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        <title><![CDATA[Knicks’ free-agent point guard options dwindling after day two]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Knicks’ free-agent point guard options dwindling after day two</media:title>
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<p>The Knicks point guard hunt continued unresolved on the second day of free agency, though not for lack of trying.</p>



<p>Dennis Schroder and Reggie Jackson were the best point guards left on the board, but the Knicks let an intriguing young guard slip through their fingers when Kendrick Nunn signed a two-year, $10 million deal with the Lakers.</p>



<p>The Heat’s first team all-rookie in 2019 had talks with the Knicks, but chose the chance to win a championship. One report stated the Knicks offered him more money.</p>



<p>The Knicks have $8 million in cap space as <strong>Derrick Rose’s complicated deal</strong> will likely not take up cap space, but the Early Bird Exception that allows teams to sign their own players and go over the salary cap.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large is-style-default"><img  data-src="/uploads/2021/08/04/knicks-free-agent-point-guard-options-dwindling-after-day-two-0.jpg" /><figcaption>Dennis Schroder and Reggie Jackson</figcaption><figcaption><span class="credit">Getty Images (2) </span></figcaption></figure>



<p>Rose signed a three-year, $43 million pact to return. The Knicks are reluctant to make him a full-blown starting point guard because of wear and tear on his surgically repaired knees. Some members of Knicks brass feel he’s at his best at 25-30 minutes a night.</p>



<p>The Knicks have interest in Schroder as a playmaker and defender, but he’s a poor 3-point shooter. One source told The Post Schroder started the process seeking a deal that would start at $25 million.</p>



<p>Besides <strong>Evan Fournier’s four-year $78 million pact</strong>, the Knicks have re-signed only their own guys in Nerlens Noel, Alec Burks, Rose and Taj Gibson, <strong>who inked a $2.7 million veteran’s minimum deal</strong>.</p>



<p>The Knicks entered Monday night’s free agency armed with the league’s most cap space at $52.4 million, but for the third straight summer they found out cap space is not the end all and be all.</p>


<p>Rose, Burks and Noel signed three-year deals but the good news is their third years are not fully guaranteed.</p>



<p>That makes their contracts a lot friendlier and tradeable in a regular trade or a free-agent sign-and-trade in 2022 when they won’t have a lot of cap space. For instance, the Heat had no cap space but engineered a sign-and-trade Monday to pull in the Knicks’ second-most-important point guard target, Kyle Lowry.</p>



<p>On the trade market, Collin Sexton was made available by Cleveland, which wanted a veteran or two in return besides draft assets. Now they may be more suited for a Sexton trade with Noel and Burks in the fold.</p>



<p>The Knicks also believe Damian Lillard will go on the trade market perhaps by next season’s trade deadline.</p>


<p>According to a source, the Knicks have had sign-and-trade talks with Dallas for the Reggie Bullock signing and president Leon Rose and Tom Thibodeau love Jalen Brunson, a 2022 free agent. It’s unclear if the Knicks asked for Brunson to be included in a larger deal.</p>



<p>Other point guards on the board are veteran George Hill, who was waived by the Sixers on Tuesday, oft-injured combo guard Victor Oladipo and Avery Bradley, a stout defender.</p>



<p>The Knicks’ free-agent point guards are still out there in Elfrid Payton, who started last season, and Frank Ntilikina.</p>



<p>The Post has learned the Knicks contacted Payton at the start of free agency but it’s unclear if they had real interest in him as a fallback. Based on social media, Knicks fans would be unhappy to see Payton back. There’d be more approval if 2017 lottery pick and longest-tenured Knick, Ntilikina made a return.</p>







<p>As it stands, Rose is the starting point guard with rookie draft pick Miles McBride and last May’s signee Luca Vildoza of Argentina on the depth chart. Vildoza has a non-guaranteed four-year pact and the Knicks could open more cap space if he were waived as he didn’t look sharp in the Olympics.</p>
			 
					
									<p>This story originally appeared on: <strong>NyPost</strong> - Author:<strong>Marc Berman</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Marc Berman]]></dc:creator>
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