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andre iguodala avail !!!

Andre Iguodala has reportedly communicated to Nuggets management that he will opt out of the final year of his contract and become an unrestricted free agent this summer.


Yahoo! Sports reports that the decision, which was expected, was passed on by Iguodala’s agent, Rob Pelinka, to Nuggets CEO Josh Kroenke this week.

“We are fully aware of Andre’s intentions and he’s well aware of how much we want him back,” Kroenke told Yahoo! Sports Friday afternoon. “Andre is a huge priority for our organization.”
After superstars Dwight Howard and Chris Paul, Iguodala will be a target for several teams, including the Atlanta Hawks, Cleveland Cavaliers, Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets, Detroit Pistons and New Orleans Pelicans, league sources said.
The 2012 All-Star will opt out of the final year of his current contract, which was set to pay him $16.2 million in 2013-14, and will now have the ability to sign a five-year contract with the Nuggets or a four-year deal with outside suitors.

Iguodala averaged 13.0 points, 5.4 assists and 5.3 rebounds in 2012-13 after arriving in Denver from Philadelphia in a four-team blockbuster trade that also involved Dwight Howard and Andrew Bynum.

Back in March, Iguodala told FoxSportsFlorida that he was “definitely” considering opting out of the final year of his deal.

“You got to weigh options. Security-wise, a player would opt out, especially with the type of season we’ve had as a team. Teams know what I can bring to them, and I know (the Nuggets) know what I can bring to a team here. Players get like $50, $60 or $70 or $80 (million over multiple years), whatever the number was, they gave up a big number (in an option season by opting out). But in the grand scheme of things, pretty much get it back. You got security.’’
“Obviously, it’s a business, so you’re going to look at your options. Here we have some good (prospects). But I’m not making any promises. But I’ve liked the last month and a half, two months, three months or however long (that Denver has been on a roll). It’s important for the future, so I’m just trying to win.’’
Since Iguodala made those comments, the Nuggets finished the season as the Western Conference’s No. 3 seed, but were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the Warriors. Already this offseason, the Nuggets fired coach George Karl, the 2013 Coach of the Year, and allowed GM Masai Ujiri, the 2013 Executive of the Year, to leave for the Raptors.

The opt-out decision is really a no-brainer in a world where Gerald Wallace received $40 million over four years last summer. Iguodala is coming off of a playoff run with the Sixers, a gold medal in London with Team USA and a solid debut season with the Nuggets. At 29, he’s not yet in a statistical decline. This summer’s weak market is a great time to sell high and land the last big-dollar deal of his prime years.

Denver should be highly motivated to keep Iguodala — considered one of the league’s top perimeter defenders and recently ranked the No. 4 shooting guard in the NBA here at The Point Forward – and is well-positioned salary cap-wise to pay him handsomely.

Ujiri handed out a number of large contracts in recent years — $44 million over four years to JaVale McGee, $42 million over four years to Danilo Gallinari, $48 million over four years to Ty Lawson, $31 million over five years to Wilson Chandler, $65 million over five years to Nene Hilario, $37 million over five years to Arron Afflalo — yet still found a way to create a successful roster mix without breaking the bank by going deep into the luxury tax. Iguodala could be offered, say, $55-to-60 million over four years without putting Denver into a tax position.

With Lawson, Gallinari, Chandler and McGee all locked in long-term, rounding out that core by re-signing Iguodala makes all the sense in the world. It’s possible, if not likely, that his future will be determined by his faith in the new course being charted by Kroenke. Watching everything go kaput after such a successful season would give anyone pause.
 

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I like Iggy but I would rather Jazz find a scoring wing. AKA Bazz.
 
I'd like him on the team to mentor Burks. I've said this since he was drafted, I can see Alec playing the SF much like Andre.
 
Sorry gentlemen, I'd still rather have Pierce at one year for $15 Million if we're going to try and win. But since we're not, it's a non-issue.
 
No to expensive FA's. Sign Iggy and what would be the goal - to compete for the 7th or 8th seed and then be saddled with his big contract when we have to dish out money for Favors, Hayward and Kanter?
 
No to expensive FA's. Sign Iggy and what would be the goal - to compete for the 7th or 8th seed and then be saddled with his big contract when we have to dish out money for Favors, Hayward and Kanter?

But I thought you believed the young "core" was good enough to build around. If they are as good as the majority push then Iggy is a no brainier.

No!! We are tanking this season for the '14 draft.

**** that.

Going into a season refusing to grab a concensus top five small forward--who won't kill your cap space anyway--is not a club I want to root for. The draft might be loaded but a) there's never 8 all stars in a draft, and b) the jazz have to be pretty damn awful to have a chance at the top three, and c) after getting that chance they have ta avoid bad lottery luck.

****. That.




*Edit* my reason comes out of how long they waited to tank. If they were going to do it then it should have started two years ago and we shoul have Lilliard n Barnes. Tanking next year is a milking of dedicated fans by the successor to Mr. ******* Miller.
 
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In fact, if Jazz could get Iggy then I'd gladly take Monta off the Bucks hands and roll out Favors-Kanter-Iggy-Hayward-Ellis for one helluva fun season.

Do it KOC get chicks.
 
But I thought you believed the young "core" was good enough to build around. If they are as good as the majority push then Iggy is a no brainier.

The young core IS good enough..... iggy is not good enough to pay that much however and is not good enough to build around.
 
But I thought you believed the young "core" was good enough to build around. If they are as good as the majority push then Iggy is a no brainier.

I do. But I also said the Jazz need to have a 8-9 man rotation just as all teams do. Do we want Utah to keep contending for the 7th or 8th seed? We've been there and done that for the last few years. Adding Iggy NOW likely gives them a shot at that but hurts the long-term success of Utah. What I have ALWAYS advocated is building around Favors, Hayward and Kanter. Maybe Burks is a 6th man or starter, maybe not. But the Jazz need to roll out a line-up with plenty of playing time for those 4 + their first rounders. With an young inexperienced bench, the Jazz will lose early and often. At the deadline, with $27M in cap space, the Jazz can likely pick up either TWO quality players or additional lottery picks for 2014. Assume the current "Core4," add the two first-rounders, 2 players (or picks) via trade and a top-10 draft pick of our own. That's 9 players right there, not counting other FA signings. Iggy is very good, but he's about to become very overpaid. And for Utah to sign him, they'd likely have to pay him WAY over what he's worth. AS for the 2014 draft, I think they'll land in the 6-8 range and maybe have the chance to move higher if they get additional picks by helping teams avoid the luxury tax..
 
He might be a Top 3 shooting guard, if he had an outside shot. I think he proved in Philly that he isn't a franchise player. The deal that Denver gave Danillo or Javale would be in the ballpark, but those players are both on the incline of their careers. Brooklyn overpaid like crazy for Wallace and will regret that.
 
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