New York Daily News

SHAKE AND BLAKE

Nets grab Griffin, stir up NBA again

- BY KRISTIAN WINFIELD

They said the Warriors were unfair and broke basketball when they set a record with 73 wins in a season, then signed superstar forward and league MVP Kevin Durant the ensuing summer.

Wait ’til “they” get a load of this.

The Nets have asked the Warriors to hold their drink, and their pursuit of all six Infinity Stones continues with their latest signing. Blake Griffin and the Nets have agreed to a deal, according to ESPN, which means they’ve successful­ly pried the six-time All-

Star from a Detroit franchise that agreed to buy out the remaining year-and-change of his contract.

When the signing is made official, the Nets can run out a lineup that features Griffin, Kevin Durant, James Harden, Kyrie Irving and DeAndre Jordan, easily one of the most talented five-man units this league will have seen in recent history.

It was the league’s worst-kept secret: In Brooklyn, the rich get richer and a team with championsh­ip aspiration­s just added another talented playmaker desperate to get out of his previous situation.

“I’m sure he wants to win,” Harden said after Sunday’s AllStar Game. “If he passed up on money to stay in Detroit, he wants to win and he wants to have an opportunit­y to play meaningful minutes, and I’m assuming that’s one of the reasons why he came.”

Jordan was Griffin’s Lob City partner for a decade during their time together with the Clippers.

Griffin, after a decade as one of the league’s premier high-flying forwards, wants to win a championsh­ip at this stage of his career, according to reports. And Nets GM Sean Marks has maintained since the beginning of the season that the team is on the hunt for every way to improve a team squarely positioned to compete for a championsh­ip.

The Nets have a full roster, which means they would need to waive a player to make room for Griffin, likely a player on a 10-day contract. Veterans Iman Shumpert and Andre Roberson are on 10-day deals, as is G-League big man Tyler Cook.

Griffin has appeared in only 20 games this season since he and the Pistons agreed it best he stay away from the team while they negotiated his way out of Detroit. He was not very effective in those 20 games, averaging just 12 points, five rebounds and four assists in 31 minutes per game.

Griffin’s fit is also questionab­le on a Nets team that already had its bout with defensive shortcomin­gs. He was never a defensive standout and by the time the All-Star break is over, will be a month removed from his last minutes of action in an NBA game. It’s unclear what role he will play, how effective he can be in that role, how quickly he can get up to speed with the Nets’ offensive and defensive philosophi­es, where his conditioni­ng level is, and whether he can regain the form that once endeared him as one of the league’s most electrifyi­ng talents.

The Nets also have players who have proven effective at Griffin’s position, including veteran forward Jeff Green, second-year big man Nic Claxton, hybrid wing Bruce Brown and, of course, Jordan.

Griffin also has to fight an uphill battle after back-to-back surgeries on his left knee over each of the two seasons preceding this one. He averaged 24.5 points, 7.5 rebounds and 5.4 assists in the 2018-19 season but has not been able to stay on the floor since. Last season, Griffin averaged 15.5 points. His production tapered off in Detroit this season before he stepped away from the team.

 ?? AP ?? Nets add another big name as Blake Griffin agrees to deal.
AP Nets add another big name as Blake Griffin agrees to deal.

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