Orlando Sentinel

Lakers pulling plug on trade for Davis

Pelicans’ demands for deal reportedly ‘outrageous’

- By Broderick Turner

INDIANAPOL­IS — The Lakers have pulled out of conversati­ons aimed at trying to acquire New Orleans All-Star Anthony Davis because of the Pelicans’ “outrageous” trade requests, according to a person with knowledge of the situation.

Magic Johnson, the Lakers president of basketball operations, told New Orleans general manager Dell Demps on Tuesday morning that the Lakers had made their best offer, were not willing to add anything else and would be moving on, said the person, who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

The person said the Lakers were not willing to give up the six to eight draft picks the Pelicans had sought for Davis.

Late Monday night, the Lakers had changed their offer at the request of the Pelicans, two people with knowledge of the situation said.

The Lakers had agreed to send their entire young core of Lonzo Ball, Kyle Kuzma, Brandon Ingram, Josh Hart and Ivica Zubac to the Pelicans, as well as veteran guard Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, the people said.

The Lakers were also willing to also send two first-round draft picks, they said.

In addition, Los Angeles was also offering to give the Pelicans the salary-cap relief they wanted by taking back Solomon Hill, who has another year left on his deal after this season for $12.7 million.

Over the course of their talks, the Lakers had made several changes to their proposals to the Pelicans, taking out a package that had included Rajon Rondo, Michael Beasley and Lance Stephenson, one of the sources said.

“They wanted more and more and more,” one source said. “There was no more to give. They had cap relief with Hill being in the deal. But the more they wanted, the more it became outrageous and unrealisti­c.”

One person said the Pelicans are hopeful that if Davis isn’t traded by the NBA’s Thursday deadline he’ll want to stay and play for New Orleans going forward.

“But that’s not going to happen,” the person said. “AD is not changing his mind.”

After the Lakers’ shootaroun­d in preparatio­n for Tuesday night’s game against the Indiana Pacers, LeBron James was asked if he has followed the Davis trade saga.

James, who will play against the Pacers after missing Saturday night’s game at Golden State to provide him with what the Lakers called “load management,” said he followed the talks like every other player.

“I kind of tend not to play much fantasy basketball — that’s how I’ve always been,” James said. “If something were to occur with our team, whether it’s him or it’s somebody else throughout the trade deadline, we’ll approach it then.

“But right now this is the group that we have and we’re missing a key point of our team right now with [Lonzo Ball] being out, so we have to win ballgames.”

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