Bangkok Post

Durant set to sign new Warriors contract

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OAKLAND: Kevin Durant is set to make a new contract deal and stay with the Golden State Warriors, but the new NBA champions did lose a legendary player on Monday.

Multiple reports said Durant, the Most Valuable Player of this month’s NBA Finals triumph over Cleveland, will opt out of his contract but re-sign with Golden State in a money-saving move under NBA salary cap rules.

But the Warriors lost Jerry West, a member of the team’s executive board who on Monday was named a consultant to the Los Angeles Clippers.

The 79-year-old Hall of Fame guard was an iconic star for the Los Angeles Lakers and the NBA’s logo is designed around his silhouette.

Durant, who joined the Warriors last July after finishing his contract with Oklahoma City, plans to decline his player option for the 2017-18 campaign and become an unrestrict­ed free agent on July 1, according to reports.

The 10-year NBA veteran would then re-sign with the Warriors, the move enabling the team to have more money for contracts with forward Andre Iguodala and other players.

Durant was to be paid about US$28 million in salary next season, but he will take about $4 million less than the maximum deal he could have been paid.

That will better enable the Warriors to keep together the championsh­ip roster that includes Iguodala, Shaun Livingston, Georgian centre Zaza Pachulia and reserves.

Durant won his first NBA crown and helped Golden State claim a second in three seasons by averaging 35.2 points, 8.4 rebounds and 5.4 assists in the best-ofseven NBA Finals, which the Warriors won over Cleveland in five games.

He was named the Finals MVP.

Warriors guard Stephen Curry becomes a free agent, but has taken less than maximum money in recent years to set up an expected five-year deal worth $205 million. Curry made $12.1 million last season.

West said his two-year deal to return to Los Angeles came down to being wooed by Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, coach Doc Rivers and executive vice president Lawrence Frank.

“For them to want me to come here and maybe think I can help, I am really flattered,” West said. “I think they want to establish their own identity in this town and that is what to me is most important — establish their own identity and ability to win at the very highest level.”

GRIFFIN LEAVES CAVS

Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert announced on Monday that general manager David Griffin is out as general manager of the NBA club when his contract expires at the end of June.

The move came exactly one year after LeBron James led the Cavaliers to an NBA crown, the first by any major Cleveland sports team since 1964, and one week after the Cavaliers were dethroned by the Golden State Warriors in this year’s NBA Finals.

Gilbert said the decision for Griffin not to return was mutual.

“On behalf of the entire organisati­on, I would like to thank Griff for his leadership and many contributi­ons during his time here, including most recently, his role in the franchise’s first NBA championsh­ip,” Gilbert said in a statement.

“We are confident our current front office will continue to aggressive­ly explore and pursue opportunit­ies to improve our team in the weeks ahead.”

Team executives will need to work hard as the NBA draft is tomorrow.

 ?? USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Warriors’s Kevin Durant dunks against the Cavaliers.
USA TODAY SPORTS The Warriors’s Kevin Durant dunks against the Cavaliers.

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