Utah Jazz notebook: Wesley Matthews, Kyrylo Fesenko get qualifying offers

Published: Tuesday, June 29 2010 12:30 a.m. MDT

SALT LAKE CITY — Even with the Carlos Boozer watch all-systems go now, and other franchises lining up to talk to him and other marquee NBA free agents, business continues for the Jazz.

The team on Monday made contract qualifying offers for next season to both starting shooting guard Wesley Matthews and backup center Kyrylo Fesenko, formally making both restricted free agents when the NBA's summer shopping market opens late Wednesday night.

Fesenko's offer is for $1,087,500 and Matthews' is for $937,135, based on current collective bargaining agreement rules between the NBA and its players association.

Wednesday is the deadline for making qualifying offers to prospective restricted free agents, but the Jazz made them Monday anyway.

The moves — largely anticipated, and mostly a formality — essentially mean Utah retains the right to match should either player sign an offer sheet from another team.

In the case of Matthews, an undrafted rookie last season, that means being able to match any offer up to and including full-midlevel exception money — but not in the unlikely event that the Marquette product is offered a deal that starts above the anticipated midlevel starting salary of approximately $6 million for next season.

In the case of Fesenko, who will be training and playing next month with his Ukrainian national team, it means an offer of any sort.

"After the way he played in the playoffs and the commitment that's been made to him at this point, it's safe to say (the qualifying offer) was expected," Fesenko's agent, Stu Lash, said by phone Monday.

After usual starting center Mehmet Okur ruptured an Achilles tendon during Game 1 of their first-round postseason series with the Denver Nuggets, Fesenko — a 2007 second-round draft pick — started for the Jazz throughout the rest of the 2010 playoffs.

He averaged 18.1 minutes, 3.9 rebounds and 3.1 points in 10 postseason games — 10.2 more minutes, 2.1 more rebounds and 0.5 more points than in his third NBA regular season.

It remains to be seen if the Jazz will attempt to agree on terms with Fesenko and/or Matthews shortly after the NBA's free-agency negotiating period opens at 10 p.m. (MT) Wednesday, or if they'll wait until after higher-priority matters — especially the fate of unrestricted free agent power forward Boozer — are settled.

"We want to be there," said Fesenko's representative, Lash.

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