DubNation Digest: Harrison Barnes Contract Situation

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Here’s a compendium of reports pertaining to last week’s mutual announcement by Golden State Warriors general manager Bob Myers and small forward Harrison Barnes to postpone contract talks until next July, when Barnes becomes a restricted free agent.

Barnes Speaks

Marc Spears of Yahoo Sports with the exclusive interview:

“At a young age she was like, ‘Do you want to do this basketball thing seriously?’ I was like, ‘Yes,’ ” Barnes told Yahoo Sports after the Warriors’ 119-69 rout of the Memphis Grizzlies on Monday night. “We put all of our resources into basketball, AAU tournaments and doing all this stuff. My sister and mom didn’t have any summers off. It was all predicated on me trying to make sure I had the best opportunities in basketball and to get exposure to go to college.
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“Had I not been able to get a scholarship, we used all the money for AAU, and college would not have been an option for me. It’s a blessing, obviously, to be in the NBA and to be able to provide for them. Whenever another deal gets done, that will be another blessing as well.”
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Quotes

Ethan Sherwood Strauss, ESPN.com:

“He wanted to have some resolution to his extension discussions before the start of the season, which we completely understand,” Myers said. “I think he just wants to focus on the games as they stand now. We’ve completed discussions, and we’re not going to be able to reach a deal.”
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Myers declined to say how far apart the two sides are but said, “We had a lot of good dialogue, and we end the discussion on very good terms, very amicable.”

“We still can match any offer,” Myers said of the team’s chances of retaining Barnes via restricted free agency. “We can do five years. It puts us in a maybe stronger position.”
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Barnes spoke to media about his decision, saying he “wanted to put this to rest today,” but doesn’t see his contract situation being a problem for him on the court.
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“No real worries. I approach the season the same,” Barnes said. “The possibility of getting hurt, the possibility of getting X, Y and Z numbers, all that kind of stuff. It’s all there whether you have a contract or not.”
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Monte Poole, CSN Bay Area:

“I completely respect any athlete or NBA player in certainly Harrison’s position of ‘I don’t want to be thinking about an extension once the NBA season starts,'” Myers said. “And I’m completely fine with that, as is our organization.”

“That was the biggest thing,” he said. “My agent that takes care of all this stuff. Bob said early on that he doesn’t negotiate with players, so that didn’t change our relationship at all.
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“But we wanted to come to this decision now and focus on the season There is a lot riding on this season. We have a great team . . . so we kind of wanted to put this to rest today and just move forward to the basketball season.”

“I would say that July is as good a chance, maybe better because you can match. Knowing July is there, maybe the incentive (to reach agreement now) isn’t as strong.”
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Diamond Leung, Bay Area News Group:

Owner Joe Lacob had said of a report that Barnes, 23, turned down an initial four-year, $64 million offer from the team, “Let’s just say it’s in the ballpark.”
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“It doesn’t change our position with him,” Myers said. “We’re still very intent on revisiting it in July when we have an opportunity to do it. We still view him as a core member of the team in the long term.”

“After this season, hopefully after another parade, we can do this again.”
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Ron Kroichick, San Francisco Chronicle:

“We came to this decision now to focus on the season,” Barnes said. “There’s a lot riding on this season — we have a great team and the possibility of back-to-back (titles). So I kind of wanted to put this to rest today and move forward with basketball.”
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Commentary

Tim Kawakami, Bay Area News Group:

By shutting down talks, Barnes has more power to pick his destination next summer, whether it’s the Warriors or somebody else, as a restricted free agent instead of signing a deal now and then watching the Warriors control his fate next summer in trade talks.
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He probably had a huge number in mind for these negotiations, figuring the GSWs had to pay him a premium in order to control his trade rights into the summer.
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Now, Barnes keeps that right. Any big trade would have to go through him, at some point.
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As a RFA, the Warriors will have to work with Barnes in any trade scenario next summer, whether it’s to OKC for (Kevin) Durant or to another team to help clear salary space for Durant (or anybody else).
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Of course, the Warriors still have a lot of power here as they hurtle towards the summer–they’ll be working the phones, they’ll be putting together all kinds of different options, and some will have Barnes staying and some will have him going.
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As Barnes put it when I asked him directly about having some power next summer as an RFA: “How much control do you really have?”
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If the Warriors get close to a Durant deal–and I don’t know if that will actually happen but I know the Warriors want it to happen–then they’ll figure out a way to work something out with Barnes, I’m quite sure, one way or the other.
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Dieter Kurtenbach, KNBR.com:

Barnes is a whip-smart guy, but he might have overestimated his own abilities this summer. He spent months doing his best to take control of his contract negotiations. He attempted to change the player-agent paradigm by asking his former agent to only take two percent of his upcoming deal. That man is no longer his agent.
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“Just a financial matter, nothing personal,” Barnes said of the separation.
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Barnes then brought a new representative to the table with the Warriors late into the negotiation game, throwing the Dubs off balance, but not in a manner that made them susceptible to conceding.
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Barnes wanted control, but it was, in fact, the Warriors who controlled every aspect of the negotiation — they entered with a firm valuation, no fear of losing Barnes, and the threat of offsetting his rights to a team he might not want to play for in exchange for a better model.
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There’s no way Barnes fully understood how stacked the system was against him. Had he known, he and the Warriors would not be where they are today.
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The Harrison Barnes I met last year — the one who was sharp, insightful and funny, even when things weren’t going well (if all else failed, he could flash that $100 million smile) — that Barnes was not present Tuesday morning. The Harrison Barnes that answered questions Tuesday was sheepish, defeated.
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When he was asked about July’s negotiations and if he felt better positioned to get what he wanted then, Barnes only replied: “How much control do you really have?”
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(Photo: @letsgowarriors Instagram account via @nba)

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