Yet while the popular speculation has Allen following LeBron James to the Cleveland Cavaliers, Allen told the Boston Herald he is still weighing his options. One of the hang-ups could be that Allen would like to receive a contract above the veteran’s minimum, which seems highly unlikely given his age and increasingly one-dimensional game.
In the meantime, Allen has communicated with Los Angeles Clippers head coach Doc Rivers, his coach for five seasons with the Boston Celtics.
“A lot have called; Doc called earlier in the summer,” Allen told the Herald’s Mark Murphy. “A lot of teams want to be able to get me at the veteran’s minimum. I still have an ego, too. I still have a service to provide, and teams still have to pay me what I feel my presence is worth. I have to take that into consideration, if it’s worth putting my body through what it will take over 82 games.”
Allen, 39, played in 73 out of a possible 82 games last season, shooting 37.5 percent on 3-pointers and posting a career-low 9.6 points per game. He earned $3.2 million in the final season of a two-year, $6.2 million contract he signed with Miami in 2012.
Allen said over the weekend that he would be “content” retiring from the NBA after 18 seasons as the league’s all-time leading 3-point shooter.