Kenyon Martin to the Clippers?

Kenyon Martin to the
Clippers?

Chauncey Billups would like to see that happen. In fact, the Clippers'
veteran guard said Saturday that he has reached out to the free-agent forward, a
former teammate of his in Denver, about signing with the Clippers.

What are
Martin's thoughts about doing so?

"I'll let him tell y'all that," Billups said
with a smile.

Asked about reports that the Clippers are one of a handful of
teams that have reached out to Martin, Clippers Coach Vinny Del Negro declined
to go into specifics.

"Kenyon is an experienced guy that knows how to play, can
play some (power forward), play some (center)," Del Negro said. "He brings a lot
of athleticism to the team. But those are all speculations. There are a lot of
teams talking to a lot of different players. I'm pleased with our group right
now and we're always looking to add good character, quality, competitive guys to
the roster."

Del Negro neither confirmed nor denied that he has reached out to
Martin.

The Clippers look like a good fit for the 34-year-old Martin, an 11-year
NBA veteran. They have two trade exceptions they can use to sign a player, one
for $3.8 million and another for $2.7 million that were acquired in their deal
for Chris Paul. They also have what's called a mini mid-level exception for $2.5
million, and, lastly, the Clippers have a 14-man roster, leaving one spot open.

"He's very valuable," Billups said of Martin. "Of course, he comes from winning
stock. He’s been to the (NBA) finals twice. He has great ability. He is a
leader. One thing I know about Kenyon, he’s a winner. He’ll do whatever it takes
to win. He’s one of the great one-on-one defensive players for a big man I’ve
played with. And, contrary to what everybody believes, he’s a really good dude."


Martin can sign with an NBA team as soon as the team he signed with in China,
the Xinjiang Guanghui Flying Tigers, completes its season. Martin signed with
Xinjiang Guanghui during the NBA lockout, but the China Basketball Association
stipulated that any players signing with a CBA team this year complete the
season before returning to the NBA.

As the Flying Tigers are currently out of
the playoff race, their season could end in mid-February. Martin averaged a
career-low 8.6 points and only 6.2 rebounds in 48 games for Denver last season.