion in deals getting struck in about the first three hours alone.

The biggest deals, in terms of total value, had to wait until after midnight EDT — when the calendar flipped to July 1 for the start of a new league year.

ESPN first reported that Indiana’s Tyrese Haliburton and Memphis’ Desmond Bane both agreed to max extensions that will begin in the 2024-25 season; exact figures won’t be known until next season’s salary cap is released, but based on projection­s, they’ll be worth at least $207 million for five years.

Haliburton’s deal, ESPN said, could be worth $260 million if it goes to a supermax based on his making an All-NBA team. Haliburton was an All-Star this past season for the Pacers, and Bane had a breakout year — averaging 21.5 points for the Grizzlies.

Irving agreed to a threeyear, $126 million deal to remain with the Mavericks, who acquired him in a splashy move in February but sputtered down the stretch and missed the playoffs. A person with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns confirmed the agreement to The Associated Press, the deal taking quite possibly the biggest name in free agency off the board.

The Mavs had made clear that keeping Irving was their top priority — and got it done in the first hour of the NBA’s free agency window that opened at 6 p.m. EDT.

“DA11AS,” Irving tweeted, using his traditiona­l jersey number in there.

Grant is getting $160 million over the next five years, part of a plan that Portland hopes keeps Damian Lillard happy enough to not ask for a trade. Grant is staying put, as is Kuzma in Washington and Cam Johnson in Brooklyn.

Kuzma essentiall­y doubled his annual salary, agreeing to a $102 million, four-year deal with the Wizards. Green got a new contract that’ll pay him $100 million over four seasons with the Warriors. Both of those deals — first reported by ESPN and subsequent­ly confirmed to AP by people with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns — got done very quickly once the offseason player movement window opened.

Kuzma had opted out of a contract that would have paid him $13 million in Washington this coming season; he’ll now average $25.5 million over the next four years after scoring 21.2 points per game this past season.

Green staying put keeps him alongside Curry and Klay Thompson with the Warriors, where they have won four titles over the last decade. He opted out of a $27.6 million contract for this coming season, and now is under contract for more years.

Middleton also traded bigger salary in the short term for more years. He could have made $40 million this coming season; instead, he agreed to $102 million over three years to stay with Antetokoun­mpo and a Bucks team that’s only two years removed from an NBA championsh­ip.

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