As time and hope for salvaging an NBA season continue to
dissipate, Turkey’s top team is engaged in serious talks with Kevin
Love(notes) and Luol
Deng(notes) about
joining point guard Deron Williams(notes) in
the Turkish Basketball League.
“I’ve been going back and forth with
Deron on it,” Love told Yahoo! Sports’ Marc
Spears on Friday. “I’ll be making my decision in the next couple of days.”
Deng’s representatives have traded
contract proposals with Besiktas too, sources said, and they’re working on
insurance proposals to protect the remaining $42
million on his Chicago
Bulls contract.
Deng’s premiums are expected to
cost $50,000 a month, and a source close to
him said it’s doubtful he would accept an offer below $150,000 per month to play overseas. Players
are left to subtract the insurance payments from their salaries.
Besiktas has also reached out to Chicago Bulls forwardCarlos Boozer(notes), sources
said.
It’s possible Besiktas will sign the
first player willing to agree to a deal, but a source briefed on Besiktas’
strategy believes team officials prefer Love. Williams and Love share the same
agent, which plays a part in the preference.
Agents and players are rapidly coming to
terms with the reality that hopes for ending the lockout – and saving the
season – are bleaker than ever. Ownership sources told Yahoo! Sports there’s a
consensus among the group to let the players miss another round of checks on Dec. 1 and further test the resolve of the 450-plus players. Owners will soon review the
players’ lawsuits filed against the league in California
and Minnesota .
More suits brought by the players could still be on the way.
League officials aren’t rushing to meet
again with the players prior to the Thanksgiving holiday and are waiting on former Players Association
executive director Billy Hunter to contact commissioner David Stern about
restarting talks again. The owners have little, to no interest, in negotiating
a settlement with the players’ prominent new front man, antitrust attorney
David Boies.
The league had scheduled a conference call with owners on Thursday, but it lasted less than a half hour.
So far, the NBA has no strategy call set with the labor relations committee for
next week. There is expected to be a revenue sharing committee call before
Thanksgiving.
“Some owners are nervous that Stern will
wake up and say, ‘Let’s go get something
done now’, but I don’t think he’s going to do that,” one ownership source said.
“The season’s not on the line Nov. 17. I
think he’s going let them stew in the decision they made [to disband the
union], and see how they react when they miss the checks on Dec. 1.”
Boston Celtics guard Rajon
Rondo(notes) and Oklahoma
City Thunder center Kendrick
Perkins(notes), close
friends, have been discussing the possibility of playing together overseas, and
have had representatives inquiring on the possibilities, sources said.
Rondo and Perkins are interested in
playing in higher-paying countries, such as Italy ,
Spain and Russia , sources
said. There’s no deal in the works, and it’s unclear if there’s even a team
that could financially put together the kind of contracts it would take to lure
the players.
Insurance premiums cut significantly into
the money that teams are willing to pay
frontline NBA starters, and in some
instances, the difference left in pay won’t make the leap overseas worth making
for some players.
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