1 Total Update since July 4, 2011
almost 2 years ago Update 0 comments
A weekend report out of Spain indicated that Real Madrid had offered shooting guard Rudy Fernandez a six-year deal worth $25 million that would begin for the 2011-12 season and, assuming the NBA season does start at some point, would allow the gunner to finish the final year of his deal with the Dallas Mavericks. But a report in Tuesday's Marca indicates that Fernandez will instead wait until the end of the next NBA season before making a decision on returning to Spain to join Real Madrid or another team, or staying in the NBA. (Via Hoopshype.)
That simplifies the equation, of course: FIBA would have been in a sticky situation judging whether Fernandez had the right to sign a contract with a Spanish club with contractual obligations remaining in the NBA. The issue is likely to come to a head with a player before long; many players under NBA contract, including Fernandez's recent former teammate Nicolas Batum of the Portland Trail Blazers, have flirted with signing European contracts. FIBA, which sanctions more than 100 legit pro basketball leagues, has a fairly strict policy of not allowing players with unresolved contract issues in one league playing for another.
The question that will likely decide whether NBA players are allowed to ply their trade in Europe, South America or Asia during the lockout is whether those players' NBA contracts for 2011-12 are considered valid. Until and unless the NBA officially cancels the 2011-12 season, it's hard to see FIBA agreeing that that is the case. As such, Fernandez, who was acquired by the NBA champion Mavericks during the 2011 NBA Draft in the Raymond Felton-Andre Miller deal, is taking the smart route by delaying his decision until after the 2011-12 season has been resolved.
almost 2 years ago Update 0 comments
Rudy Fernandez, the Spanish player traded by the Portland Trail Blazers to the NBA champion Dallas Mavericks 10 days ago, has an offer from Real Madrid for a six-year deal worth more than $25 million, reports Mundo Deportiva (via Eye on Basketball) The deal would be the most lucrative in the history of Spain's ACB, the top league outside of the NBA. It'd also be more than what Fernandez would likely make on his second contract in the NBA.
The problem: Fernandez remains on his rookie scale contract for one more year, meaning he'll face legal hurdles moving to Spain during the NBA lockout. Despite the lockout, players under contract with NBA teams, as Fernandez is with the Mavericks, remain so. FIBA will not allow transfers without clearance from the base league (the NBA, in this case), and it's not believed that the NBA will provide that clearance as seeing players flock overseas would weaken the owners' negotiating position.
The Spanish report suggests that Fernandez would play for Real Madrid until the lockout ends, return to the Mavericks for whatever is left of the 2011-12 season, and then re-commence his career with Real.