Sacramento Kings WiretapPaxson Close To Making An Offer To SongaliaThe Bulls' pursuit of restricted free agent Darius Songaila continues, and it hardly will be a surprise if the 6-foot-8-inch power forward gets an offer soon from general manager John Paxson. Songaila visited Paxson at the Berto Center on Wednesday, but several teams remain interested in the Lithuanian who averaged 7.5 points and 4.2 rebounds last season for Sacramento. The Kings are unlikely to match an offer. Chicago Bulls, Sacramento Kings Read the Full Story Discuss Send Feedback Buy Tickets Songaila Could Soon Join BullsThe Sacramento Kings will not match an offer sheet given to restricted free agent Darius Songaila, according to numerous league sources. Kings general manager Geoff Petrie even suggested to the Sacramento Bee that his team’s roster is complete, except for the future addition of a low-cost 13th man. “The roster we have at the moment, the way it’s comprised, are the guys who will play all the minutes,” Petrie said. If that’s the case, Songaila appears headed to the Bulls. Before finishing a two-day visit to the Berto Center on Thursday, the 6-foot-9 forward spent time checking out real estate, according to one source. The Bulls could sign Songaila to an offer sheet using their remaining salary-cap exception (worth either $1.7 million or $2.2 million) but may spend a few more days trying to orchestrate a three-team deal that would allow them to pay Songaila a higher salary. In theory, the Bulls could send shooting guard Eric Piatkowski to a team with salary-cap room or a trade exception. Sacramento would get a draft pick in the deal and the Bulls could pay Songaila a starting salary of up to $3.85 million. The chances of that happening, however, may be remote. Chicago Bulls, Sacramento Kings Read the Full Story Discuss Send Feedback Buy Tickets Petrie Doesn't Expect To Match Evans' Detroit OfferGeoff Petrie, the Kings' president of basketball operations, said Wednesday the team is unlikely to match the offer sheet that Maurice Evans signed with the Pistons. In reality, the Kings don't have bargaining power. Their mid-level exception is gone, and they don't have much spare money left under the salary cap. Detroit Pistons, Sacramento Kings Read the Full Story Discuss Send Feedback Buy Tickets Kings Aug 2005 Archive
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