James' remarks about Davis irk NBA general managers
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[December 22, 2018]
LeBron James' recent comments
about how it would be "amazing" to play with New Orleans Pelicans
star Anthony Davis have upset general managers around the NBA,
according to an ESPN report.
Small-market general managers told ESPN they feel James' expressed
adulation about possibly playing on the same Los Angeles Lakers'
team with Davis was tampering and that the league office should
enforce the NBA bylaw that prohibits such comments. The bylaw reads:
"Any Player who, directly or indirectly, entices, induces, persuades
or attempts to entice, induce or persuade any Player, Coach,
Trainer, General Manager, or any other person who is under contract
to any other Member of the Association to enter into negotiations
for or relating to his services shall, on being charged with such
tampering, should be given an opportunity to answer to such charges
after due notice and the Commissioner shall have the power to decide
whether or not the charges have been sustained ..."
The lack of action has peeved some general managers, who feel
players should be punished in the same manner as teams who cross the
line, according to the report.
"If these are the rules, enforce them," ESPN quoted one Western
Conference general manager as saying. "If you want to push Anthony
Davis in L.A., if you allow LeBron to interfere with teams, then
just do it. Change the rules, and say, 'It's the wild, wild west and
anything goes.'
"But give us a list of the rules that you're enforcing, and give us
a list of the rules that you're going to ignore."
In recent years, the Lakers were twice fined for tampering --
$500,000 for comments about Paul George and $50,000 for remarks
about Giannis Antetokounmpo.
But general managers told the network that the NBA looks at comments
differently when they come from players.
"Each case is assessed on its own facts," an NBA spokesman told
ESPN. "In general, absent evidence of team coordination or other
aggravating factors, it is not tampering when a player makes a
comment about his interest in playing with another team's player."
Regardless, James' comments about how "incredible" it would be to
play with Davis -- the Pelicans play the Lakers on Friday night in
Los Angeles -- can certainly be looked at something that will make
it harder for New Orleans to keep Davis.
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Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) drives to the basket
against New Orleans Pelicans forward Anthony Davis (23) during the
second half at Quicken Loans Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-USA
TODAY Sports
Davis isn't slated to become a free agent until following the
2019-20 season but he recently switched agents and now retains Rick
Paul of Klutch Sports, the same agent who represents James.
Pelicans coach Alvin Gentry said at the team's Friday shootaround
that Davis will not be dealt.
"No we're not trading him," Gentry told reporters. "We're not
trading him under any circumstance. You can move on from that one."
Several general managers told ESPN they reached out to New Orleans
general manager Dell Demps to express their concerns with the way
the NBA closed its eyes to James' comments.
"It's New Orleans' problem today, and a problem with a different
player tomorrow for the rest of us," one Eastern Conference general
manager told ESPN. "It's open season on small markets and our
players."
Representatives of the small-market franchises indicated they
believe the NBA is fine with star players navigating toward the
bigger markets.
"There is no confidence among most of us -- if not all of us -- that
the league cares about protecting our interests," one small-market
general manager told ESPN. "It's hard enough already to hold onto
the kind of players we need to try and win with -- but (the NBA)
doesn't do anything to help."
The 25-year-old Davis was the No. 1 pick of the 2012 NBA Draft. He's
averaging 28.0 points per game for the Pelicans this season, good
for third in the NBA.
--Field Level Media
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