Miami Herald (Sunday)

League looking into tampering by Philadelph­ia

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

The Philadelph­ia 76ers are being investigat­ed by the NBA for possible tampering in offseason free agency moves involving James Harden, P.J. Tucker and Danuel House, a person familiar with the situation told

The Associated Press on Friday night.

The person, speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigat­ion is ongoing, said the team is cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion.

Harden signed a deal worth slightly over $68 million, paying him about $33 million this season with a $35 million player option for the 2023-24 season. Harden, though, will make about $14.5 million less this coming season than he could have earned under his previous deal. Harden had a $47.4 million option for this coming season that he declined last month, saying he wanted to give the 76ers flexibilit­y to improve their roster and compete for a championsh­ip.

ESPN reported Friday there are questions involving Harden and the Sixers having “a handshake agreement in place on a future contract.”

“Taking less money this year to sign as many players as we needed to help us contend and be the last team standing was very, very important to me,” Harden said in an interview this month with The Associated Press. “I wanted to show the organizati­on, the Sixers fans and everybody else who supports what we’re trying to accomplish, what I’m trying to accomplish individual­ly, that this is what I’m about.”

Tucker signed a $30 million, three-year contract and House signed for $8.4 million over two years. The Sixers were able to sign Tucker to the full mid-level exception and sign House to the bi-annual exception because Harden declined his option.

If Harden had opted in before his June 30 deadline, Philadelph­ia would have had a much more difficult time in finding financial pathways toward luring free agents.

The NBA approved stiffer penalties for tampering in 2019 and stripped a draft pick from both the Chicago Bulls for early contact with Lonzo Ball and the Heat for doing the same with Kyle Lowry in the summer 2021.

ELSEWHERE

Suns: Phoenix has officially agreed to a multi-year contract extension for Monty Williams, the NBA's Coach of the Year last season after leading the franchise to a teamrecord 64 wins in the regular season. Williams, 50, has led a quick turnaround in three seasons with the Suns, taking them to the NBA Finals in 2021 where they lost in six games to the Milwaukee Bucks. It was the first time the franchise had been to the Finals since 1993. They were the No. 1 seed in the Western Conference last season, but fell in the second round to the Dallas Mavericks.

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