North Carolina

Tar Heel sports: Click here to get the latest UNC news and commentary at UNC Now 

Published Sun, Jun 13, 2010 06:01 AM
Modified Mon, Jun 14, 2010 11:02 AM

Felton may be in bind

Email Print Order Reprint
Share This
Text

tool name

close x
tool goes here

If I were Raymond Felton, I'd wonder if I missed the boat.

That boat may have left last summer. It's when the Charlotte Bobcats offered about $6 million a season in a long-term contract, and he instead chose to play under the one-year qualifying offer to become an unrestricted free agent next month.

Felton played well in the regular season and poorly in the playoffs against Orlando's Jameer Nelson. I'd heard the Bobcats may have cooled on Felton, and then general manager Rod Higgins described Felton Monday as "a delicate situation."

That's not what you want to hear entering unrestricted free agency. Unless some other team likes Felton far more than the Bobcats, this could be a disappointing offseason.

Felton is an exceptional guy - accountable, competitive, a leader. The problem is he has not proven he's an above-average NBA point guard. Yet, he seemingly expects to be paid like one.

I spoke to three current or former player-personnel guys in the league about this, and was struck by the similarity of their reactions: The Bobcats are in equal danger of overpaying Felton or being left with no real point guard. Dilemma is an overused word, but this is a dilemma.

D.J. Augustin probably isn't the answer. It was telling when Higgins asked, rhetorically, if Augustin is a starter or a backup. If they don't know two seasons in whether D.J. would be an effective starter, then he's probably not.

Augustin seems to lack self-confidence - I've heard this from too many people who would know - and the position demands conviction and confidence.

The Bobcats need to do something assertive. I understand more than ever why they tried to acquire T.J. Ford from the Indiana Pacers at the trade deadline. I don't know exactly what aborted that deal, but I'd guess it was then-owner Bob Johnson containing cost, while arranging a sale.

Regardless of how that deal might have helped long-term, adding Ford's salary would have added short-term debt to the franchise.

Now long term might be short term. Ford makes $8.5 million this coming season, the last on his contract, and would welcome a trade. You know those baseball trades, where you effectively rent a veteran? This could work like that.

Is there a deal to be made with Larry Bird that would send Ford to Charlotte and Felton (sign-and-trade) to Indiana? Could that deal involve Nazr Mohammed (expiring contract) in a way that helps the Bobcats now and the Pacers later?

I asked Higgins Monday if he thought they'd revisit trading for Ford. Higgins said they'll revisit a lot of things.

That's practicing the art of the possible. When you have a tight payroll and no certainty at point guard, that's the appropriate mode-of-operation.

Get the biggest news in your email or cellphone as it's happening. Sign up for breaking news alerts.

Email Print Order Reprint
Share This
Text

tool name

close x
tool goes here
We welcome your comments on this story, but please be civil. Do not use profanity, hate speech, threats, personal abuse, images, internet links or any device to draw undue attention. Read our full comment policy.
More North Carolina

Get sports updates

Keep up with the latest sports stories with our free e-mail newsletters, delivered to your inbox!

- it's free!

- it's free!

- it's free!

- it's free!

- it's free!

- it's free!

- it's free!

- it's free!

- it's free!

Hot Deals View All
Find a Car
Go
Top Jobs View All

Find a Job
Go
Featured Homes View All
Find a Home
Go

Print Ads