However, Higgins also sees a downside to Okafor signing a one-year qualifying offer.
“Our comfort level probably wouldn't be so good. You'd have him for a year,” before Okafor could leave without compensation next summer, Higgins said.
Higgins was addressing a report in Tuesday's Observer that negotiations with Okafor reached an impasse. A source familiar with the negotiations said the Bobcats are offering less now than they did a summer ago and Okafor now prefers a sign-and-trade to another NBA franchise.
“We're still holding out hope that we can get a (long-term) deal done with Emeka,” said Higgins.
“We talk to his representatives. We last saw Emeka around draft night (in late June). We've never heard from him that he doesn't want to be here.”
Last summer, the Bobcats made Okafor a multi-year offer that would have averaged over $12million per season. Okafor declined that proposal in October, playing out the season to reach restricted free agency.
A source familiar with the situation said the Bobcats are now offering Okafor something closer to $10million a season. Higgins declined comment on the negotiations.
Under NBA rules, the Bobcats were required to offer Okafor a one-year contract (worth about $7million) to designate him a restricted free agent. That would allow the Bobcats to match another NBA team's offer to him this summer. With salary-cap room drying up around the NBA, the chances of Okafor receiving an offer sheet appear slim. So the only way Okafor could sign long-term elsewhere would be via sign-and-trade.
Higgins didn't sound receptive to that alternative.
“When you do a trade, you want to do something that makes sense for all involved,” said Higgins, adding that the NBA's base-year compensation rule would make it difficult to receive fair value.
If Okafor receives a big raise in a new contract, the team acquiring him in trade would have to absorb about twice as much money under its salary cap as the Bobcats could take back. That would make it tough for the Bobcats to get talent comparable to what they'd lose in a starting center.
Higgins said resolving other personnel issues – such as whether to add another veteran big man – is probably on hold until the Okafor issue is settled.
NoteReserve center Ryan Hollins re-signed Friday. Based on salary-cap rules, Hollins' one-year qualifying offer is worth about $1million this season.
With Hollins and first-round picks D.J. Augustin and Alexis Ajinca signed, the Bobcats now have 12 players under contract. Okafor and second-round pick Kyle Weaver have yet to sign. Higgins plans to invite a couple of summer-league players to training camp in October.

Submitted by FanBoom
Posted 4 months ago
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