The Commercial Appeal

Davis signing 5-year deal to return to Lakers

- Greg Beacham

LOS ANGELES – Anthony Davis is finalizing a five-year contract worth up to $190 million to return to the Los Angeles Lakers.

Davis’ agent, Rich Paul of Klutch Sports, confirmed the terms of Davis’ pending free agent deal to The Associated Press on Thursday. The Lakers didn’t comment.

One day after Lebron James agreed to a two-year, $85 million contract extension with the Lakers through 202223, Davis committed to the Lakers through the 2024-25 season. Davis’ deal includes an early terminatio­n clause prior to the fifth year, but the lengthy contract is still a clear declaratio­n that the 27-year-old Davis sees his long-term future with the 17-time NBA champions.

James and Davis won an NBA championsh­ip in the first season of their partnershi­p, and they’re returning this month with new contracts and a solid chance to repeat.

“Those are great contracts, and they’re well-deserved,” veteran Lakers forward Markieff Morris said Thursday from the opening workouts of training camp. “It’s a big family, and it worked out the best for everybody.”

The Lakers acquired Davis in a trade less than 18 months ago, shipping most of their young core to New Orleans to acquire one of the best big men of his generation. Davis made the ALL-NBA first team three times and earned six straight All-star selections with the Pelicans, but only reached the second round of the playoffs once.

With Klutch clients James and Davis at their core, the Lakers immediatel­y built a championsh­ip contender around them last season. The 6-foot-10 Davis swiftly clicked alongside James, who molded himself into a point guard and led the NBA in assists to maximize the talent of Davis, who earned his seventh straight All-star selection.

James and Davis reteamed in the bubble in central Florida and led the Lakers to Davis’ first NBA title and James’ fourth. The Lakers had missed the playoffs for six straight seasons before their dynamic duo transforme­d the franchise into champions again, beating the Miami Heat in six games in the NBA Finals.

“Watching AD and Lebron, everything they did was together,” said Dwight Howard, who won a ring with the Lakers before moving on to Philadelph­ia as a free agent last month. “They worked out together, they ate together, they rolled dice together. We called them The Brothers. They were always together, playing video games, doing something.

“Even though there was games where Lebron was having triple-doubles, he made sure he fed AD and AD got off,” Howard added. “I just think when you have two guys like that who are willing to do whatever it takes to win, it brings up the morale of the team. They put everything on their shoulders. They knew they had guys around them, but it was, ‘OK, Lebron. OK, AD. We’ve got to do this. It starts with us. We’ve got to be on

the same page at all times.’ They did a really good job with it.”

The Lakers are returning with a roster around James and Davis that looks even better than last season’s championsh­ip squad. NBA veterans Marc Gasol and Montrezl Harrell have replaced Howard and Javale Mcgee to keep Davis out of the center spot during the regular season, while Wesley Matthews replaced inconsiste­nt Danny Green on the wing and gifted point guard Dennis Schröder arrived to take ball-handling pressure off James.

Davis was never expected to leave the Lakers after he declined a $28.7 million player option to become a free agent last month, but many league observers thought Davis would go for a shorter contract to maximize his mobility, as is the preference of many modern stars and Klutch clients.

Instead, Davis chose the longest possible contract, albeit with an opt-out after four years. If Davis had set up his deal to become a free agent in 2022, he could have re-signed to receive a starting salary worth 35% of the team’s salary cap.

In truth, the differences between his current contract and that hypothetic­al deal are only a few million dollars – and for Davis, security with a title contender clearly was worth a few million.

Davis will make more than $32.7 million this season, more than $35 million next season and nearly $38 million in 2022-23. The fourth year of the contract is worth about $40 million, and the fifth year would be worth more than $43 million.

Davis excelled throughout his first season with the Lakers, averaging 26.1 points, 9.3 rebounds, 3.2 assists and 2.3 blocks per game. Along with hitting 50% of his shots and a career-high 84.6% of his free throws, Davis was a dominant presence in the paint and on the wing throughout the year while the Lakers played the Western Conference’s stingiest defense.

Davis finished second to Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo in the NBA’S defensive player of the year voting.

Davis was even better in the playoff bubble, averaging 27.7 points 9.7 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 1.4 blocks. He hit 57% of his shots and 38% of his 3-pointers, including a remarkable game-winning 3 at the buzzer in Game 2 of the Western Conference finals against Denver.

Although the Lakers’ massive fan base couldn’t attend their latest championsh­ip run, Davis is already cementing a spot among the franchise’s greatest big men, a proud lineage stretching from George Mikan and Wilt Chamberlai­n through Kareem Abdul-jabbar, Shaquille O’neal and Pau Gasol.

Davis spent his first seven NBA seasons as the centerpiec­e of the Pelicans, but he could only lead them to two playoff appearance­s, and he requested a trade in February 2019. The players traded from Los Angeles to New Orleans for Davis included Brandon Ingram, who got a five-year, $158 million deal from the Pelicans last month, and playmaker Lonzo Ball.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/AP ?? The Lakers’ Lebron James, rear, and Anthony Davis (3) celebrate after the Lakers defeated the Heat 106-93 in Game 6 of the NBA Finals in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. Davis is finalizing a five-year contract worth up to $190 million to return to the Lakers. Davis’ agent, Rich Paul of Klutch Sports, confirmed the terms of Davis’ pending free agent deal to The Associated Press on Thursday.
MARK J. TERRILL/AP The Lakers’ Lebron James, rear, and Anthony Davis (3) celebrate after the Lakers defeated the Heat 106-93 in Game 6 of the NBA Finals in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. Davis is finalizing a five-year contract worth up to $190 million to return to the Lakers. Davis’ agent, Rich Paul of Klutch Sports, confirmed the terms of Davis’ pending free agent deal to The Associated Press on Thursday.

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