CLEVELAND - All Drew Gooden has ever wanted was a place in the NBA to call
home. Now he's got one.
Gooden, who has played for three teams and six coaches in four seasons,
agreed in principle on a three-year, $23 million contract and will re-sign with
the Cavaliers, his agents said Monday.
The Cavs' top rebounder last season, Gooden has been a solid complementary
player to All-Star forward LeBron James, who committed to a three-year contract
extension with the Cavaliers in July.
"You always want your guy to be in a stable situation and this is one," agent
Calvin Andrews said. "Drew thinks Cleveland has a chance to win it all. We got a
deal within the range we were looking for. This is a win-win for everyone."
Andrews handled the bulk of the negotiations with Cavaliers general manager
Danny Ferry, who after getting James signed, turned his attention to keeping
Gooden.
"We have said from the beginning that we wanted to keep Drew in a Cavaliers
uniform, and although I'm not going to comment on specifics of the negotiations,
things have moved in a good direction," Ferry said.
The sides have agreed to Gooden's salary and only have to work through some
minor details before the deal becomes official. Gooden's agents traded offers
with the Cavs on longer deals, but couldn't reach an agreement. They also
explored some sign-and-trade possibilities but couldn't find a fit.
"We're ecstatic," said agent Bill Duffy said. "Drew is very happy. He likes
where Cleveland is headed."
The 24-year-old Gooden averaged 10.7 points and 8.4 rebounds last season. His
inside presence and energy helped Cleveland go 50-32 in the regular season and
make the playoffs for the first time since 1998.
The Cavaliers eliminated Washington in the first round and pushed defending
Eastern Conference champion Detroit to seven games. Gooden averaged 8.8 points
and 9.3 rebounds against the Wizards.
Cleveland has had a relatively quiet summer, one year after its 2005 free
agent spending spree when they signed guard Larry Hughes and Damon Jones and
re-signed center Zydrunas Ilgauskas.
Gooden, a restricted free agent, was hoping for a deal similar to the
six-year, $60 million contract that Nene signed with the Denver Nuggets.
However, Gooden found a limited market and decided to stay with the Cavs, who
acquired him along with Anderson Varejao in a 2004 trade with Orlando for
forward Tony Battie.
Gooden was the No. 4 overall pick in the 2002 draft by Memphis, which traded
the 6-foot-10, 242-pounder to the Magic in 2003.