Sources: Cavs' pursuit of Jimmy Butler, Paul George faces hurdles

ByMARC STEIN
June 20, 2017, 8:25 PM

— -- The? Cleveland Cavaliers?remain seriously interested in trading for Chicago's? Jimmy Butler or Indiana's Paul George, but have encountered significant obstacles on both fronts, according to league sources.

Sources told ESPN on Tuesday that the Cavaliers have been notified that Butler hopes to stay with the Bulls and would be reluctant to commit his long-term future to Cleveland. Butler, sources said, remains intent on trying to lead the Bulls back to Eastern Conference prominence.

When it comes to George, meanwhile, ESPN reported earlier Tuesday that the? Indiana Pacers have commenced trade talks with the Los Angeles Lakers, who overwhelmingly rank as George's preferred destination as his own free agency looms in the summer of 2018.

One option for the Lakers, sources say, is trying to sell the Pacers on a trade package headlined by the 27th and 28th overall picks in Thursday night's draft in addition to players such as forward Julius Randle and guard Jordan Clarkson. Indiana, meanwhile, continues to try to pry away Thursday's No. 2 overall pick despite L.A.'s well-chronicled determination to keep it off limits.

Sources say that David Griffin, in his final few days as Cavaliers general manager, aggressively pursued trades for both Butler and George, seeking to acquire an elite two-way player in the wake of Cleveland's 4-1 NBA Finals defeat inflicted by the Golden State Warriors.

But Griffin and Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert abruptly announced Monday night that they were parting ways, just three days before Thursday's NBA Draft and less than two weeks before the June 30 expiration of Griffin's contract.

To land either Butler or George, sources say, Cleveland knows it would have to assemble a three-team (or more) trade --- likely costing them All-Star forward Kevin Love -- to manufacture the top-five draft pick Chicago and Indiana are known to covet in exchange for surrendering their respective best players.

ESPN's Dave McMenamin and Brian Windhorst reported Monday night that Gilbert himself, alongside Cavaliers assistant general manager Koby Altman, would continue to aggressively pursue upgrades to the roster as Cleveland enters the final season James is under contract.

But sacrificing Love to acquire Butler or George -- even for a historically bold team like the Cavaliers -- would be risky if neither player is prepared to make a long-term commitment to the franchise.

George has been widely expected since the All-Star break in February to do anything he can to land with the Lakers in the summer of 2018, while Butler could become a free agent as early as July 2019.