Orlando Sentinel

Clock ticks down on trade deadline

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NEW ORLEANS — Jahlil Okafor viewed New Orleans during All-Star Weekend with a different lens than usual because he thought there was a chance it may have been his next home.

That’s life in the rumor mill.

Welcome to trade season, already underway in earnest and which will remain so until Thursday afternoon's deadline. AllStar DeMarcus Cousins is changing his address from Sacramento to New Orleans, Serge Ibaka was sent last week from Orlando to Toronto — and the next few days will likely see Carmelo Anthony, Jimmy Butler, Taj Gibson, Reggie Jackson and many more all discussed by various teams.

“Here we go again,” said Okafor, the Philadelph­ia 76ers forward who missed two games before the break amid looming trade speculatio­n.

The motivation­s are many, and obvious in most cases. Some teams will look to add pieces with hopes of enhancing their postseason hopes; others are looking to build toward the future by shedding expiring contracts or collecting draft picks.

The jostling is already well underway, and the Cousins move would be huge for New Orleans — if they can convince him to sign an extension this summer. Ibaka figures to bolster the Raptors' chances in the East, and Cleveland moved the injured Chris Andersen to Charlotte to open up a roster spot just in case the Cavs have a chance to add a piece that might help LeBron James when it's time to defend last season's title.

And of course, teams are looking for ways to improve enough to beat the defending champs as well.

With Cousins now moved, the next huge domino to fall may be Anthony, who has a no-trade clause — but is going through times trying enough with the New York Knicks that he may be persuaded to drop that clause. The Knicks were tied for fourth in the East in mid-December; they're now 12th, having lost 21 of their last 28 games.

If that wasn't enough, the Knicks also dealing with fallout related to cryptic tweets by team president Phil Jackson and the Charles Oakley incident where he was dragged from Madison Square Garden and arrested. Anthony, at AllStar weekend, said he was bolstered by support from fellow stars.

“For me, it's good to see the support from my peers despite everything I have been having to deal with,” Anthony said. “When you have your peers who understand it, they’re the ones who are actually going through similar situations and can relate to those types of situations because they're in it. So to have my peers speak up and talk about that, it means a lot to me.”

The Bulls might lose Gibson in free agency this summer, and Boston — which could easily have the No. 1 pick in this year's draft thanks to a past deal with the Brooklyn Nets — is believed to be a potential landing spot for Butler if Chicago elects to go into a full rebuilding mode.

Not everyone gets frenzied at trade time. San Antonio hasn't made a deadline deal of any real significan­ce since acquiring Kurt Thomas in 2008.

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