The Prince George Citizen

Silver: NBA ‘can do a better job’ on free agency, rules

- Tim REYNOLDS The Associted Press

LAS VEGAS — The NBA knows its rules about when teams can negotiate with free agents are not being followed.

So expect changes on that front for 2020. The NBA’s board of governors discussed ways Tuesday to fix that process – either by changing rules, adding rules or potentiall­y eliminatin­g some rules that may be outdated – and decided that it’ll all be worked on over the next several months in an effort to ensure fairness across the league.

“The one strong conviction I have is that we should not have rules that are not strictly enforced,” NBA commission­er Adam Silver said.

“And we know that’s the case right now. And whether that’s by virtue of practice, whether it’s because just the world around us has changed, whether it’s because players have power that they didn’t use to have... let’s step back, let’s reset, let’s talk to our players’ associatio­n about what system makes sense going forward.”

This year’s free-agent negotiatin­g period was to begin on June 30 at 6 p.m. Eastern. But it was known within the first few minutes of that period that several deals had already been agreed upon – and in a few cases, deals were apparently struck even before the negotiatin­g window opened.

There’s always been an understand­ing that some players are talking to other players about teaming up, which is legal. And there’s also been the same sort of understand­ing that teams will talk to their own free agents to strike deals before negotiatio­ns are technicall­y supposed to begin.

This year, the rules simply seemed to be ignored.

“It’s pointless, at the end of the day, to have rules that we can’t enforce,” Silver said.

Kevin Durant’s decision to join the Brooklyn Nets was one of the major pieces of free-agent news this summer. The Nets said Tuesday that when word leaked before 6 p.m. on June 30 that Durant had made his decision and would announce it on social media, they were concerned – since they had not spoken with him yet.

“We weren’t even sure we were getting a meeting that night,” Nets general manager Sean Marks said.

Durant eventually came in that night and spoke with the Nets, but after he made the announceme­nt that he would be signing a max contract – four years, $141 million – with the team.

Teams couldn’t sign players until the off-season moratorium ended, which this year meant Saturday. Some deals that are known to be happening still aren’t completed, meaning teams still have not had the chance to celebrate certain signings or acquisitio­ns. And by now, in some cases, the buzz surroundin­g those still-unannounce­d moves is largely gone.

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