Joe Harris: Ideally ‘I would play my whole career in Brooklyn’

Joe Harris has no intention of seeing his Brooklyn Nets career come to an end after the 2019-20 NBA season.

Although the Nets were quiet at the 2019-20 NBA Trade Deadline, there were reports indicating Brooklyn had conversations with other organizations. While Joe Harris’ name never came up in any reports, but there was talk as the deadline drew near that the sharpshooter would be someone to watch because he’s a free agent after the 2019-20 season.

But, if Brooklyn’s superstars want Harris to stick around and the sharpshooter himself wants to remain in a Nets uniform, as well, then there was no reason to trade him.

The deadline came and went, and Harris is still a Net. During an Instagram Live session on the NBA’s Instagram account on Monday, he told YES Network’s Ian Eagle that he wants to remain in Brooklyn beyond this season:

In [an] ideal world, I would play my whole career in Brooklyn. I came in with [Brooklyn Nets general manager] Sean [Marks], even the ownership. It’s just one of those things where you have a close connection with a lot of people that are within the organization. You kind of all came in together. Now I’ve been here for four years and built unbelievable relationships … It’s amazing just to see where we’ve gone from year one to now. And I obviously want to be a part of that, and a part of it for a long time.

Report: Golden State signing Marquese Chriss to two-year deal

The Golden State Warriors now have 13 players on their roster.

Per ESPN’s Bobby Marks, the Golden State Warriors are signing power forward Marquese Chriss to a two-year contract. Chriss initially signed to a one-year contract with the Warriors in September and waived shortly before being signed to a Two Way contract in January.

He’s appeared in 47 games for Golden State this season.

Now in his fourth year in the league, Chriss has averaged 7.9 points, 5.4 rebounds, 1.7 assists and 1.0 block per game this season while shooting a career-high 51.8 percent from the field. Chriss finds himself being added to one of what were five open roster spots, with the Warriors also signing wings Ky Bowman, Juan Toscano-Anderson and Zach Norvell Jr. to deals after the passing of the trade deadline.

Chriss’ signing should be one of the last for the Warriors for some time, with Golden State now near at the allotted minimum number of players (14) on the roster; they have 13. However, the team now has no Two Way players after adding Chriss and Bowman, another of their former Two Way players, onto the regular season roster.

Report: Warriors signing Zach Norvell to 10-day contract

The Golden State Warriors need to replace plenty of perimeter shooters and Zach Norvell Jr. is a legitimate option for filling in one of those spots.

According to The Athletic’s Anthony Slater, the Golden State Warriors are signing 6’5” guard Zach Norvell to a 10-day contract. Norvell, who went undrafted in the 2019 NBA Draft, played two games with the Los Angeles Lakers this season before being waived in December.

The Gonzaga product now plays for the NBA G League’s South Bay Lakers, where he’s averaging 15.2 points, 4.5 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 0.9 steals per game while shooting 40.6 percent from the field and 39.6 percent from three (on 7.5 three-point attempts per game).

Norvell is undoubtedly a three-point threat after shooting 37.0 percent from deep in both years he spent at Gonzaga. However, he’s also an under-control player who does well attacking closeouts while displaying a nice handle and solid passing ability as well.

The Chicago native could legitimately earn a roster spot with the injury-depleted Warriors. Golden State has four open roster spots after trading away five players (D’Angelo Russell, Jacob Evans, Omari Spellman, Alec Burks and Glenn Robinson III) before Thursday’s trade deadline and could use Norvell’s skillset in their effort to replace what they lost by trading away their four best perimeter shooters.

Within the next 10 days, the Warriors will face the Lakers, Miami Heat and Phoenix Suns.

Warriors could face up to $77.5 million luxury tax with new salary cap projections

With new NBA salary cap projections released, the Golden State Warriors could face a heightened luxury tax.

The NBA salary cap projections could have stifling consequences on the Golden State Warriors.

The league released projections for salary cap and luxury tax for the 2020-21 season to teams Thursday, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski and Bobby Marks.

With a lower salary cap and luxury tax than expected, the Warriors could be on the hook for a tax payment as high as $77.5 million, about $12 million more than what was expected.

The salary cap is expected to be $115 million, according to Wojnarowski. That would be an increase from the 2019-20 season, but not as much as the previously-predicted $116 million.

The luxury tax is projected to be $139 million, Wojnarowski reported.

As the roster currently stands, the Warriors’ 2020-21 payroll will be $147.87 million, according to Basketball Reference.

Four players on the Warriors roster are set to receive more than $20 million: Draymond Green’s extension will start at $22 million, D’Angelo Russell will be paid more than $28 million, Klay Thompson $35 million and Stephen Curry $40 million.

The Warriors will also likely add a high first-round draft pick to the sheet. A top-five pick would result in a cap hit ranging from $6.8 million to $10.73 million.

Golden State has a $5.9 million exception to use on a free agent, according to Wojnarowski and Marks.

If the Warriors use the entire taxpayer mid-level exception, their luxury tax bill could range from $77.5M if they get the No. 1 pick to as low as $61M if they get the No. 5 pick.

The easiest way to get under the luxury tax would be to trade Russell. A highly-coveted free agent this past offseason, he will have three years left for about $30 million per year after this season.

Moving his contract would put Golden State right near the luxury line, depending on other roster changes, and allow them to move manageable contracts to clear the rest of the way if needed.

But the Warriors have not been shy about exceeding the luxury tax in recent years. If the front office feels the team can still compete for a title when Curry and Thompson return from injury, it may pay the price again.

USA TODAY Sports Media Group salary cap expert Yossi Gozlan contributed research to this report.

Kevin Durant and a Ray Allen reunion? Sugar Ray says it almost happened

Former Boston Celtics sharpshooter Ray Allen recounts his interest in returning to Boston it they were able to bring Kevin Durant on board.

Ray Allen’s return to the Boston Celtics may have never really been in the cards after he left the team to win his second and final ring with the Miami Heat but, according to the Hall of Fame guard, there was a brief window when it almost happened.

Speaking on a recent episode of Boston-area local sports radio show Ordway, Merloni and Fauria, the 10-time All-Star explained how he was a superstar decision away from putting on the green and white one more time.

“I had a conversation with [Celtics president Danny Ainge] and I told him this was my last-ditch effort. I would’ve went back,” said Allen of that career-defining moment in the summer of 2016 (via WEEI’s Nick Friar), as teams around the league — Boston included — waited on the free agency decision of Kevin Durant.

Durant, who ultimately chose (to the rest of the league’s chagrin) to join the Golden State Warriors, evidently would have been the siren call to Jesus Shuttlesworth (as Allen is sometimes called). But then, it’s never a tough sell to convince players to suit up for a real shot at a ring, which Durant’s presence before his Achilles injury could perhaps have granted the Celtics.

“This was when Kevin Durant was a free agent. He was thinking about going to Boston. And I said, ‘Hey, if you guys land Kevin, I would certainly look at lacing them back up one more time and try to make something good happen here in Boston.’

And it was a great story if it went that way, if it happened. After that I wasn’t — it’s great to talk about it. There’s a lot of nostalgia associated with it. But, what’s done is done and you kind of have to move on.”

Ultimately, despite recruiting New England Patriots superstar quarterback Tom Brady to encourage the DMV native to sign with the Celtics, the bid fell short and Allen remained retired. All is well that ends well though, as Sugar Ray — called such for the sweet and smooth game he displayed in his time with the NBA — indeed moved on to settling into retired life as well as anyone cut from his cloth might.

Allen, now 44 years old, is still prepared to play if he should ever get a call though. Well regarded for his pregame preparation and workout routine, the UConn product was quick to note he could still come back and be an impact player at age 44, noting “If I had to play tomorrow, I can do it … As many (minutes) I need to play”.

Players known for their meticulous preparation never truly let go of that part of their personality. So as Allen says, it’s better to, “Stay ready, [so] you never have to get ready”.

As to whether there was ever any real traction to KD linking up with Allen in Boston, well — we’ll just have to take the shooter at his word.