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Everybody talks about the Warriors blowing a 3-1 lead in the 2016 NBA Finals. This weekend, I witnessed someone blow a 3-1 lead in shuffleboard. In related news, happy birthday to The Athletic editor Tyler Batiste!
Star’s sacrificial deal with have ripple effects
Would you pass up $113 million for the sake of your friends and coworkers? That’s what Jalen Brunson just did for the New York Knicks by agreeing to a four-year contract extension worth $156.5 million. Sounds like a lot of money, right? Correct! Brunson’s previous deal with New York was for four years and $104 million. So he just got a massive raise, and it’s not because of inflation. It’s because he’s awesome at his job. Here’s the thing, though: Brunson actually took a pay cut. Walk with me, Bounce reader:
His new extensions sounds like a great, team-friendly move — and it is. Brunson has been commended, especially by Knicks fans who are incredibly excited for this squad. Adding Mikal Bridges, keeping OG Anunoby and having so many good Villanova vibes means lots of potential for contending in the East.
However: The players’ union surely has questions about this. Is it good practice to sacrifice money for owners and their teams? While I was in Las Vegas for summer league, people around the Thomas & Mack Center openly questioned what this means for star players, their money and negotiations moving forward.
The problem: The union helped create this. Players still get 51 percent of basketball-related income, but with the setup of the first and second aprons, the union has essentially agreed to unavoidable hard caps for expensive teams. Plenty of teams will now have an eyebrow raised at the Knicks.
As Las Vegas Summer League continues, NBA team officials are spending time watching their respective squads, scouting players and monitoring the league’s landscape as rosters round out. The major free agents have been signed, and the remaining tier of available players are resolving their next steps — but larger offseason issues are still outstanding.
Among those are the statuses of two former All-Star forwards: Utah’s Lauri Markkanen and New Orleans’ Brandon Ingram. My latest Inside Pass explores their current situations, along with more news and notes on Russell Westbrook, Anthony Edwards and others.
Who are the next big names to get moved?
No offense to the Morris twins, but as Shams noted, free agency is essentially over. Gary Trent Jr. and Tyus Jones are the most significant names still out there. That means we move on to trade season, and that’s where things could get interesting.
There are four potential impact players who could — and maybe even should — be traded, plus one big-time player who could reshape the landscape quite a bit if he gets moved:
Lauri Markkanen | Forward | Utah Jazz | 1 year, $18 million left
Prediction: Extended and traded next summer.
Brandon Ingram | Wing | New Orleans Pelicans | 1 year, $36 million left
Jarrett Allen | Big | Cleveland Cavaliers | 2 years, $40 million left
Darius Garland | Lead guard | Cleveland Cavaliers | 4 years, $163 million left
Hey, Zach, you referenced one other big-time player. Who was that? We can always be surprised, but I don’t believe the Hawks are that interested in moving Trae Young. But the franchise has swapped out so much around him without any real progress. The Hawks have had three coaches in the last three years. John Collins is gone. Dejounte Murray came and went. Maybe another uniform rebrand will fix it?
Checking in on young talent
Las Vegas Summer League has completed its first weekend, and we’ve gotten a glimpse at some of the star (role) players of tomorrow from this draft class. Let’s check in on the super complicated NBA Summer League Stock Market, which is calculated by top analysts and supercomputers and definitely not by me seeing a guy play and haphazardly slapping a chart emoji next to his name.
Some 2024 lottery picks
Second-year players
Keep an eye out 👀
People related to LeBron James
In our latest piece on Team USA, Joe Vardon details how Derrick White had one foot in Cabo when the call came to join the Olympic squad.
Steve Kerr and Steph Curry discussed the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump, calling it “sad” and a “demoralizing day for our country.”
The NBA revealed the groups for the 2024 Emirates NBA Cup (previously called the In-Season Tournament).
(Top photo: Nathaniel S. Butler / Getty Images )