The Morning Call

Harden declines option with Sixers

Teams look to reshape rosters as NBA free agency opens

- By Tim Reynolds

Let the talking begin. The trading, too, and eventually the signing.

Free agency officially opens Thursday in the NBA, with teams able to begin negotiatin­g at 6 p.m. Eastern with players who are not under contract — although, in reality, free agency and the slew of offseason movement is already off and running.

James Harden declined his $47 million option for next season with the 76ers on Wednesday and became a free agent — but told the team he intends to stay on a new deal that will allow them the flexibilit­y they need to sign other players this summer.

And Harden’s decision came almost simultaneo­usly Wednesday with another massive move —the Spurs are trading All-Star guard Dejounte Murray to the Hawks for Danilo Gallinari and three first-round picks, according to another to reports. The deal will pair Murray with another All-Star in Trae Young in the Hawks’ backcourt.

Kyrie Irving and Russell Westbrook have already made their decisions; both could have been free agents this summer and found a combined 84 million reasons not to hit the open market — $47 million for Westbrook to opt-in for the last year of his deal with the Lakers, and nearly $37 million for Irving to do the same with the Nets.

Jalen Brunson will be in demand early, with the expectatio­n that he’ll quickly agree to leave the Mavericks and become the Knicks’ new point guard. And there will be players who might decide to look elsewhere, or accept huge $200-million-plus deals with their current teams — opportunit­ies that are presenting themselves to Zach LaVine with the Bulls and Bradley Beal with the Wizards.

The largest deal, in terms of actual dollars, coming in the next few days almost certainly won’t have anything to do with a free agent: All signs point to two-time reigning NBA MVP Nikola Jokic being offered a supermax extension in the $260 million range by the Nuggets. The only question there will be how quickly he finds a pen to put to that paper.

The Timberwolv­es can give Karl-Anthony Towns a supermax of about $210 million this summer, as can the Suns with Devin Booker.

Other players are restricted free agents, meaning their current teams will have the right to match offers from other clubs. The most notable name on that list is Deandre Ayton, the Suns center who was the No. 1 pick in the 2018 draft but watched others in his draft class get their first extensions last summer.

Some players will be free agents in name only. John Wall, for example, will get $41 million in a buyout from the Rockets, and has already decided that he wants to play for the Clippers next season.

“We’ll see what happens as free agency opens up and everything else,” Clippers owner Steve Ballmer said. “I think the sky’s the limit for our team. The sky is the limit. ... And of course, you’ve got to have a little bit of luck to win the Larry O’Brien Trophy, which is what we’d really like.”

That will be everyone’s goal come 6 p.m. Thursday, to find ways to get closer to the Larry O’Brien, whether in 2023 or beyond.

Such thinking even applies to the champion Warriors, who have a slew of rotation players — Kevon Looney, Otto Porter, Gary Payton II among them — who just last week were enjoying a parade through San Francisco and are now free to go elsewhere if the opportunit­ies and dollars are right.

“We still do need to surround the team with vets and that’s the plan in free agency,” Warriors GM Bob Myers said. “It’s easier to get some of the older players, we think, in free agency than young players. Young players are probably the most in-demand.”

Ja Morant will surely be offered a max rookie extension by the Grizzlies, one that will kick in with the 2023-24 season. The Zion Williamson situation will be interestin­g, as the Pelicans decide how much to offer to — or safely structure a deal for — a No. 1 pick who has missed the majority of his first three NBA seasons because of injury issues. The Heat are planning to offer sixth man of the year Tyler Herro an extension.

 ?? INQUIRER YONG KIM/PHILADELPH­IA ?? Sixers guard James Harden is one of many players in the NBA who could be on the move when the league’s free agency officially opens Thursday evening.
INQUIRER YONG KIM/PHILADELPH­IA Sixers guard James Harden is one of many players in the NBA who could be on the move when the league’s free agency officially opens Thursday evening.

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