Tag Archive: New Jersey Nets


By TOM CANAVAN AP Sports Writer

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.(AP)—Rod Thorn isn’t cleaning out his office in his final week as the New Jersey Nets president and general manager.

The 69-year-old executive was hard at work Monday. He wants to find a new GM and sign a power forward, if a good one is out there at the right price.

Thorn also says he is not retiring and he’s not bitter. So if someone has a front office NBA job or television gig, give him a call. He’s interested.

 Thorn insists new owner Mikhail Prokhorov did not force him out after a 10-year stint that included two trips to the NBA finals and an enjoyable but disappointing last foray into a free agency market featuring LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh.

“The real story is it’s time,” Thorn said Monday of his pending departure. “I got along great with Mr. Prokhorov and his people, no problem with any of them. I like his forecast for what he wants to do. It’s just time. I have been thinking about it for a couple of years and I just think it’s time. Sometimes you go along and your time just runs out. To me, I felt my time was up here.”

Thorn was relaxed talking about his decade in New Jersey. His voice was cheerful and he laughed a lot, noting he feels great.

Where he goes from here, even he doesn’t know.

“If someone is interested in talking to me about what I am doing now, I would be willing to talk or if it’s in another capacity I would be certainly willing to do that, too,” he said with the latter referring to television work.

Thorn knows nothing may pop up.

“Then it’s retirement, I guess,” he said.

Thorn doesn’t sound like a man who is ready to walk away from the game to play golf or a little poker on weekends. He worked incredible hours for weeks getting the Nets ready to make their free agency pitch in late June and early July, while at the same time, hiring Avery Johnson to be the team’s next coach.

And it just wasn’t one pitch. The Nets meet with James, Wade and Bosh on the opening day of free agency. He talked with agents for power forwards Carlos Boozer and David Lee while negotiating with others in what easily was the best free agency marketplace in years.

“You knew it was going to be hectic and it was,” Thorn said. “To me it was a lot of fun because we got to tell our story to some of the top players. We felt we had some kind of chance. As it turned out, we did not get chosen. But those are the fun times, around the drafts and around when you are trying to sell whatever you are trying to sell to players. Those are the fun times as far as I am concerned.”

Coming off a franchise worst 12-70 season, the Nets were shutout out in signing big-name free agents. They eventually reached agreements with small forward Travis Outlaw, backup center Johan Petro and point guard Jordan Farmar while extending an offer sheet to shooting guard Anthony Morrow.

“We increased our talent pool,” Thorn said. “We are very young. All the players we are in the process of signing are very young players that have the ability to get better together.”

The Nets also have the ability to offer a max contract to a power forward, but most of the good ones have signed.

“If you dropped a great player in to the pieces we have now, then you are going to have a pretty good team.”

That’s how Thorn started out with the Nets.

Coming from the NBA offices, he engineered the trade that brought Jason Kidd to New Jersey to play with Kenyon Martin and Richard Jefferson. It instantly turned the Nets into a contender as they made the finals in 2002 and 2003, losing to the Lakers and Spurs, respectively.

After Martin was dealt to Denver, Thorn replenished the talent pool by trading for Vince Carter. However, it wasn’t enough to get New Jersey back to the finals. Eventually, Thorn traded away his stars to clear cap space for this year’s free agency. New Jersey had more than $30 million to spent, but they could not persuade the league’s best to join them.

“It’s been a great 10 years from my perspective,” Thorn said. “Obviously our team was, starting in my second year, we were really good for the biggest part of it. The last couple of years we weren’t very good. I’m leaving with nothing but fond memories of my time here and wish the Nets nothing but good luck.”

Nets land Morrow in sign-and-trade

The Golden State Warriors have agreed to a sign-and-trade to send Anthony Morrow to the New Jersey Nets for a $4 million trade exception, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

Morrow agreed to a three-year, $12 million offer sheet on Saturday with New Jersey, but had yet to sign it. The Nets parted with the exception because they wanted Morrow too badly to risk the Warriors matching the sheet and keeping him.

Morrow, a 6-foot-5 guard, was undrafted out of Georgia Tech two years ago and averaged 13 points for Golden State last season.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)—The New Jersey Nets have reached an agreement in principle with free agent forward Travis Outlaw on Thursday.

A person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press that Outlaw got a five-year deal worth $35 million. The person requested anonymity because financial terms of the deal were not being disclosed.

Outlaw played 34 games with the Portland Trail Blazers and Los Angeles Clippers last season. He averaged 9.9 points and 3.5 rebounds with the Trail Blazers and 8.7 points and 3.6 rebounds with the Clippers.

The agreement was the Nets’ first since free agency started last week, and it’s not even close to being one that would excite New Jersey fans after winning just 12 games last season.

The wish list for new owner Mikhail Prokhorov and president and general manager Rod Thorn included LeBron James, Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade with Rudy Gay heading the fallback position.

Gay re-signed with Memphis. Wade stayed in Miami, and Bosh is joining him there.

All that is left among the franchise players is James, and the Nets aren’t the favorite to get the two-time MVP when he announces his future plans on television Thursday night.

The Nets also courted Utah forward Carlos Boozer but were outbid by the Chicago Bulls on Wednesday.

That left the Nets with $30 million to spend on free agents, and they started spending it by getting Outlaw to come to New Jersey.

“We are very pleased to add Travis to our roster,” Thorn said. “He is a young, athletic player who will fit in very well with the style of play that Avery has installed.”

A seven-year veteran, Outlaw was Portland’s first-round draft pick (No. 23 overall) in 2003. He has played in 400 career games, averaging 9.5 points and 3.4 rebounds in 22 minutes while shooting .441 from the field and .363 from 3-point range. In six career playoff games, he averaged 9 points and 3 rebounds.

His best season was in 2007-08, when he averaged 13.3 points and 4.6 rebounds.

The New Jersey Nets have reached agreement on a five-year, $35 million contract with forward Travis Outlaw, Outlaw’s agent told Yahoo! Sports.

The contract is fully guaranteed and doesn’t contain a fourth-year opt-out. Outlaw is expected to sign next week.

Outlaw’s agent Bill Duffy confirmed the deal.

Outlaw, 25, split last season between the Portland Trail Blazers and Los Angeles Clippers. He appeared in only 34 games total after breaking his left foot early in the season.

During his six-plus seasons with the Blazers, Outlaw became one of the team’s best fourth-quarter scorers. He averaged 12.8 points and 4.1 rebounds in 81 games for Portland during the 2008-09 season.

LeBron’s Day arrives

AKRON, Ohio (AP)—More than two years of hype, drama, conjecture and expectation have dwindled to a few more hours.

LeBron James’ big moment is here—not as an NBA champion but as a free agent. There will be no parade, no ring ceremony, no banner raising.

Instead, on a prime time made-for-TV special his handlers contracted with ESPN, James will announce Thursday night where he’ll play next season and beyond. Fans from coast to coast will tune in to watch, with the ones in his home state of Ohio praying they won’t have their hearts broken again.
The Decision, it’s been dubbed.

In Cleveland, they can only hope it doesn’t join The Drive, The Fumble, The Shot and The Move in the lexicon of sports misery.

James has kept everyone waiting. It’s time to come clean.

“I’ll be watching,” said fellow free agent superstar Dwyane Wade, who agreed to re-sign with Miami on Wednesday and may be trying to recruit James. “We’ve scheduled it. I’ll make sure I’m in front of the TV tomorrow at 9 to watch like everyone else.”

James will announce his plans within the first 10 minutes of the special, Norby Williamson, ESPN’s vice president of production, told The Associated Press. He said sportscaster Jim Gray, who was hand-picked by James’ team, will handle the introduction, announcement and initial questions. A person familiar with the plans tells the AP the interview will take place at the Boys & Girls Club of Greenwich, Conn.

Not everyone plans to watch the big announcement by James. The story has dragged on and dominated the headlines for months. It’s no wonder some have been turned off by his need for the spotlight and consider him a bit of a drama King.

“It’s gotten ridiculous,” Orlando coach Stan Van Gundy said. “It’s almost like a parody of itself this whole situation now. Come on, an hour long? It takes 15 seconds to say I’ve decided to stay in Cleveland but we’ve got another 59 minutes and 45 seconds to, what? Promote LeBron James?

“As if we don’t do that enough. Look, the guy’s a great player and wherever he goes, my bet would be Cleveland, that place will be excited. But an hour-long special?”

James offered no hints about his plans on his final, full day of free agency. His secret remains safe, despite an information frenzy and growing speculation the 25-year-old superstar might join Olympic teammates Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami, a move that would rock the league.

That’s exactly what new Cavs coach Byron Scott doesn’t want. He showed up unannounced at James’ summer camp at the University of Akron and spent an hour watching the two-time MVP and Cleveland players Jamario Moon, Danny Green, Christian Eyenga and assistant coach Chris Jent scrimmage.

Scott, who was part of the Cavs’ presentation team that wooed James last week at the megastar’s business office in downtown Cleveland, said he did not speak with James but was keeping his fingers and toes crossed that James’ loyalty to his home state will sway his decision.

“I’m always hopeful,” Scott said.

Hope and home are what’s sustaining Cleveland’s die-hard fans. Although the Cavs could offer James $30 million more on a maximum-length contract than any other team, money might not be enough.

James wants to win championships. Without any salary-cap space, the Cavs, who also could try to swing a last-minute trade to make their roster more appealing to James, don’t have enough money to acquire the Robin to his Batman.

But in Cleveland, this goes deeper than dollars.

James is one of their own. Although he led the Cavs through the most successful stretch in their 40-year history, the Akron native came up short in winning a championship and snapping the city’s pro sports title drought dating to 1964. In Clevelanders’ minds, James has unfinished business. If he decides to leave them dry, he will be viewed as a villain on equal footing with Art Modell who packed up the Browns and bolted for Baltimore.

In the other NBA cities where James’ courtship has dominated the summer’s headlines, fans will hope their teams did enough to land LeBron:

— The New York Knicks are counting on the magic of Manhattan, Madison Square Garden and their recent agreement with Amare Stoudemire.

— The New Jersey Nets appealed to James’ global ambitions with Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov, rap mogul Jay-Z—a close friend of James—a young roster and their planned move to Brooklyn.

— The Chicago Bulls, who at one point looked to be at the front of the line for James’ services, have rising stars Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah, money to spend and just secured free agent forward Carlos Boozer, who played with James in Cleveland.

— And then there’s the Heat. Miami’s now got two All-Stars and is eager to make room for a third. It’s assumed Wade, Bosh and James all would have to take less money to play together, but the chance to win one, two, three or more titles might be enough to convince them to join forces and build a dynasty under president Pat Riley, who might even wind up as their coach.

There have been signs James is preparing for a new chapter in his career.

In recent days, he has relaunched a website that was dormant for two years and opened a Twitter account, which drew more than 250,000 followers in first two days of existence. Now, he has scheduled a TV special to tell the world what he’s doing next.

It’s a new LeBron, one moving faster than ever.

And maybe moving on.

AP Sports Writer Antonio Gonzalez in Orlando, Fla., contributed to this report.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)—With Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh going to Miami, the New Jersey Nets don’t see their hopes for the future as being reduced to a LeBron James-or-bust scenario.

Far from it.

An official within the league who is close to Nets management says the team is still in the hunt for New York Knicks forward David Lee, and they believe they are going to get other players at bargain rates once the initial phase of free agency passes.

Of course, new owner Mikhail Prokhorov and his minions believe they have a chance of landing James.

The two-time MVP is scheduled to announce whether he plans to stay in Cleveland or play elsewhere in a nationally televised show on Thursday night.

Nets president and general manager Rod Thorn wrote a text message to The Associated Press on Wednesday night saying they were still involved in some talks.

With Wade and Bosh announcing on Wednesday that they will be playing for the Heat in Miami next season, the Nets spent a good portion of the day trying to set up a meeting with Boozer, who averaged team highs of 19.5 points and 11.2 rebounds for the Jazz last season.

The plans fell apart late in the afternoon when Boozer agreed to leave Utah and join the Chicago Bulls.

The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak for the Nets, said the team was not going to overpay for free agents. The official said Boozer got $80 million for five years.

Boozer wasn’t the first free agent the Nets failed to persuade to come to New Jersey to play for a team that won a league-low 12 games last season.

Rudy Gay, who was possibly the Nets’ second choice in free agency, decided to stay with the Memphis Grizzlies. The Knicks and former Phoenix forward Amare Stoudemire then agreed to a five-year contract for roughly $100 million.

New Jersey, which also had meetings with Wade and Bosh on July 1, the first day of free agency, learned the pair was headed to Miami on Wednesday. Wade is staying. Bosh is joining a contender after years in Toronto.

“I think at the end of the day the New York Knicks and Chicago had to overspend on players,” the official within the league said. “We are not in the same situation as either team.”

The Nets are believed to have offered Boozer about $5 million less than the Bulls.

Mark Bartelstein, who represents Lee, said on Tuesday that the lines of communication have been open between him and Thorn about Lee, who averaged 20.2 points and 11.7 rebounds this past season.

Bartelstein did not immediately return two telephone messages left by the AP at his office in Chicago.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)—The New Jersey Nets have a Plan B in case LeBron James rejects their offer.

The agent for New York Knicks forward David Lee says the Nets have talked to him several times since free agency began on Thursday.

An official within the league who is very close to the Nets’ management team said the team would also consider going after Utah Jazz forward Carlos Boozer if James rejected the offer that was presented by new owner Mikhail Prokhorov and a team that included hip-hop mogul Jay-Z.

 Nets president and general manager Rod Thorn said in a text message on Tuesday that there was nothing to report on the free agency front.

It’s the same message the 69-year-old outgoing executive has given out for past five days as the Nets and the rest of the NBA waits for the two-time MVP to decide whether to remain with the Cleveland Cavaliers or to accept one of the offers from the Nets, Knicks, Clippers, Heat or Bulls.

ESPN reported Tuesday night that James will announce his future NBA plans during a one-hour special on its network at 9 p.m. Thursday.

James visited his summer camp in Akron, Ohio, earlier in the day and, appropriately, kept everyone waiting four hours for his arrival.

Asked about the Nets’ options if The King nixes their overtures, Thorn wrote:

“We will look at other options if we don’t get one of the top guys.”

The other top players left in free agency are Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh.

Amare Stoudemire has agreed to sign with the Knicks and Rudy Gay, Dirk Nowitzki and Joe Johnson have decided to remain with their teams.

That leaves Boozer and Lee for the Nets to go after if the top three reject the offer to come to New Jersey and play for a team that won a league-worst 12 games last season.

Mark Bartelstein, who represents Lee said the lines of communication have been open between him and Thorn about Lee, who averaged 20.2 points and 11.7 rebounds this past season.

“We’ve talked a bunch,” Bartelstein said in a telephone interview. “There is not a day that goes by that we don’t talk. They are kind of waiting now on Wade and LeBron and once they decide, we’ll go from there.”

Bartelstein said there are a lot of other teams actively pursuing Lee and there is a chance that he might be signed before James makes a decision.

“If he is available when the Nets know where they stand with LeBron, we’ll be happy to talk to them,” Bartelstein said. “They’ve got a lot of great things going on in the organization and, you know, David loves New York and the area, but I don’t know if David will still be there when they have an answer.”

Rob Pelinka, Boozer’s agent, did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment on his client.

The Nets official who requested anonymity said the team would not overspend this year just to sign someone, noting they would rather wait until next year.

In the past two days, two men mentioned as possible successors to Thorn as the Nets general manager both said they were happy where they were. Joe Dumars of the Detroit Pistons and Jeff Bowers of the New Orleans Hornets issued statements saying they would not be coming to New Jersey.

LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh are expected to share a conference call on Wednesday to discuss free agency and try to move closer to finalizing their decisions, a league source with knowledge of the plan told Yahoo! Sports.

The three players are motivated to reach resolutions and make their choices public by Thursday, several sources told Yahoo! Sports. The stars and their agents with CAA continued on Tuesday to churn through numerous machinations and possibilities.

“Everything is still in play,” the source said.

James has the Cleveland Cavaliers, Chicago Bulls and New Jersey Nets as his top three choices, sources said. Still, Cleveland has reemerged as the leader to keep James and Cavaliers officials are confident the two-time MVP will choose to re-sign with them.
The three players have strongly discussed playing together in Miami, and Bosh and Wade are considering playing together there as well as in Chicago or New Jersey, sources said. Wade hasn’t committed to re-signing in Miami and is still strongly considering the Bulls. He is intrigued with the talent that would surround him with the Bulls, as well as family considerations that would benefit from proximity to his ex-wife and children in Illinois.

Chicago and New Jersey need to make deals to eliminate more salary off their cap to accommodate two maximum contract players.

New Orleans Hornets GM Jeff Bower has withdrawn from consideration for the New Jersey Nets general manager’s job, the Hornets announced in a statement.
Bower interviewed for the Nets job on Saturday in New York with owner Mikhail Prokhorov and outgoing GM Rod Thorn.

The Nets could open the search to more outside candidates or turn to an internal candidate with strong support from Thorn, assistant GM Bobby Marks.
Sources believe Bower shares the sentiments of several other prospective candidates who have backed away from interest in the job: They’re uneasy working with new Nets coach Avery Johnson, whom sources say is trying to gather front-office power for himself.
Sources say Johnson was vehemently against the hiring of Bower, who didn’t hire him to be the Hornets coach.

“It is not the right fit for the Nets, or myself,” Bower said in the statement.

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP)—Joe Dumars says he is not a candidate for a job with the New Jersey Nets.

Responding to reports that he could be a replacement for Rod Thorn, the Detroit president insisted Monday he doesn’t have “any interest in a basketball operations position with the Nets.” Dumars adds his priority is putting together a team to get the Pistons back on track next season.

Thorn is leaving next week after 10 years as Nets president. General managers Jeff Bower of New Orleans and Sam Presti of Oklahoma City, and Nets vice president Bobby Marks are among the leading candidates to replace Thorn.

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