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I thought the team that drafts them loses their rights to the player after a certain amount of time.
Koponen was a first round pick. The only time I remember a team actually renouncing a first round pick was that white center from (I think) UCONN whose name escapes me that the Jordan Bulls drafted with (of course) the very last pick of the first round. They just let him go. He then latched on with the Lakers and actually got a nice fat contract, which quickly became a millstone as Jerry Krause's foresight in letting him go became obvious.
Didn't Atlanta or another team draft Sabonis first?
Travis Knight?
Didn't Atlanta or another team draft Sabonis first?
no, Portland was actually at the forefront in looking at European players.
HCP is correct. Sabonis was drafted by ATL, but I think he was too you, either that or there was a thing against drafting soviets, I can't remember which. So we drafted him later, then he signed to play in spain. God, if we'd only had him for that drexler/porter team.
What if the team and player can't agree to a contract? What options does the player have? How long does the team keep his draft rights?
The player's options are limited. What happens depends on a number of factors:
* If the player is already under contract to, or signs a contract with a non-NBA team, the team retains the player's draft rights for one year after the player's obligation to the non-NBA team ends. Essentially, the clock stops as long as the player plays pro ball outside the NBA. Players are not included in the team's team salary during the regular season while the player is under contract with a non-NBA team.
* If the player was still eligible to play in college before he was drafted, the team retains the player's draft rights until the draft the player would have entered had he not left college early. For example, if a team drafts a college sophomore in 2005, they retain his draft rights until the date of the 2007 draft. Note that the current NCAA rules state that players lose their NCAA eligibility if they are drafted, so the player could not return or go on to play college ball.
* For all other players, the team retains the player's draft rights until the date of the next draft.
In any of the above cases, if the team does not sign the player in the allotted time, the player can enter the next draft. If the team that selects the player in the next draft doesn't sign him either, he becomes a rookie free agent.
When a team signs a first round draft pick in a year other than the year in which he was drafted, the player is signed using the salary scale for the year in which he is signed, not the year in which he was drafted. An exception to this is for players drafted prior to 2005, under the previous CBA. These players may be signed according to the rules for scale contracts set forth in the previous CBA, including three guaranteed years plus one option year, at the scale salary for the year in which the player was drafted.
