DALLAS — DeAndre Jordan gave the Dallas Mavericks his word. Then he gave the Los Angeles Clippers his signature. ADVERTISING DALLAS — DeAndre Jordan gave the Dallas Mavericks his word. Then he gave the Los Angeles Clippers his signature. After
DALLAS — DeAndre Jordan gave the Dallas Mavericks his word. Then he gave the Los Angeles Clippers his signature.
After a Clippers contingent including Blake Griffin, J.J. Redick, Paul Pierce and Doc Rivers descended on Jordan’s home in Houston on Wednesday night for a last-ditch push to keep their defensive pillar, Jordan backed out of a verbal agreement with the Mavericks to stay with the only NBA home he’s ever had.
The Clippers announced Jordan’s deal late Wednesday night. It’s a four-year pact worth more than $87 million, a person with knowledge of the agreement told The Associated Press. The terms, first reported by USA Today, include a player option after the third season. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the team was not releasing contract details.
The Clippers also sent out a tweet welcoming Jordan back to Los Angeles.
“WE’RE OFFICIALLY CENTERED,” the tweet read.
Once and for all.
Jordan initially agreed to a four-year deal worth more than $80 million to leave the Clippers after seven seasons and join the Mavericks, a team that offered him a more featured role on offense. But that was last Friday, and the contract could not be signed until 12:01 a.m. Eastern time on Thursday, according to NBA rules.
That gave Jordan time to think it over, and when word got back to the Clippers that he was having second thoughts, they pounced.
They gathered to meet with Jordan and talk things over, then held the Mavericks at bay as owner Mark Cuban tried to get one more meeting to close the deal.
Cuban and Jordan’s agent, Dan Fegan of Relativity Sports, tried repeatedly to reach the big man while he was holed up in his house with his teammates to no avail, according to two people with knowledge of the situation. They spoke on condition of anonymity because all parties involved were not publicly discussing the process.
Griffin even tweeted a photo of a chair pushed underneath the handle of a door.
“Don’t agree with the furniture layout but I’m not an interior designer,” Griffin quipped.
Desperate measures for a desperate team.
Earlier this week, Redick said on Bleacher Report radio that the Clippers deserved an “F” in free agency after losing Jordan.
“We had one priority this summer, and that was to re-sign D.J., and we missed out on that,” the guard said. “So barring some miracle, (the) makeup of our team is completely different now.”
Without him, the Clippers were scrambling to find an answer at center and in danger of falling far back in the loaded Western conference.
Now, with Jordan back to center a lineup that includes All-Stars Griffin and Chris Paul and added Pierce and Lance Stephenson this summer, the Clippers again will have plenty of talent to compete.
Jordan has led the NBA in rebounding the past two years and is coming off career highs in scoring and rebounding at 11.5 points and 15.0 rebounds per game. He helped the Clippers get within a victory of the Western Conference finals for the first time, but a second-half collapse at home in Game 6 was followed by a loss in the deciding game at Houston.
The collapse prompted Jordan to reconsider everything, and the Mavericks wooed him to help aging star Dirk Nowitzki make one last run at another championship.
Cuban was so confident that he had landed Jordan that he went on a Dallas radio show this week and spoke about the role Jordan would have in the Mavericks’ offense. Discussing the free agent before a contract was signed earned Cuban a $25,000 fine.
He lost a lot more on Wednesday.