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NBA's free agency will begin today; few moves are expected

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Hedo Turkoglu is considered to be among the premier free-agent point guards available.

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Published: July 1, 2009

Some big names will be out there. The big spenders will be harder to find.

Free agency in the NBA will open today, but there might be few fireworks this July. The blockbuster trades were last week, and the real free-agent bonanza will be next year.

Financial difficulties, combined with the potential of one of the best free-agent classes ever in 2010, will have most teams keeping their checkbooks closed this summer. More than a dozen teams have already lined themselves up as players for next year, when LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh and Amare Stoudemire could all become available, and they might not want to waste precious salary cap space now.

In February, owner Mark Cuban of the Dallas Mavericks said he wouldn't want to be a free agent this summer. Yesterday, he wondered if players might find it best to sign short-term deals and try again in 2010, when there will be more suitors.

"How many players will sign one-year deals to be able to take advantage of the huge amount of cap room next year?" he wrote on his Twitter page.

For those who want to buy now, there is talent worth considering.

Teams seeking a point guard could choose among Jason Kidd, Mike Bibby and Andre Miller. Those needing a good swingman can consider Ron Artest, Hedo Turkoglu, Trevor Ariza or Shawn Marion.

Allen Iverson or Ben Gordon could provide instant offense for some team. Paul Millsap or David Lee would look nice as young, hardworking power forwards in someone's frontcourt.

Detroit and Oklahoma City have the most money to spend but seem to have different strategies. The Pistons, who freed up millions when they dealt Chauncey Billups to Denver for Iverson and his expiring contract, are expected to pursue Gordon and perhaps Charlie Villanueva. The Milwaukee Bucks let Villanueva become a free agent, and he could also draw interest from the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Thunder don't seem as eager to throw its money around, knowing a better bet could be slowly building around a young core featuring Kevin Durant, Jeff Green and Russell Westbrook.

"We've worked really hard to create some flexibility for this basketball team so we can continue to grow the organization and build and grow together," General Manager Sam Presti said. "It's just not going to be prudent for us to let restlessness be our nemesis. We need to be able to walk into somewhere with an eye towards the future as well as the present."

Both NBA finalists face free-agency decisions. The Los Angeles Lakers will try to keep their championship core intact by retaining Lamar Odom and Ariza. The Orlando Magic appear likely to lose Turkoglu after trading for Vince Carter last week.

The Houston Rockets must determine how much they value Artest, the last man standing among their big three after injuries to Tracy McGrady and Yao Ming.

"We have 11 guaranteed contracts now and obviously have free agents we need to decide on, Ron and Von (Wafer)," General Manager Daryl Morey said last week. "Obviously, we've got two big players who've got some injuries. We'll learn more over time and as it unfolds, we'll have to react."

Teams were free to start negotiating with free agents after midnight last night but can't sign them until July 8, after the salary cap for next season has been set. It's expected to decrease from this year's $58.7 million, making it even harder to predict which teams will spend.

"Right now I have no sense of the market in the whole league," Donnie Walsh, the New York Knicks president of operations, said Friday.

Players are about to find out -- and might not like the answers.

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