Sixers Notes: Jackson, Free Agent Options, Morey, George

Reggie Jackson officially signed a one-year contract with the Sixers on Tuesday. The veteran point guard passed through waivers after Denver traded him to Charlotte and the Hornets bought out his contract. Jackson is thrilled to join another contender and reunite with former Pistons teammate Andre Drummond and Clippers teammate Paul George.

It’s definitely great to play with Andre again and PG. But I think everybody knows in the basketball world, I think the deck looks pretty full,” he said, per Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer. “So that was a big part of my choice and just an opportunity to try and do something special.”

We have more on the Sixers:

  • The team has 13 players on standard contracts and plans to carry 14 on opening night. That leaves one spot open and the Inquirer’s Gina Mizell looks at five free agent forwards who might fill that opening, including Marcus Morris, Jae Crowder, Cedi Osman, Gordon Hayward and Lonnie Walker IV.
  • President of basketball operations Daryl Morey said that prior to free agency his staff listened intently to Paul George’s Podcast P for clues as to where he might be leaning. Morey disclosed on the ‘Rights To Ricky Sanchez: The Sixers Podcast’ (YouTube link). Morey believed the Clippers would drop their hard line and give George a four-year, maximum-salary contract but that never happened, which he found somewhat surprising. The Clippers eventually offered George a three-year max deal but wouldn’t include a no-trade clause, leading George to look elsewhere.
  • Morey told The Ringer’s Howard Beck that there numerous contingency plans if George chose to stay in Los Angeles but he wasn’t particularly thrilled with any of them. “We thought that the best path was a Paul George–type path,” Morey said. “The other paths we thought were OK, they just weren’t as good. … We also felt like in the scenarios where we don’t convince Paul that this is the right team, we felt like we had a plan that was [workable]. We probably spent 85 percent of our time on the alternate plan, because that was way more complex.”
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