News for Chris Bosh - 2017 9 Category, $200 Cap, 4G/4F/2C

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Wed May 24 201723:34NBA notebook: Bosh, Heat part ways
The Miami Heat and 11-time All-Star forward Chris Bosh have agreed to part ways.The South Florida Sun-Sentinel and Miami Herald reported the sides were in talks Tuesday, and sources told ESPN on Wednesday that the Heat, Bosh and the players' union tentatively agreed to a resolution.Bosh, 33, was sidelined this past season when he failed a preseason physical -- Heat team doctors declined to clear him to take part in training camp -- after he missed the second half of the previous two seasons due to blood clots.Bosh last played in a game on Feb. 9, 2016, remaining on the Heat's roster and taking up salary cap space as the sides worked through medical and legal issues. His five-year, $118 million contract runs through the 2018-19 campaign.The agreement has not been finalized as Bosh and his family, agents and lawyers are still reviewing documents, according to ESPN.--The Atlanta Hawks are in the process of finalizing a deal that would make Travis Schlenk, the Golden State Warriors' vice president of basketball operations, their general manager, multiple media outlets reported.ESPN.com reported that Schlenk has agreed to become the Hawks' general manager, and it is expected to be announced on Thursday.Schlenk spent the last 13 seasons with the Warriors. During his first five years with the Warriors he was an assistant coach and video scout. The last eight years he worked in the Warriors' front office, and he has been the team's assistant general manager for five years.--The NBA announced that Charlotte will host the 2019 All-Star Game after this year's midseason event was moved to New Orleans because of a North Carolina state law restricting the rights of LGBT people.The All-Star weekend festivities are set for Feb. 15-17, 2019, with the 68th NBA All-Star Game taking place at Spectrum Center, home of the Hornets.North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper in March signed a compromise bill that repealed House Bill 2, but banned local governments from passing anti-discrimination ordinances for three years.