Cassano checks in on the Drew Gooden negotiations, noting the stand still things have come to. Reports have surfaced that the Cavs had free agent Reggie Evans in town, which may act as a catalyst to a deal with Gooden. Papa Cass has all the latest on Gooden and Evans in this mornings piece.
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It
looks like the Cavaliers are starting to get rather impatient with the
Drew Gooden contract saga. It's about time somebody got antsy.
Gooden
has formally been a free agent for nearly two months, and the only
thing we know is that he wants the kind of money Nene received in his
six-year, $60 million extension with the Nuggets. We have no idea if
other teams are willing to offer him anything close to that, we have no
idea if Gooden's camp still thinks that's a realistic possibility, we
have no idea if the Cavs have been able to talk Gooden off the ledge.
It
seems like both sides met at the negotiating table in mid-July,
discovered they were an ocean apart, shrugged their shoulders and
busied themselves with cookouts and trips to the coast.
When I
thought about it last week, I wondered if Gooden's agent was going to
be pouring himself a beer sometime in mid-September and suddenly smack
his forehead and say, "Holy crap! Drew doesn't have a contract yet! I
totally forgot!"
Well, if Gooden's posse hasn't yet tired of the
back-burner waiting game, it looks like the Cavs have. Reports say the
Cavs met with free agent forward Reggie Evans this week.
Evans
was a sometimes-starter for the Nuggets and Sonics last year, averaging
nearly six points and 7.5 rebounds in about 20 minutes per game. With a
reputation as a tenacious rebounder with a mean streak, he'd fit the
Cavs' roster well, though his overall game is far more limited than
Gooden's.
The Nuggets reportedly think they can re-sign Evans, but
they are about to bump into the salary cap. They have about $3 million
worth of wiggle room. If they go above that, they will begin paying the
league's dollar-for-dollar luxury tax, a prospect that horrifies most
teams.
The Cavs don't have that issue, still possessing both their
$5.2 million midlevel cap exemption and their $1.8 million biannual
exemption.
In a perfect world, the Cavs could burn their midlevel
exemption on Evans, then coax Gooden into signing a one-year qualifying
offer. That would give the Cavs a deep and multitalented corps of big
men with Gooden and Zydrunas Ilgauskas starting and Evans, Anderson
Varejao and Donyell Marshall off the bench.
Next year would serve as
a proving ground to see if Evans or Varejao could perform at a starter
level. If one or both can, the Cavs don't have to bother with Gooden
when he becomes an unrestricted free agent next summer. If neither can,
it might be time to reorganize the frontcourt and commit to Gooden long
term.
That probably won't happen, though. Odds are Gooden will only
take a one-year qualifying offer as a last resort. I still think the
Cavs will work out a sign-and-trade for Gooden.
But it's all
speculation until Gooden makes a move. It would be nice to have a clue
of where Gooden stands sometime before the leaves start turning.