Share

Harrison Barnes verbally agrees to exorbitant contract with Mavericks — NBA free agency

As another leg of the Durant move, the Warriors renounced their rights to restricted free agent Barnes, who receives a four-year deal from the Mavericks worth more than $90 million. The Warriors, having landed Durant, will certainly not match that offer. He is a tremendous rebounder, even if his numbers don’t suggest that, as he is strong and athletic enough to grab tough rebounds in traffic.

Advertisement

The Warriors had to allow their former starting small forward, Harrison Barnes, to leave via free agency.

So far, there’s not a lot of evidence that Barnes is capable of that.

The Australian-born center averaged 5.4 points, 7.0 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 1.63 blocks in 20.7 minutes over 70 games (66 starts) in the Warriors’ NBA-record 73-win campaign in 2015-16.

According to Tim Kawakami of the San Jose Mercury News, the Warriors’ Plan B after Kevin Durant is re-signing Harrison Barnes.

Jennings will finally join the Knicks after they passed on him in the 2009 NBA Draft, a source told The AP, confirming reports of the point guard’s one-year, $5 million deal.

With the Dallas Mavericks, Barnes will instantly become one of the top options on offense. In any case, Barnes’ usage rate will surely climb a fair amount next season. But Parsons is a more efficient scorer, creator and ball-handler. The three point shooting is almost identical, and Beal is considered a marksman from behind the arc.

The Warriors ended up losing the entire series despite leading 3-1 after the first four games. That equates almost to him missing an entire season, and it wasn’t just on one injury, it was on multiple.

Clippers, Mbah a Moute reach deal: The Los Angeles Clippers found a rare bargain amid the free agency spending frenzy, reportedly agreeing to a two-year, $4.5 million contract with veteran forward Luc Mbah a Moute.

Bogut will make $14.59 million in the coming season in what was the final year of his three-year contract.

Which Player Would You Want? He shot 47 percent from the field and 38 percent from behind the three-point line. Similar to Player A however, he does not have the upside to eventually be a star, like Player B does.

Bogut is more or less a rental, which is the path the Mavericks have taken over and over again since winning the 2011 championship. Barnes, for his part, should be a very interesting addition to a Dallas team that no longer will have Chandler Parsons.

Advertisement

Both Barnes and Bogut will play alongside German standout Dirk Nowitzki, who agreed to a deal for his 19th season in Dallas.

Andrew Bogut #12 of the Golden State Warriors warms up prior to Game 4 of the 2016 NBA Finals against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Quicken Loans Arena