With a late-in-the-month deadline looming, Jazz All- Star forward Andrei Kirilenko is hopeful his NBA rookie contract will be extended for seasons to come -- and Jazz owner Larry H. Miller is confident a deal to do just that can be struck.
"We'd like to extend it," said Miller, whose franchise opened training camp Tuesday morning at Dixie State College.
"I mean, Andrei's a guy who we think belongs here," the Jazz owner added during a media-day session prior to the club's Monday-night departure for St. George. "He's certainly been a huge part of the excitement of the team the last couple of years, and I think, in terms of character, he's clearly our kind of guy.
"Talent-wise, he's clearly a person anybody would want to have. So, we certainly want to make a deal with Andrei -- and we need his agent to realize that there's got to be cooperation on both sides a little bit."
Kirilenko's agent -- Connecticut-based Marc Fleisher, who also represents recently signed Jazz center Mehmet Okur and recently re-signed Jazz swingman Gordan Giricek -- was out of the country Tuesday and could not immediately be reached for comment, a spokesman said.
But Kirilenko said discussions are ongoing between Fleisher and Kevin O'Connor, the Jazz's senior vice president for basketball operations.
"They're trying to talk about numbers, or some options, some rules in the extension," the 23-year-old Russian said.
"I know everything is going," Kirilenko added. "I don't how far it's going, but it's going. So, we'll see. We'll see."
O'Connor confirmed negotiations are under way and have been for some time.
An agreement, however, does not seem imminent -- despite the fact Kirilenko would become a restricted free agent if no deal is struck by Oct. 29.
"We're gonna continue to talk and see what comes out of it," O'Connor said. "I can't say 'yes' or 'no' or anything else."
Like O'Connor, Kirilenko did not want to publicly discuss specifics regarding the negotiations.
"I have an agent; he will work on it," Kirilenko said. "He knows my price, my situation, my position. That's why I pay him money."
There are other terms to iron out, but it is money matters that must be settled foremost before the deal can be extended.
Reports suggest Fleisher has acknowledged the Jazz already have expressed a willingness to pay Kirilenko something monetarily in excess of the six-year, $68 million contract the Jazz recently used to sign free-agent power forward Carlos Boozer.
But it is not known how close they are to offering something akin to the six-year, $76 million extension New Jersey recently gave to Richard Jefferson, or something similar to the deal recently made between Memphis and Grizzlies big man Pau Gasol.
Gasol reportedly signed a six-year extension worth the max permitted by terms of the collective bargaining agreement between the league and its players union -- likely somewhere between $82 million and $86 million, depending on a variety of variable factors, after all is said and done.
The Gasol agreement did not pass without notice from Kirilenko, who finished last season as the Jazz's leader in scoring (16.2 points per game), rebounding (8.1 per game), blocks (2.76) and steals (1.92).
"I think he deserved it," Kirilenko said. "He did a great job for Memphis, for the three years.
"Right now," the Jazz forward added, "I feel a little bit unhappy - - because his deal is done, my deal is not done. But that's a work in progress."
It's also one that seemingly would work out as beneficial for both sides.
By extending him now, the Jazz would avoid exposing their lone All-Star to a market in which another team could offer Kirilenko a highly front-loaded deal designed to dissuade Utah from matching.
And by consenting to extend now, Kirilenko could guarantee himself a six-season deal -- important considering the possibility that contract lengths could soon by shortened within the framework of a new collective bargaining agreement.
"I think it makes sense," Miller said, "for both sides to do it now, especially if you look at the potential pitfalls in the collective bargaining agreement."
According to Miller, however, coming to terms will require "a little bit of conciliation -- from both sides."
If that's what it takes, Kirilenko may be willing. He has, after all, often expressed a desire to remain with the small-market Jazz.
"For sure," Kirilenko said. "Salt Lake is my first city for NBA in America, and I like everything here.
"I'm ready for anything," he added. "You know -- I think good, but I'm ready for bad."