[TimesPicayune] Cap woes hamper Hornets
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Cap woes hamper Hornets
N.O. misses out on two of its top choices
Wednesday, July 14, 2004
By John Reid
Staff writer
LONG BEACH, CALIF. -- Two of the top free agents the Hornets
had targeted will sign today with other teams.
Hornets general manager Allan Bristow said Tuesday at the
Southern California Summer Pro League that the team was unable
to sign shooting guard Stephen Jackson or center Michael Doleac.
"We tried to do everything we could, and we gave it our best
effort," Bristow said. "But now we'll target somebody else,
because we have roster spots. We're not short on people calling
us. But we have to make sure that the right people are calling
us."
Today is the first day free agents can sign. Jackson is expected
to re-sign with the Atlanta Hawks, then be traded to the Indiana
Pacers for Al Harrington to complete a sign-and-trade agreement.
Last week, Jackson agreed to a six-year, $44 million deal.
The most the Hornets could offer Jackson was a six-year, $38
million mid-level exception because of salary-cap restraints.
Doleac, a free agent who played last season with the Denver
Nuggets, would have filled the Hornets' need for a backup center.
Bristow said negotiations with Doleac's agent, Glenn Schwartzman,
lasted until 12:30 a.m. Tuesday.
"The Hornets offered a competitive four-year deal, and it came
down to deciding between two really good offers," Schwartzman said.
"But the lure was that Michael wanted to play on the same team with
Shaquille O'Neal (who is expected to be traded from the Los Angeles
Lakers to the Heat today)."
The trade that will bring O'Neal to the Heat is resonating across
South Florida. Salespeople at the team's ticket office couldn't
keep up with the volume of calls Tuesday, and a trendy South Beach
nightclub said it will set aside a permanent table for O'Neal's
nightclubbing needs. The Heat is expected to send Caron Butler,
Lamar Odom, Brian Grant and a first-round draft pick to the Lakers
for O'Neal, a 7-foot-1 former LSU standout.
Meanwhile Kobe Bryant, O'Neal's former teammate in Los Angeles,
hasn't tipped his hand on where he will play next season. Bryant,
an unrestricted free agent, listened to proposals from the Lakers
and Los Angeles Clippers on Monday night.
Bryant will be eligible to receive a starting salary equal to 105
percent of his 2003-04 salary of $13.5 million.
Other free agents whose plans are not known are Rasheed Wallace of
the champion Detroit Pistons, Erick Dampier of the Golden State
Warriors, Karl Malone of the Lakers, Vlade Divac of Sacramento,
Derek Fisher of the Lakers, Darius Miles of Portland and Kenyon
Martin of New Jersey.
Martin was weighing whether to sign an offer sheet with Atlanta or
Denver after sign-and-trade discussions between the Nuggets and Nets
broke down. Malone, puzzled by the breakup of the Lakers, was being
courted by the Spurs.
Bristow said the Hornets are in negotiations to re-sign forward-center
Robert Traylor, who has received interest from five other teams. The
Hornets would have pursued Traylor even if they had obtained Doleac,
Bristow said.
The Hornets have not been in serious negotiations to re-sign Courtney
Alexander, Shammond Williams, Steve Smith or Stacey Augmon, Bristow
said. They all played last season with the Hornets and are free agents.
Only Alexander is a restricted free agent, meaning the Hornets can
match any offer he receives and keep his rights. But the Hornets want
to be certain that Alexander has recovered from a ruptured Achilles
tendon, which forced him to miss all of last season, before they offer
him a guaranteed deal.
The Hornets had hoped the recent hirings of Scott and Hall of Famer
Willis Reed would help attract free agents. But the Hornets didn't
have enough room under the cap to outbid other teams.
"A lot of guys that we looked at -- and had a really good chance at
getting -- are getting maximum mid-level exception contracts," Scott
said.
"It's something that you can't fault those guys for taking the money.
If you only got a certain amount of money and guys are getting deals
way over it, there's not much you can try and present them with."
. . . . . . .
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
John Reid can be reached at jreid@timespicayune.com or (504) 826-3405.
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