2008 76ers Offseason Thread

Started by PoopyfaceMcGee, May 02, 2008, 06:10:34 AM

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PoopyfaceMcGee


hunt

hopefully speights is ready to play this season...smith would've given them some good minutes off the bench.
also heard they're talking to magloire & theo ratliff about signing for the vet min to back up at center.
lemonade was a popular drink and it still is

SD_Eagle5

I wouldn't mind Ratliff at the vet minimun, I didn't think he was too bad last season.

PhillyGirl

"Oh, yeah. They'll still boo. They have to. They're born to boo. Just now, they'll only boo with two Os instead of like four." - Larry Andersen

Rome


Rome

QuoteSources: Iguodala agrees to six-year, $80 million deal with Sixers

By Henry Abbott
ESPN.com
(Archive)

Updated: August 12, 2008, 7:14 PM ET

The Philadelphia 76ers and restricted free agent Andre Iguodala have agreed to a six-year, $80 million contract, league sources tell ESPN.com.

The athletic and exciting 6-6 forward/guard has improved his scoring average in each of his first four seasons, and promises to be a mainstay on a Sixers team that recently signed former Clipper big man Elton Brand to an estimated $82 million free agent contract.

Point guard Andre Miller, center Samuel Dalembert, and promising bench players like Thaddeus Young and Louis Williams make the Sixers an emergent force in the East. The young team managed to extend the Detroit Pistons to six games in the opening round of this year's playoffs -- and that was even before they added one of the NBA's best post scorers in Brand. Now the Sixers will be a popular pick to join the league's elite for many years to come.

If the Sixers had not been able to sign Iguodala, the 24-year-old could have played this season for them after signing a qualifying offer, which would have made him an unrestricted free agent next summer. In that scenario, the Sixers could have lost their most exciting young star without any compensation.

Iguodala and the team had an opportunity to work out a contract extension last summer but could not come to an agreement. Talks this offseason moved slowly until the last 24 hours, when, sources say, the team significantly increased their offer.

Although the basic terms of the deal have been agreed to, the new contract has yet to be finalized and signed.

76ers president and general manager Ed Stefanski took over a franchise on the wane last December, replacing the fired Billy King. The franchise had been the talk of the NBA as recently as 2001, when Allen Iverson and Larry Brown took the organization on a thrill-ride to the NBA Finals where they briefly held a lead in the series against the Los Angeles Lakers.

However, upon Stefanski's arrival, Iverson had long since been traded to Denver, and the remaining pieces in Philadelphia were unproven. Stefanski encouraged coach Maurice Cheeks to play some of the young bench players King had drafted, in part to help Stefanski assess their value as he made long-term plans. To many people's surprise, the young players played impressively and the team began to win, managing to atone for a 5-12 start with a 40-42 record and the seventh seed in the East.

Against the Pistons in the first round, the team recaptured some of the optimism that had been missing for the last several years. Iguodala did not distinguish himself in the series, shooting just 33 percent from the field while averaging more than four turnovers per game behind the defensive pressure of Detroit's Tayshaun Prince. Nevertheless, his negotiating power with the team had increased thanks to the team's strong finish in the regular season, and then the signing of Brand.

The long-term commitment to Brand put pressure on the organization to win sooner rather than later -- or risk wasting a massive investment -- and coming to terms with Iguodala became almost an essential part of the Sixers' message to sponsors, season ticket holders, and fans, that the team was rejuvenated.

Iguodala had started the summer as one of many promising NBA free agents, but had seen nearly all of the big names, including Josh Smith, Emeka Okafor, Luol Deng, Andris Biedrins, Baron Davis, Elton Brand, and Josh Childress agree to lucrative deals.

Sources with knowledge of the negotiations say that over the last 24 hours, the Sixers became convinced that their previous highest offer, believed to be slightly less than $70 million, would result in Iguodala signing a qualifying offer and playing one season in Philadelphia before testing the open market next summer.

In short order, the team emerged with a much higher offer, to which Iguodala quickly agreed.

Many of the details of the contract are still to be worked out, sources say, including incentive clauses that could increase the value of the deal beyond a base compensation of $80 million.

Henry Abbott writes the TrueHoop blog for ESPN.com.

reese125

Lynum was just on and said its guaranteed $71-72 million. The rest is incentive based--similiar to Deng, Bogut, etc.

I really hope he has a court at his crib and he's practicing jumpers right now... or get ready for some fierce boos

SD_Eagle5


PoopyfaceMcGee

The great thing about him is that he can pull up and hit long range jumpers.

MDS

So thats $13 mil a year for him? Wow.
Zero hour, Michael. It's the end of the line. I'm the firstborn. I'm sick of playing second fiddle. I'm always third in line for everything. I'm tired of finishing fourth. Being the fifth wheel. There are six things I'm mad about, and I'm taking over.

Rome

I've said it for years... he's a good sixth man type, period.

Now they're paying him like a franchise player.  Brilliant.

Also - I wonder if they realize the free agent crop that's going to hit the market next year and more importantly in 2010?  Nah.  Probably not.

PoopyfaceMcGee

Quote from: Rome on August 12, 2008, 09:10:04 PM
Also - I wonder if they realize the free agent crop that's going to hit the market next year and more importantly in 2010?  Nah.  Probably not.

Hey, if the Sixers take themselves out of the game, that's fewer suitors to compete with your hometown Magic for those players!

Rome

Have no fear - the friggen Magic already blew their load last year by signing Rashard Lewis to a deal that made Iggy's look like cab fare.

reese125

Quote from: Rome on August 12, 2008, 09:10:04 PM
I've said it for years... he's a good sixth man type, period.

Now they're paying him like a franchise player.  Brilliant.

Also - I wonder if they realize the free agent crop that's going to hit the market next year and more importantly in 2010?  Nah.  Probably not.

cmon Rome...I understand you dont like the signing for that much (neither do I..but its what the market is..and its a crying shame), but your assessment of Iggy as just a "6th man type" is way off.

Rome

It's not an insult, dingus.   There are certain players who are great 6th men because of what they bring to the game when they enter it.

Bobby Jones, Kevin McHale, Detlef Schrempf, Danny Manning... the list goes on.  All of them were great 6th men.  Iggy can be precisely that sort of player.