|
Thursday, February 20 Updated: April 16, 2:46 PM ET Bucks acquire Payton from Sonics Associated Press |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
In a blockbuster five-player deal Thursday at the NBA trading deadline, Ray Allen was sent from the Milwaukee Bucks to the Seattle SuperSonics for Gary Payton and Desmond Mason.
The Sonics also received guards Kevin Ollie and Ronald Murray and a conditional first-round draft pick.
The trade ended Payton's career in Seattle after 12½ seasons and reunited him with coach George Karl. Milwaukee plays at Seattle on Friday night on ESPN, but Sonics general manager Rick Sund said that neither Payton nor the four others in the trade would play.
The nine-time All-Star guard's contract expires after this season, and the Sonics risked losing him over the summer on the free agent market with nothing in return.
Instead, they acquired one of the purest shooters in the game.
Allen, a six-year veteran and three-time All-Star, has spent his entire career with the Bucks. A gold medalist for the United States at the Sydney Olympics, he also will be a member of the 2004 Olympic men's basketball team.
"It was an All-Star point guard for an All-Star two-guard. Both players are great,'' Nets vice president Rod Thorn commented. "Gary was in the last year with Seattle. They felt they got a quality player in Ray. That's a trade that could be real good for both teams.''
The trade creates a logjam at point guard for the Bucks while causing the opposite problem for the SuperSonics.
Seattle also made a trade with the New Orleans Hornets, exchanging point guard Kenny Anderson for center Elden Campbell.
In the day's only other deal, Boston sent guard Shammond Williams, a second-round draft pick and cash to Denver for center Mark Blount and forward Mark Bryant.
"Quite frankly, I'm surprised any deals were made,'' Atlanta Hawks general manager Pete Babcock said. The Hawks were expected to be one of the most active teams before the deadline, but 3 p.m. passed without any of their best players -- Shareef Abdur-Rahim, Jason Terry, Theo Ratliff and Glenn Robinson -- being traded.
"The tax had added another layer of issues you have to work through,'' Babcock said. "You rarely see a trade just talent-for-talent.''
Many owners told their basketball executives they would not take on added payroll commitments, especially if it would put them over the expected luxury tax threshold of $52-53 million. Teams with payrolls higher than that amount will have to pay a dollar-for-dollar tax on the overage.
Concerns about long-term financial implications apparently scuttled a deal that would have sent Derrick Coleman from Philadelphia to Golden State for Adonal Foyle and Bob Sura, an Eastern Conference official told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.
"It's very, very hard to make deals today for a number of reasons. One being the luxury tax,'' Chicago Bulls general manager Jerry Krause said. "It used to be you'd talk about basketball players and now you talk about budgets. A guy used to say, 'I'll get out the roster.' Now a guy says, `I'll get out the budget printout.'''
Karl was Payton's coach in Seattle when the SuperSonics lost to the Chicago Bulls in the 1996 NBA Finals. Payton's arrival presumably will force Bucks starter Sam Cassell into a backup role, with sharpshooter Michael Redd taking over Allen's old spot at shooting guard.
An NBA spokesman denied a report that the Bucks and Knicks had requested an extension of the trade deadline to finalize a deal sending Cassell and another player to New York for Latrell Sprewell. A Knicks spokesman also said there was no validity to the report.
Milwaukee has struggled for a season and a half after coming within one game of reaching the NBA Finals in 2001. The Bucks are 27-26 -- seventh-best in the Eastern Conference.
Their next opponent is Seattle on Friday night at Key Arena, putting Payton in the ironic position of playing his first game with his new team against the team that just traded him.
As the afternoon trade deadline drew near, the Indiana Pacers were said to be on the verge of acquiring Payton in a three-way deal. But Pacers general manager Donnie Walsh said the sides were "not close at all.''
Although it was not a huge surprise for the Sonics to trade Payton, it was much more shocking to see the Bucks give up Allen -- their leading scorer with a 21.3-point average.
Bucks general manager Ernie Grunfeld's asking price was high, getting the Sonics to include one of their most promising youngsters -- Mason. The 25-year-old former slam dunk champion was Seattle's best reserve, averaging 14.1 points and 7.0 rebounds.
If the Bucks don't give the starting shooting guard spot to Redd, it could go to Mason.
The trade apparently will leave Ollie as Seattle's starter at point guard. A career backup, he was averaging 5.7 points and 3.4 assists behind Cassell.
Payton was averaging 20.8 points and 8.8 assists for the SuperSonics, who have dropped out of the playoff race in the Western Conference after a promising start to the season. At 34, Payton was a decade older than most of the players on Seattle's roster.
"He likes playing for George,'' said Payton's agent, Aaron Goodwin. The draft pick going to Seattle will be the lower of Milwaukee's own pick or Atlanta's, which was acquired by the Bucks in the Glenn Robinson deal. If lottery protection provisions leave the Bucks with only one first-round pick, they will send the Sonics a pair of second-round picks -- their own, and Memphis' pick. |
|