MIAMI (AP) - Throughout his
NBA career, James Jones has always thought of the
Miami Heat as his team.
And now, it finally is.
The South Florida native signed a five-year contract on
Wednesday with the Heat, one that'll pay him $4 million
next season and could be worth more than $23 million
over the life of the deal. He had other offers,
including one from the Detroit Pistons that tempted
him, but ultimately Jones wanted to come home.
"For me, it's like coming full circle," Jones said.
"I'm from the city. I spend all my time here and when
the Heat hurt, even when I'm on another team, I still
feel that pain. ... So for me, the interest from my
hometown team superseded and outweighed all the other
positives and pluses of the different cities,
especially Detroit, that were looking for my services."
The South Florida Sun-Sentinel first reported terms of
the agreement, including a clause that makes the final
three years conditional - which ensures that Miami can
still have maximum spending capability during the free
agent summer of 2010, the year that Dwayne Wade can opt
out of his Heat contract.
Jones, who played at the University of Miami and has
been with Indiana, Phoenix and Portland in his NBA
career, is a 3-point specialist, and that's an area
where the Heat clearly need an upgrade.
Jones shot a career-best 44 percent from 3-point range
last season. The Heat, as a team, shot 36 percent from
beyond the arc a year ago.
"Everyone knows I can shoot," said Jones, who got his
deal done on the first day of this year's free-agent
signing period. "I love to shoot. That's what I do. I
try not to step on any toes, not try to do too much,
but just do what I do well, which is make shots."
It's unclear where exactly Jones will fit into the Heat
rotation next season.
Miami drafted Michael Beasley, who'll likely play some
minutes at both forward positions. The Heat have a
contract offer pending with restricted free agent
forward Dorell Wright, and still have small forward
Shawn Marion and power forward Udonis Haslem - both of
whom have been mentioned as possible trade candidates.
Plus, the Heat will likely still seek some help at
point guard (besides rookie Mario Chalmers) and center.
"We're trying to develop and build our bench," Heat
president Pat Riley said earlier this week. "I think we
have to build our depth right now, first. I think
that's the first priority before you make a big move."
For his part, Jones doesn't care what role he plays, as
long as he gets the chance to help the Heat erase the
sting of last year's dreadful, injury-plagued 15-67
season.
"If that means coming off the bench, if that means
starting, if that means taking 10 shots, if that means
taking one shot, for me, it's about being efficient and
winning games," Jones said. "Coming here, I don't have
any expectations about what position or which role I'll
play. All I'm looking for is the opportunity to
compete."
(kval.com)