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Nene asks Denver, "Yeah but.... what have you done for me LATELY?"

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  • Nene asks Denver, "Yeah but.... what have you done for me LATELY?"

    “I learned last season that this was a business,” Nene told Yahoo! Sports. “No matter how nice you are to people, no matter how nice people are to you, this is a business. I did my best for the team and they waited and waited to extend me. I was like, ‘Oh, OK, all these years playing good, doing your best and they still test you.’ That’s not about family, love and somebody liking you. It’s a business.

    “So how do I think about [free agency]? I want to be happy. I want to improve my game. I want to enjoy it. It was very stressful for me and I don’t want to go through this in my career anymore.”

    Nene made $11.3 million in the final year of his contract. He entered last season hoping for an extension, but didn’t push too hard while Denver was trying to trade Carmelo Anthony(notes). But after Anthony was sent to the New York Knicks in February, Nene expected an offer from the Nuggets. They instead waited until just before the July 1 start of the lockout, proposing a four-year, $50 million deal, sources said.

    Nene says he likely would have taken that offer during the season, but felt disrespected because the Nuggets waited so long. So he opted to join this year’s limited free-agent market at the urging of his agency, Lagardère Unlimited.

    “When the season was over they didn’t offer me nothing good,” said Nene, who averaged 14.5 points and 7.6 rebounds while shooting a league-best 61.5 percent. “It’s hard. When my option came, it was good for my side and I to seize the opportunity of free agency. I tried to make a deal before that. Yes, I would have signed before the end of the season. But after the season was done, after going into the summer and waiting a little more in the summer, they ask me to sign?

    “There was so much pressure on my shoulders. It was hard for me and I still did my job.”

    Not only are the Nuggets in danger of losing Nene, but free agents J.R. Smith(notes), Wilson Chandler(notes) and Kenyon Martin(notes) signed contracts to play in China. Guard Arron Afflalo(notes) also is a restricted free agent, and could draw significant interest from other teams.

    Nene hasn’t been able to talk to anyone from the Nuggets since the lockout. Asked about his relationship with the franchise now, he said: “I like the organization. I do need to be professional just like they were with me. They did what was best for them, and now I need to do what is best for me.”

    Nene won’t lack for suitors. The Golden State Warriors, New Jersey Nets, Houston Rockets, Los Angeles Clippers, Indiana Pacers, Miami Heat, Dallas Mavericks and Portland Trail Blazers are among the teams that figure to have interest.

    Nene, 29, says he wants to play for a contender – perhaps at the expense of a more lucrative contract elsewhere. The Heat and Mavericks, who will both be over the salary cap, should be happy to hear that.

    “It’s not about the money,” Nene said. “If I wanted to retire today I could retire because I saved my money. So right now I want to be happy and improve. That’s what I want. That’s what everybody wants. I need help. I need good players around. People say, ‘Nene, the last six years you averaged 14 points and eight or seven rebounds.’ OK, but they don’t say why.

    “Right now I want to happy first. Two, I want to win. Money? Money, I am going to have because I worked and busted my butt. Money will come.”

    Nene is arguably the top free agent in a thin group that also includes Mavericks center Tyson Chandler(notes), New Orleans Hornets forward David West(notes) and Memphis Grizzlies center Marc Gasol(notes), who is a restricted free agent.

    “I’m a big man who can defend different positions and do different things,” Nene said. “You can’t find that so easily in the league. I don’t like talking about my game, but you know what I can do and what I’m capable of doing. [Other teams] know, too.”
    http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_yl..._agents_112911



    I find this article to be very one sided and sad. I lost quite a bit of respect for Nene reading this. I understand everyone is looking out for themselves but he is asking for an extension with a year of $11.3M remaining. The franchise does not owe him anything.

    Does Nene not remember the hip and hamstring injuries Denver endured with him? How about the left knee injury for 13 games missed? How about the torn ACL and lost season? What about the knee bruise for 12 games? What about the 22 games missed with the thumb injury? What about the 37 missed games for testicular cancer? What about the missed playoff series versus the Lakers?


    It seems to me that Denver has stuck by him through ALOT of adversity. I'm not sure I recall ever hearing a public complaint by the coaching staff, front office, or owners - even after dealing with a huge contract to Kenyon Martin and his numerous injuries on top of it.


    Everyone looks out for themselves but at least you can go about it with class instead of ripping the franchise that has paid you over $70M over the last eight years..... but that is just my opinion.

  • #2
    Matt52 wrote: View Post
    http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_yl..._agents_112911



    Everyone looks out for themselves but at least you can go about it with class instead of ripping the franchise that has paid you over $70M over the last eight years..... but that is just my opinion.
    That's less than $9 million a year. Talk about disrespectin'

    Puffer

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    • #3
      ... bit off topic, but all these writers always seem to mention Miami as a possible suitor for the top free agents like Chandler and Nene. Miami can only afford an MLE and that is only if they waive Miller. Chandler, Nene, or any other top free agent would have to take a serious pay cut to play with Lebron and Wade. I don't see it happening.

      As for Nene - I don't think he's as good as he thinks he is. In my opinion he's worth much less than Denver's qualifying offer.

      Comment


      • #4
        Contract worth is deeply embedded in players' egos. He's looking at the lack of an extension as an insult. That's how I read it. He's saying he's treating this as business but any good businessman will tell you emotions should be checked at the door. Denver will probably offer him the most money.

        Alternatively he could be using the lack of an extension offer as a lame excuse to try and shift "the blame" when he leaves. Maybe he's decided to leave and this is the best tactic he could think of in terms of damage control?

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