So long, Atlanta: Childress leaves NBA for Greece

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May 9, 2002
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#1
Wow...first Brandon Jennings decides to go to Europe to play, now some other NAB guys are following.

Ex-Hawk Childress signs with Greek club team

Josh Childress is leaving the Atlanta Hawks for Greek club Olympiacos, reversing the course of the many international stars who have signed with the NBA.

Heading overseas allows Childress to make more money than he could have as a restricted free agent in the United States. The Hawks had the right to match an offer from another NBA team, but not from an international club.

Agent Jim Tanner said Wednesday the three-year deal was worth about $20 million after taxes. The money is guaranteed, and Childress can opt out of the contract after each year.


The deal is the most lucrative current contract in European basketball and the biggest in Euroleague history, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, which first reported the signing. It follows the decision by top prep prospect Brandon Jennings to sign with an Italian club team rather than play a season at Arizona.

The newspaper reported Monday the Hawks had a deal on the table worth nearly $36 million, with a first-year salary in excess of the midlevel exception of $5.6 million.

"I've talked to a few guys, and it could become a trend," Childress said on a conference call about other Americans following his lead. "I'm not so sure it won't. It's different. We thought out of the box a little on this one."

The 6-foot-8, 210-pound guard/forward averaged 11.8 points and 4.9 rebounds as the Hawks' top reserve last season. He averaged 11.1 points and 5.6 rebounds in four years with Atlanta about being drafted sixth overall in 2004 out of Stanford.

Childress said he intended to re-sign with the Hawks, who made the playoffs for the first time since 1999 and pushed the eventual champion Celtics to seven games in the first round. But when he felt the team didn't show a sense of urgency in making a deal, he looked elsewhere.

Atlanta general manager Rick Sund said that while he believes the Hawks made a proposal that was competitive within the NBA, it would have been fiscally irresponsible to try to match Olympiacos. Sund wouldn't reveal the exact numbers of Atlanta's offer. But he said it exceeded the salary cap's midlevel exception, which is more than $5.5 million, and would have made Childress the team's fourth highest paid player.

"Obviously I'm not happy with it because I wanted him on my team. I wish things would have turned out different, but it's his decision at the end of the day," Hawks center Al Horford said. "I'm disappointed about it because he's one of the guys that I really liked to play with, but we have to be able to bounce back and try to sign the other Josh [free agent Josh Smith]."

Olympiacos initiated the contact, said Lon Babby, another of Childress' agents. With the strength of the euro against the dollar, Babby believes international clubs now have the resources to pursue high-level American players -- and other restricted free agents may reciprocate the interest because it creates leverage they lack within the NBA.

"The path to globalization that the NBA has paved for years now appears to travel in both directions," Babby said.

International players have spurned the NBA for lucrative offers back home in the past, but Americans of Childress' caliber have not done so in the prime of their careers.

"I think it's always going to happen when you get a player that's pretty solid over here and then they get offered more money, it's hard to pass up," Toronto Raptors star Chris Bosh said. "Especially guys in the midlevel range when they can go over to Europe and probably make a little bit more money, it's always a better situation for them."

Phoenix Suns chairman Jerry Colangelo, the managing director for USA Basketball, expected the trend to be limited to players like Childress who are solid contributors but not big stars.

"It's an opportunity for players who fall into that kind of a niche or category to have an option available to them," Colangelo said. "So it's a players' market."

After an initial meeting with Olympiacos officials in Las Vegas, Childress traveled to Athens on Sunday and liked what he saw. He said he feels confident he can adapt to a different culture.

The Hawks would retain Childress' NBA rights, and he would remain a restricted free agent, if they make a qualifying offer each year, Babby said. That would count against their salary cap, though. If they don't, he'd become an unrestricted free agent.

Olympiacos finished runner-up in the Greek basketball league last year, behind rival Panathinaikos. It has boosted its roster with summer transfers -- including Greece star Theodoros Papaloukas, who was signed from CSKA Moscow.

Pond Jumpers

Josh Childress became the fifth player to leave the NBA for a European team this offseason.

Leaving NBA for Europe in '08 Player NBA team European team:

Primoz Brezec - Raptors - Virtus Roma

Josh Childress - Hawks - Olympiakos

Carlos Delfino - Raptors - Khimki BC

Juan Carlos Navarro - Grizzlies - F.C. Barcelona

Bostjan Nachbar - Nets - Dynamo Moscow
 
Mar 18, 2006
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I think that it could grow into more of a trend...the more quality players that the NBA loses to Europe, it will only become a bigger threat...It's not going to happen overnight...but eventually, there is going to be a bigger player that leaves which will make it much more competitive....its a different lifestyle......playing in cities overthere as opposed to a place like Milltown or OKC....or wherever
 

Rich

Sicc OG
Jul 22, 2003
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#8
Well it looks like the trend is European players are going back to the Euro league. Next offseason I'm sure there will even more players leaving the NBA.
 
Jun 27, 2005
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#9
True. I guess I was talking more about the HS kids who wil follow Jennings' shoes.
I wouldn't worry about that. He'll be in the NBA when his Euro contract is up. There's a chance he'll enter the NBA draft this year anyway and just go where ever he gets picked after his contract is up or is bought out. Europe is really not a threat. The NBA will still be the best league in the world.
 
Oct 28, 2005
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#12
For those wrestling fans out there---WWF used to be king back in the day. Then NWA/WCW pops up, and goes ape shit signing away all WWF's talent. Next thing you know, WWF is reeling, struggling to stay at even par. They fought them off, but they haven't been the same company since. They had to retool just about everything.

Face it: Basketball is like the #3 sport here (Behind Football and Baseball). In Europe, it's closer to #2. Europe has a bigger population, so you do the math. The NBA can't afford to not take this shit seriously. All it takes is one superstar saying "You know what? Fuck you David Stern" (especially with the dress code, technical fouls, and other bullshit rules) and signing with a European team, and it's going to be an all-out fight from then on out.

I for one can't wait. David Stern is a fucking cocksucker and deserves to have his blood pressure shoot up 50 points, trying to hold onto top talent before they jump.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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I think the concern comes more from the political and social pressure the United States is facing as a country right now than one schmuck going to Greece.
 
Jan 28, 2005
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For those wrestling fans out there---WWF used to be king back in the day. Then NWA/WCW pops up, and goes ape shit signing away all WWF's talent. Next thing you know, WWF is reeling, struggling to stay at even par. They fought them off, but they haven't been the same company since. They had to retool just about everything.

Face it: Basketball is like the #3 sport here (Behind Football and Baseball). In Europe, it's closer to #2. Europe has a bigger population, so you do the math. The NBA can't afford to not take this shit seriously. All it takes is one superstar saying "You know what? Fuck you David Stern" (especially with the dress code, technical fouls, and other bullshit rules) and signing with a European team, and it's going to be an all-out fight from then on out.

I for one can't wait. David Stern is a fucking cocksucker and deserves to have his blood pressure shoot up 50 points, trying to hold onto top talent before they jump.
professional wrestling and professional basketball are apples and oranges. the reason it fell off so hard is because of all the stupid ass soap opera BS they threw into the matches.

and while basketball might be the number 3 sport in America, the season is still very long and always the top priority under the microscope for weeks after the super bowl is finished.

the Euro league will never become competition for the NBA on a national or Global level. Not in regard to revenue or talent, and maybe even popularity.

BUT, I do understand your point. David Stern is just a douche and anybody who follows the NBA understands he makes some odd decisions and is more concerned about how people perceive the NBA than the actual game itself.

although I do disagree with your saying all it takes is for one superstar to sign with a European team and that starting some war between vying for athletes between the US and Europe.

All the big money is in the NBA, and all the best talent is bred in America. This is a story about role players such as Josh Childress and Carlos Delfino leaving for an extra two million bucks on a contract, not a story about Lebron James getting 80 million to play in Italy.