NBA Rumors: Why Knicks Bullish On Kemba Walker, Optimistic For Future

Will Walker's knee withstand NBA rigors?

Has Kemba Walker’s reported next team secured a bona-fide steal and a brighter future in a single swoop?

The New York Knicks believe the veteran point guard will be an NBA All-Star-caliber player if his body holds up, The New York Post’s Marc Berman reported Wednesday, citing a source. Walker reportedly will sign with the Knicks as a free agent after he and the Oklahoma City Thunder agreed to a buyout of the he two years and $74 million remaining on his contract Wednesday.

“Source says Knicks feel Kemba Walker, if his body is right, still is All-Star level player,” Berman wrote in a tweet. “Needed OKC to buy him out as no trade market at his salary.”

Walker, a four-time All-Star, has averaged 19.9 points, 3.8 rebounds and 5.4 assists over his 10 NBA seasons. However, knee problems dogged him for much of his two-season tenure with the Boston Celtics and were a major reason why the team traded him in June to the Oklahoma City Thunder in June.

The NBA community assumed OKC would be a pit-stop for Walker and expected teams such as the Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers to pursue a trade for him. However, his salary, as Berman wrote, prevented a market for his services from materializing, prompting the Thunder to buy out his deal, and the Knicks to swoop for the NYC native.

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“The motivation for this buyout for OKC is Knicks can put Kemba Walker into their salary-cap space and the Thunder get an offset break,” Berman wrote. “Thunder had originally wanted to trade him but he was to make about $36M this season.”

With Walker destined for the Big Apple, the Knicks’ busy offseason roster-building “appears finished,” Berman wrote in the New York Post. After going 41-31 and finishing in fourth place in the Eastern Conference standings in 2020-21, Knicks officials believe the team’s future now is even brighter following a successful past few days.

“Knicks brass excited about free agency,” Berman wrote. “Flexibility. Continuity. Upgrades. Feel their new contracts are moveable if need be. Naturally Rose-Walker have to healthy.”

Of course, these rosy scenarios are that way on paper only, and New York and Walker must prove on the court whether the excitement is warranted.