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Nets Waive Joe Johnson - Signs With Heat

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  • Nets Waive Joe Johnson - Signs With Heat

    Brooklyn Nets waive former All-Star guard Joe Johnson

    The Brooklyn Nets announced Thursday afternoon that they've waived Joe Johnson after agreeing to a buyout with the former All-Star guard.

    Earlier Thursday, ESPN.com's Marc Stein reported that the two sides had opened buyout negotiations. Sources said that Johnson had been sold on the idea of joining a contender for the stretch run if he and the Nets could come to terms on a contract settlement.

    A number of likely playoff teams, sources said, are already pursuing Johnson: Atlanta, Boston, Cleveland, Houston, Miami, Oklahoma City and Toronto. Sources said that Johnson, who can't clear waivers until 5 p.m. ET on Saturday, is likely to take a couple of days to sift through the offers.

    There is a strong belief within the Cavaliers' organization, league sources said, that they are in prime position to win the Johnson sweepstakes and add him to their title-chasing roster. But sources say the Hawks are likewise planning to make a determined push to persuade Johnson to return to Atlanta.

    Because Johnson was released by new Nets general manager Sean Marks by this coming Tuesday, he'll be playoff-eligible for his next team.

    Johnson gave back $3 million in remaining salary to move on from Brooklyn, Marks said during an interview Thursday on ESPN New York 98.7 FM.

    "It shows Joe's serious about going to a contender. We wish him all the best. He's been part of some great Net memories," Marks said.

    Johnson, 34, is earning $24.9 million this season in the final year of a mammoth six-year, $124 million deal that was the league's largest at the time when he signed it with the Hawks in 2010. Brooklyn absorbed the remaining four years and $89.3 million left on Johnson's deal -- soon followed by the acquisitions of Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett -- in a bid to first persuade then-franchise point guard Deron Williams to stay with the Nets and then to make a run at the NBA championship that Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov vowed to win within the space of five years.

    But the Nets won only one playoff series after acquiring Johnson and don't have control of their own first-round pick until June 2019.

    Setting Johnson free is the second significant move for Marks in his first week-plus on the job after Brooklyn released veteran forward Andrea Bargnani.

    Marks said it was his call to complete a buyout of Johnson, but Prokhorov was in support of the decision.

    "I know [Prokhorov] is very fond of Joe, and it's hard to see him leave, and he would've loved for Joe to have stuck around and been a Net for the rest of this season and beyond," Marks said. "But I think he also realizes the fair thing for Joe would be [for him] to try to get a chance at a championship."

    Asked about the potential of Johnson returning to Brooklyn in the offseason, Marks replied: "You never know what's going to happen with the future. But if he ends up somewhere else, we're basically saying, 'Joe best of luck to you and we'll catch up with you down the road. It's been fun.' But I'm not going to rule anything out. But at the same time we've got some different things on our horizon, I guess, right now."

    Johnson, who is averaging 11.8 points on 40.6 percent shooting but has seen an uptick in his performance lately, has been best known for his winning shots at the buzzer in Brooklyn. He has seven of them in the past decade, which accounts for the most by any NBA player in that span by a wide margin, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

  • #2
    Joe Johnson expected to sign with Miami Heat

    The Miami Heat expect to sign former All-Star guard Joe Johnson when he clears waivers, sources tell ESPN's Zach Lowe.

    Several playoff teams pursued Johnson, but the Heat clearly moved to the front of his wish list, league sources told ESPN's Chris Broussard.

    Johnson will clear waivers Saturday at 5 p.m. ET after negotiating a contract buyout with the Brooklyn Nets. Sources told ESPN's Marc Stein that the Cleveland Cavaliers and Atlanta Hawks are the other finalists on Johnson's list, but all signs point to Johnson choosing Miami.

    Cavs star LeBron James said earlier Friday that Cleveland was interested in acquiring Johnson, saying "he knows we want him."

    "If he decides to come [to Cleveland], it'd be great," James said. "But if not, we'll continue to move on with what we have."

    Johnson, averaged 11.8 points, 3.9 rebounds and 4.1 assists for the Nets this season on 40.6 percent shooting overall and 37.1 percent from 3.

    Before negotiating a buyout with the Nets, the 34-year-old Johnson was making $24.9 million this season in the final year of a mammoth six-year, $124 million deal that was the league's largest at the time when he signed it in 2010.

    Miami has two available roster spots after making trades last week that moved its payroll back under the league's punitive luxury tax line.

    By shedding what essentially were the original salaries for Mario Chalmers and Chris Andersen, the Heat are in position to avoid the dreaded repeater tax status that would drastically hinder their ability to execute sign-and-trade deals and would also make it far more expensive to sign free agents.

    Although there are complicated alternatives within the league's rules, signing Johnson prior to March 10 -- or adding any player who shakes free after being bought from a current team by March 1 -- could throw the Heat back above the luxury tax line.

    For that reason, Heat president Pat Riley acknowledged being in a bit of a dilemma when he met with reporters late Thursday. By waiting several days as part of a loophole to maintain future flexibility, the Heat would miss out on adding a player such as Johnson. By adding help now in a player such as Johnson, it would provide a major boost to an injury-ravaged roster that is fighting to remain in position for one of the top four playoff spots in the Eastern Conference.

    The Heat still aren't certain if leading scorer Chris Bosh will return this season as he continues to seek treatment options for an undisclosed medical condition that has sidelined him since Feb. 9. Reserve guard Tyler Johnson underwent shoulder surgery earlier this season, and Miami announced Friday that backup point guard Beno Udrih had season-ending foot surgery.

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