Miami Herald

Report: Durant forced Warriors to give top pick

- From Herald Wire Services

After deciding to leave Golden State for the Brooklyn Nets in free agency, Kevin Durant was apparently in no mood to deliver a parting gift to his former team. He reportedly wouldn’t agree to the signand-trade deal that sent D’Angelo Russell to Golden State unless the Warriors also gave up a firstround pick.

Durant didn’t believe the Warriors were sacrificin­g enough in a straight up deal for Russell, so multiple sources told ESPN’s Brian Windhorst that Durant insisted his new team also receive a draft choice.

To be fair to Durant, there was no incentive for him to agree to a sign-andtrade since the Nets had ample cap room to sign both him and Kyrie Irving. Any trade with the Warriors would only benefit Golden State and Russell, who was able to receive a max contract that may not have otherwise been available via his two biggest freeagent suitors, the Lakers and Timberwolv­es.

Durant, who took nearly $10 million less in his second contract with the Warriors two years ago to help them keep both Andre Iguodala and Shaun Livingston, was under no obligation to do Golden State any more favors.

With no other avenue to receive any compensati­on for Durant, the Warriors were left with no choice but to surrender their top pick next season. And more.

The Nets and Durant were able to squeeze even more out of the deal when they offloaded the combined $3.6 million contracts of Shabazz Napier and Treveon Graham to the Warriors. Dumping those contracts gave the Nets cap room to sign free-agent center DeAndre Jordan ,a close friend of Durant’s.

After sending Napier and Graham and $3.6 million to the Timberwolv­es for the rights to 33-year-old Israeli star Lio Eliyahu (who may never play for the Warriors) in order to clear more cap space, the Warriors should still be commended for managing to get a 23-yearold All-Star in Russell in the trade.

In addition, while it may seem as though Durant got one over on the Warriors, they may not even lose the first-round pick. The Warriors were able to get some protection­s for next year’s pick — if it’s anywhere from 1-20 then Golden State keeps its No. 1 pick and instead will send a secondroun­d pick in 2025 to Brooklyn.

So, there’s a scenario in which the Warriors make the playoffs next season and still keep their firstround pick, as long as they don’t finish with one of the top 10 records in the regular season. Things could get fascinatin­g in the final week or so next season should the Warriors be teetering around the league’s 10th-best record.

ELSEWHERE

Bucks: Milwaukee star ●

Giannis Antetokoun­mpo is suing a Pennsylvan­ia artist who is selling

“Greek Freak” merchandis­e. His lawyers sent a cease and desist letter to Jinder Bhogal in May. Bhogal removed the “Greek Freak” merchandis­e from his website, but not his Facebook page. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports Antetokoun­mpo is asking for a jury trial in his lawsuit against Bhogal.

Mavericks: Dallas resigned

● restricted free agent Dorian Finney-Smith toa $12 million, three-year contract, bringing back the former University of Floria forward for a fourth season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States