All-Star Bulls shooting guard Zach LaVine appears intent to earn a maximum contract extension with Chicago, but whether or not that happens this summer will have a significant financial impact on the deal, writes Joe Cowley of The Chicago Sun-Times. A standard extension for LaVine this offseason could only be worth up to about $105MM over four years, so he seems unlikely to accept such a deal — Chicago could offer him significantly more in a renegotiation or once he reaches free agency.
“I definitely want what I deserve, and whatever that is I’ll have it coming to me,’’ LaVine said of a possible extension after the Bulls’ 2020/21 season concluded.
K.C. Johnson of NBC Sports Chicago notes that LaVine’s fate this summer could be directly affected by the Bulls’ lottery luck. Should the team move into the top four in Tuesday’s lottery drawing ahead of the 2021 draft, it will be committed to paying at least $7.2MM to the rookie prospect it drafts. Depending on how some decisions shake out across the rest of Chicago’s roster, this will likely mean the Bulls, who have not made the playoffs in four seasons, will be operating over the salary cap, which would preclude a renegotiation with LaVine this season and make an extension less likely.
There’s more out of the Central Division:
- Pacers center Myles Turner weighed in on his perceived snub from the NBA’s All-Defensive teams this season, writes Nat Newell of the Indianapolis Star. Turner tweeted, in part, “Right back to it next season, [I’m going to] make it to where it ain’t even a debate.” Newell notes that all of the forwards who made the cut ahead of Turner played at least five more games than he did during a truncated 72-game season, where every appearance counts that much more. Newell observes that, in the last 20 years, the league leader in blocks has not made either All-Defensive team just six times — and Turner accounts for two of those omissions.
- A lot is riding on the Cavaliers landing some lottery luck, again, in the 2021 draft lottery next week, writes Chris Fedor of Cleveland.com. Over the last two decades, Cleveland landed the No. 1 overall pick in the 2003, 2011, 2013, and 2014 drafts. The club hasn’t fared as well lately in the lottery, but is hoping its luck turns ahead of a starry draft.
- Pacers All-Star Domantas Sabonis proved he was one of the best big men in the league through his play this season, per Wheat Hotchkiss of Pacers.com. The 25-year-old deservedly made his second straight All-Star game, and boasted a sparkling stat line of 20.3 PPG (on 53.5% shooting from the floor), 12 RPG, and 6.7 APG. Hotchkiss highlights just how valuable Sabonis was on offense, both as a ball-handler and an expert pick-setter, and notes that Sabonis was often tasked with guarding players beyond the paint while Turner manned the middle, resulting in Sabonis traveling 2.7 miles a night on the floor, more than any other big man in the league. Sabonis will suit up for Team Lithuania during a six-game qualifying event for the Tokyo Olympics, and potentially the Olympics themselves, before his focus returns to the NBA.
Pelicans get Lavine
Wolves get Bledsoe and Pelicans 5 Firsts
Bulls get Edwards and Rubio and Pelicans own First
Salary filler added
Wolves and Bulls rebuild
The Bulls aren’t trading Lavine.
no Silly rabbit
Stop it sillyman.its not funny.why would bulls rebuild? They r already have 2 allstar players.they just need add plamaking pg and defensive pf.
Cavs won the lotto in 2013 as well
You can hardly call it a win when you end up with Anthony Bennett at #1.
Of course Orlando didn’t exactly do a great job either taking Oladipo at #2.
And the ROY from that draft is now a bench warmer. Those awards are pretty worthless.
MCW is just another failed experiment for the Sixers.
He could have been drafted by any team; ROY award is rather meaningless.
Lol, MCW was a spectacular move by hinkie. High volume scoring ROY they then flip for a 1st rounder. He knew he wasn’t a keeper and got the lakers pick for it.
They didn’t get a Lakers 1st rounder for MCW. It was a 3 team trade that didn’t involve the Lakers.
Philly got a Lakers’ 1st that they previously sent to Phx in the Nash deal. Getting a Laker 1st at that time for a guy they recently picked #11 was hardly a spectacular move.
Lavine will get his cash, from the Bulls, one way or another. They have a fair amount of, as they are wont to say, “flexibility”, especially if they are willing to move Thad and Satoransky and can make taking Aminu part of that deal. If they get a top-4 by some sort of divine intervention, Lavine would be ecstatic, and the FO would do whatever they have to do to make sure he stays. Top 4 means they will get a PG rookie ‘project’ who can be worked into the lineup behind one of the many vet PGs available in FA this year who can be signed for the MLE.
Sabonis was such a great snub in the All-NBA teams, I had him in the 1st or 2nd at worst… his season was just phenomenally good!
Bulls should get Lonzo.
Possible but a sellers market there.