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Metta World Peace, a hero of 2010 title run, is waived via 'amnesty,' potentially saving team $15 million. Lakers also sign swingman Nick Young.
The Lakers waived Metta World Peace via the so-called amnesty provision Thursday, a cost-cutting move that could save them about $15 million in luxury taxes.
When Dwight Howard bolted for Houston last week as a free agent, it ensured a roster spot for Pau Gasol but immediately put World Peace, 33, in jeopardy.
With World Peace gone, the Lakers have nine players under contract for about $74 million. After paying almost $30 million in luxury taxes last season, the most in the NBA, they are now barely $2 million over the tax threshold for next season.
Earlier Thursday, in a move that basically guaranteed the end of World Peace's four-year Lakers run, free agent Nick Young signed a one-year deal for $1.2 million to join the team.
Young, 28, is a shoot-first, pass-last player who gets penciled in to start for the Lakers at small forward after averaging 10.6 points and shooting 41.3% last season with the Philadelphia 76ers as an occasional starter.
He has averaged one assist per game, and 11.3 points, in a six-year NBA career that includes more than 41/2 seasons in Washington and a brief stay with the Clippers toward the end of the 2011-12 season. He played at USC and also at Reseda Cleveland High.
"It's great for Nick and great for the Lakers," Young's agent, Mark Bartelstein, said Thursday. "He could've waited and got more money in the free-agent market, but his dream has always been to play for the Lakers."
As for World Peace, any team that is under the salary cap can submit an undisclosed bid this weekend to the NBA to acquire him. If the highest bidder offers, say, $3 million, he goes to that team next season and the Lakers use that money to offset the $7.7 million they still owe him.
"It's tough to say goodbye to a player such as Metta, who has been a significant part of our team the past four seasons," Lakers General Manager Mitch Kupchak said in a statement. "For anyone who's had the opportunity to get to know him, it's impossible not to love him.
"He has made many contributions to this organization, both in his community work as well as in our games; perhaps no more so than in his clutch play in Game 7 of the 2010 NBA Finals in helping to lead us over the Celtics in one of the greatest playoff wins in Lakers history. We thank Metta for all his contributions and wish him the best of luck in the future."
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SOURCE: The Los Angeles Times
Mike Bresnahan
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