Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Waiters proves his worth

Guard agrees to 4-year, $52M deal with Heat

- By Ira Winderman Staff writer

Breakout year earns him four-year, $52 million deal.

MIAMI — Free-agent guard Dion Waiters has turned his one-year audition with the Miami Heat — a season filled with bravado and big-moments shots — into a four-year return engagement.

After signing for the Heat’s $2.9 million exception when he found himself with limited options last summer, Waiters settled in as a backcourt complement to Goran Dragic, with the backcourt taking the “7-Eleven” nickname as a play on Dragic’s and Waiters’ numbers, with Waiters playfully noting how the team’s ball-movement offense left them “always open.”

It proved to be a breakout season for Waiters, after uneven stints with the Cleveland Cavaliers and Oklahoma City Thunder during the first four seasons of his NBA career. He averaged 15.8 points, posting career bests with his .394 3-point shooting, 4.3 assist average and 3.3 rebounding average.

The agreement has been reported as four years at $52 million, which would mean a $12 million salary for the upcoming season. There are no option years in the contract. The Heat were working with approximat­ely $34 million in salary-cap space before the Waiters agreement.

Waiters bypassed a $3 million 2017-18 option with the Heat to enter free agency July 1. The NBA signing moratorium ends at noon today, which is the earliest Waiters can be signed.

The agreement with Waiters still left James Johnson, Willie Reed, Luke Babbitt and Udonis Haslem as unsigned Heat free agents. In addition, the Heat have a Friday

The agreement with Waiters still left James Johnson, Willie Reed, Luke Babbitt and Udonis Haslem as unsigned Heat free agents.

“It was damn near the best thing that’s happened in my NBA career.” Dion Waiters, on his signing with Miami before last season.

deadline to guarantee Wayne Ellington’s $6.3 million salary for next season.

The Heat were reportedly working into Wednesday night on a new agreement with Johnson, after he had been linked to interest from the Utah Jazz a day earlier.

Depending on the Heat approach with Johnson, there remains the possibilit­y of the Heat being able to add another notable free agent.

The Heat began to cycle back to their own players after Utah Jazz free-agent forward Gordon Hayward, who had met with the Heat at Saturday’s outset of free agency, agreed Tuesday to a four-year, $128 million contract with the Boston Celtics.

For Waiters, the next challenge becomes displaying enough durability to push the Heat beyond last season’s 41-41 lottery finish. Waiters missed 20 games early in the season with a groin tear, three at mid-season with a sprained ankle, and then the season’s final 13 games with another sprain of that ankle.

Waiters had been linked to interest from the Los Angeles Lakers and New York Knicks.

Waiters chronicled his desire to return to the Heat in an April essay at The Players’ Tribune.

“Look, I know we fell one game short of the playoffs, and it kills me,” he wrote. “If I hadn’t gone down with an injury, I think we all know where we’d be right now.

“But you know what? The run this season was magical.”

In that Players Tribune piece, Waiters said working under Heat President Pat Riley was transforma­tive.

“When I got a call from Miami, I went down there and walked into the O.G. Pat Riley’s office,” he wrote. “It was damn near the best thing that’s happened in my NBA career.”

A primary lesson, Waiters said, was learning how to get into the type of condition the Heat demand from their players. Since the end of the season, Waiters offered before-and-after photos of his re-sculpted physique.

“When Pat said, ‘worldclass shape,’ I thought it sounded cool,” Waiters wrote, “but in my head, I was like, Yeah, I got this. I’m in world-class shape. You already know.

“So I show up for camp, and after one week, my body is shot. I was damn near throwing up in trash cans like in the movies. And I realized, You know what? Pat was not just talking that smooth talk. This Heat thing is the real deal.”

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 ?? PEDRO PORTAL/TNS ?? Dion Waiters turned a one-season audition into a four-year extended run with Miami. He averaged almost 16 points a game.
PEDRO PORTAL/TNS Dion Waiters turned a one-season audition into a four-year extended run with Miami. He averaged almost 16 points a game.
 ?? MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Dion Waiters averaged 15.8 points and shot a career-best .394 from beyond the 3-point line. He also averaged 4.3 assists and 3.3 rebounds a game.
MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/STAFF FILE PHOTO Dion Waiters averaged 15.8 points and shot a career-best .394 from beyond the 3-point line. He also averaged 4.3 assists and 3.3 rebounds a game.

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