May/16/08 02:22 AM Filed in:
James Jones
I caught up with James Jones
today to see if he and his agent, Joel Bell, have
had any preliminary talks about his player option
situation, and found out that the situation is
pretty much unchanged from the season's end.
Jones is relaxing with his family at his home in Miami
and getting ready for a trip to Hawaii early next
month. He said he probably will not discuss whether to
activate the option on his contract until after the NBA
Finals are completed next month because it is tough to
get an accurate feel for the free agency market before
that time. Jones has until late June to make his
decision.
But Jones acknowledged that the potential playing-time
crunch at small forward next season will factor in to
the decision. He stressed that it will not be a
make-or-break factor, but it will be a strong
consideration. The situation boils down to this: A
healthy Greg Oden and improving Channing Frye could
push Travis Outlaw back to small forward next season,
creating a bottleneck at that position. And if Rudy
Fernandez chooses to join the Blazers, where he would
likely be Brandon Roy's backup as a rookie, that
bottleneck will grow even tighter. Should Jones
activate his option (worth $3.2 million), he, Martell
Webster and Outlaw would all be battling for playing
time at the same spot, and the contract situations for
each player could create an intensely competitive
environment. Both Jones and Webster would be in the
final years of their contracts and looking to improve
their free-agency stock, while Outlaw will be playing
to entice the Blazers to activate the team option on
the third year of his contract (which appears almost
certain at this point, but a rough year and a situation
where any of those three could be pushed out of the
regular rotation could change any certainties).
Jones is not concerned about the competition, though,
having already carved out a solid career by being
productive in limited amounts of time. He averaged a
respectable 8.0 points and buried 91 3-pointers last
season despite playing in only 58 games and averaging
22.0 minutes off the bench.
"I can be efficient in any amount of time that I'm
given," Jones said. "I'm not worried about that."
The part that Jones will consider, though, is his
free-agency stock. After battling knee trouble
throughout last season and having his numbers plummet
thanks to a horrid shooting slump late in the season,
Jones' stock this summer may not be super-hot. But
should Jones activate his option and return to the
Blazers next year, he will be gambling that he will be
able to raise his stock for the following summer in
that highly competitive situation. Should Jones get
pushed out of the regular rotation and wind up being
the 11th or 12th man off the bench -- a realistic
possibility considering how deep the Blazers appear to
be next season -- his free-agency stock could take a
hit next summer.
And that gives Jones something to consider over the
next month: Should he test the market this summer while
he's coming off a solid season? Or believe that he can
continue to be effective next season and improve his
standing on the market next summer?
"That will definitely be a part of my decision," Jones
said. "It will be a factor, but not the factor."
(coumbian.com)