Paul George agrees with Thunder on 4-year, $137 million deal

The Thunder have been in communication with George since the end of the season and remained in contact with him throughout the past week. The signs and momentum for George staying had been building throughout the season, hinging largely on his trust of Thunder general manager Sam Presti and his strong relationship with Westbrook. George talked often about “building” with the Thunder, referencing his enjoyment of playing with Westbrook.

“Russ is the reason why this decision is becoming even more easier to make, is the character Russ [has],” George told ESPN’s Rachel Nichols in February. “A stand-up guy, and he has his teammate’s back.”

After acquiring Carmelo Anthony in September, the Thunder appeared to have formed a superteam with the then-reigning MVP. However, the season didn’t go as planned, with a bumpy start finally smoothed out by January before an injury to starting shooting guard Andre Roberson derailed it again. The Thunder recovered to finish with 48 wins and the Western Conference’s 4-seed, but they went out in six games to the Jazz in the first round. In George’s final game, one in which Westbrook scored 46 points on 43 shots, he finished with just five points on 2-of-16 shooting.

“Here they have made a huge risk in trading for me, knowing I have one year on my deal,” George said in part one of SportsCenter’s behind-the-scenes look at his free agency. “But I felt I didn’t finish as strong as I could have. Just knowing you left something on the table, even to this point now, it weighs on me.”

George, a five-time All-Star, hit unrestricted free agency for the first time in his career after declining his player option last Thursday.

With George re-signed and Carmelo Anthony under contract for next season, the Thunder are headed for a monumental payroll and luxury-tax bill, something ownership is prepared to pay. The Thunder could take measures to reduce their financial stress by using the stretch provision to waive Anthony or negotiating a buyout or trade (Anthony has a no-trade clause, though). The Thunder also are interested in re-signing forward Jerami Grant.

George, 28, averaged 21.9 points on 43.0 percent shooting plus 5.7 rebounds and 3.3 assists. Playing with Westbrook, George enjoyed one of his best 3-point shooting seasons to date, hitting the highest total of his career on 40.1 percent shooting.

Article Appeared @http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/23958531/paul-george-commits-re-sign-oklahoma-city-thunder

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