The Cavs’ Delonte West is considering a two-year, $10 mlllion offer to play in Moscow.
This time, the overseas revolution of outbidding NBA teams for restricted free agents advances with Dynamo Moscow discussing a two-year, $10 million offer with Delonte West, a source close to West said on Thursday.
Clearly, Dynamo is a franchise with the resources to be taken seriously. Just a week ago, it lured New Jersey Nets forward Bostjan Nachbar with a three-year, $14.3 million contract.
Nachbar’s contract turned into a prelude to Atlanta Hawks free agent Josh Childress signing a groundbreaking three-year, $20 million deal with Olympiakos of Greece. So far this summer, four international players with NBA résumés – Jorge Garbajosa, Juan Carlos Navarro, Carlos Delfino and Pops Mensah-Bonsu – have taken substantial offers in Europe.
It’s not surprising that international players are electing to play overseas, but it’s a fundamental shift in thinking that good, young NBA-quality American players are seriously considering playing internationally.
So far, the Cavs and West haven’t been able to come to terms. He could sign a one-year qualifying offer of $2.76 million, which would allow him to become an unrestricted free agent next summer.
If West is considering a Russian deal worth $10 million over two years, it doesn’t seem like he and the Cavs can be too far apart. Why doesn’t Cleveland just offer him a three- or four-year deal worth $4 to $4.5 million a season and call it a day?
The bottom line is that the Cavs don’t want to lose West. He was the best player to come out of Cleveland’s deadline deals back in February. He’s a good shooter and he can handle the ball well enough to play point guard alongside LeBron James.
