<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Face-to-face negotiations are under way in the Michael Finley sweepstakes, but no signing commitment is expected from the in-demand former All-Star before next week at the earliest. Sources close to the process told ESPN.com that Finley and agent Henry Thomas have invited the leading suitors to Chicago for sitdowns in Finley's hometown as opposed to launching into a series of recruiting trips. The process, sources said, will last at least through the weekend. The Miami Heat's Pat Riley and Stan Van Gundy were the first to visit Finley on Monday, with delegations from the Phoenix Suns (Tuesday), San Antonio Spurs (Thursday) and Detroit Pistons (TBD) also scheduled for visits this week. There is likewise a chance that the Minnesota Timberwolves will be the fifth team to get an up-close chance to woo Finley, with the most prominent casualty of the NBA's new amnesty clause apparently intent on a deliberate evaluation of his options. The 10-year veteran was waived by the Dallas Mavericks late last Monday and became an unrestricted free agent after clearing waivers Thursday. Riley, Minnesota star Kevin Garnett, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich and ex-Dallas teammate Steve Nash are among the luminaries who have personally reached out to Finley by phone since he was released. Suns coach Mike D'Antoni, meanwhile, enjoyed an unexpected head start in the lobbying process late last week when he and Finley were guests at the Phoenix wedding of Mavericks athletic trainer Casey Smith, a former Suns employee. Various league executives have maintained for weeks that Miami is the heavy favorite to land Finley, with the Heat able to offer a full mid-level exception of $5 million next season and the lure of playing alongside Shaquille O'Neal and Dwyane Wade, who's also represented by Thomas. Finley, furthermore, is quite familiar with Van Gundy, having played for him at Wisconsin. Yet, sources insist that Finley has not yet established a favorite. Intensely private throughout his eight-plus seasons in Dallas, Finley has been typically tight-lipped about his future, telling reporters at Nash's July 29 charity game that he wasn't ready to discuss the prospect of free agency and declining interview requests since being waived by the Mavericks. Thomas, though, did confirm last week that Finley is "most interested" in joining a team with championship potential. Of the four teams that best fit that description, Miami and Detroit can both offer a starting salary of $5 million. The Pistons, however, are poised to cut into their mid-level exception to sign power forward Dale Davis this week -- and potentially take themselves out of the running -- if they sense that Finley's interest is waning. San Antonio and Phoenix are the other two teams, but going to either of the Mavericks' Western Conference rivals will require Finley to make a financial sacrifice. The Spurs are limited to offering a starting salary of just over $2.5 million, and Phoenix can't pitch anything more than the veteran minimum of $1.1 million for the 2005-06 campaign. The Mavericks tried for weeks to trade Finley to an Eastern Conference team before waiving him in hopes of keeping the swingman away from the Spurs or Suns. Reports persist that Mavericks owner Mark Cuban was prepared to offer Finley a restructured payment schedule on the nearly $52 million left on Finley's contract to help persuade him to go East, but NBA front-office sources told ESPN.com that no such deal was struck. The presence of San Antonio and Phoenix on Finley's list of finalists indeed suggests no such arrangement exists. A "spread provision" in Finley's Dallas contract stipulates that, upon being waived, his remaining salary will be paid in annual installments of less than $5 million.</div> Source: ESPN August 23 2005
<div class="quote_poster">Quoting NTC187:</div><div class="quote_post">He might as well just sign with Miami now, since we've stupidly signed Dale Davis.</div> Haha I like what I hear
Well I really dont want to see him go to San Antonio, I cant stand them (no not because they beat us in the finals, I've just never liked them apart from Robert Horry) Plus even though I would've rather seen him sign with us, i'm anxcious to see what Miami can do with this new "super" line up, if he joins, their whole roster is now basically all just big name players, lol. Oh and plus it will make for playing as Miami on NBA Live 2006 more fun , lol.
no mention of the suns... that is the best fit if he wants to get some minutes and try and win a championship
I dunno about winning a championship, I thought their team last year looked alot better than this years, only downside was they were lacking a decent specialist Centre. But hey, you never know.
<div class="quote_poster">Quoting NTC187:</div><div class="quote_post">He might as well just sign with Miami now, since we've stupidly signed Dale Davis.</div> If you look closely the signing of Dale is not really stupid at all. Finley was never serious about going to Detroit for some reason. Signing Davis and Evans togeather is a better option than going after just Finley to me.
I'm just not sold on Jason Williams at the point, but I like what Miami has done. It should be interesting to see what happens. I really see Finley going to Miami, although I'd love to have him here in SA. Did Miami re-sign Jones as the backup PG? I think that is very important for them to do.
I'd love to see him go to San Antonio, but I don't see that happening. The Suns would be the best option for him, he'd get more minutes definitely. But then again, I don't see him passing up a chance to play with Shaq.
<div class="quote_poster">Quoting Duncanonu:</div><div class="quote_post">I'm just not sold on Jason Williams at the point, but I like what Miami has done. It should be interesting to see what happens. I really see Finley going to Miami, although I'd love to have him here in SA. Did Miami re-sign Jones as the backup PG? I think that is very important for them to do.</div> A lot of people are not sold on Jason Williams at the point, because a lot of people have not seen Jason Williams at the point in the last four years. He's nothing like he was in Sacramento. He has one of the best assist to turnover ratios in the NBA, and his defense is not consistently a liability like it used to be. The one question mark on that team is Antoine Walker. He's the only one who has gotten worse with age. I can see it now; It'll be game seven in the Finals, the Heat will be down by one point, and Antoine Walker will take an illadvised three pointer with both Shaq and Wade open. I don't see why the Heat would want Michael Finley. They have James Posey, who is not only a better player than Finley (arguable) but is also more of what they need, a defender who will adjust to whatever role the team wants him to play. If anything's going to make that team run smoothly next season, it'll be James Posey's defense.