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 Sunday, October 29
Crucial hearing on tap for Thursday
 
 ESPN.com news services

Joe Smith's status will remain in limbo until Thursday, when an arbitrator will hold a hearing on NBA commissioner David Stern's decision to void Smith's past two contracts.

Joe Smith
Smith

If Smith wins the hearing, he will regain his Larry Bird rights. He would then presumably re-sign with Minnesota for one year, setting himself up for a lucrative long-term contract with the Timberwolves next summer.

If Smith loses, he will probably look to play elsewhere since there will be no financial incentive for him to stay with the Timberwolves. More than a dozen teams would be able to offer him more money than Minnesota could.

Smith's agent told the Los Angeles Times on Saturday there was virtually no chance Smith would take the Lakers' $1.2-million salary exception to play in Los Angeles.

"If they'd kept their mid-level exception it would have been a different story," agent Dan Fegan said.

The hearing will be held in New York before arbitrator Kenneth Dam, who ruled Monday that Stern could void Smith's current contract. Stern went even further, voiding Smith's two previous contracts and taking away his Bird rights.

The players' union contends Stern overstepped his bounds.

"They tried to take away his Bird rights one way, and the arbitrator said they couldn't. Now they're trying to do it a different way," union attorney Ron Klempner said Saturday.

Dam will have 30 days to issue his ruling.

As punishment for having a secret financial agreement with Smith in violation of salary cap rules, Stern fined Wolves owner Glen Taylor $3.5 million and stripped the team of five first-round draft picks.

Stern also voided contracts Smith signed with the Wolves for the 1998-99, 1999-2000 and 2000-2001 seasons, making Smith a free agent.

Stern's punishment could also include suspensions for Taylor, vice president of operations Kevin McHale and anyone in the organization who took part in the deal. A hearing will be held to determine who had knowledge of the secret agreement.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

 


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