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Former NBA star Monta Ellis is set to camp out in Joe Abunassar’s Impact Basketball this week as he ramps up his training in his latest comeback bid.

The 35-year old Ellis will fly to Las Vegas on Tuesday and conduct private workouts in front of at least three NBA teams until Saturday, according to his business manager Derrius Nelson of Dagger Basket agency.

“Tae and Joe have come a long way. They worked together when he was in the NBA,” Nelson told Empire Sports Media.

Ellis is rekindling his partnership with Abunassar that started when the former McDonald’s All-American player went into the NBA straight from high school.

Since his pre-draft workout, Ellis had been a regular at Impact Basketball during the offseason, including the year where he became the league’s Most Improved Player in 2007 that set him off to NBA stardom.

There are still about 17 roster spots left to be filled in the NBA, with the Los Angeles Lakers leading the way with three. Playoff contenders with open roster spots are the Chicago Bulls, Portland Trail Blazers, Atlanta Hawks, Miami Heat, Phoenix Suns. Young teams that may need veteran leadership like the Minnesota Timberwolves, Cleveland Cavaliers, Orlando Magic, and Oklahoma City Thunder also have roster openings.

Nelson believes that Ellis can provide veteran leadership to a young team and a complementary piece to a playoff team.

“If you put Tae in any of the 30 NBA teams, he can help them win in any situation with his experience and skill set,” Nelson said. Tae is coachable and still quick. He is still reliable and explosive who can put the ball in the hole, especially with the NBA spacing right now. He’s great in pick and roll, and he prides himself on defense. He’s definitely 10 times better than most free agents available out there.”

Ellis has career averages of 17.8 points, 3.5 rebounds, 4.6 assists, and 1.7 steals. He has recorded nine 40-plus points games, including a career-best 48 against Oklahoma City Thunder that featured Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook, and James Harden in 2012.

The playoff-tested Ellis has 38 games in the postseason under his belt, averaging 13.7 points, 2.8 rebounds, 3.0 assists, and 1.5 steals.

During his NBA hiatus, Ellis kept himself fit by coaching kids under his AAU club, Ellis Elite, and training with Dallas-based NBA trainer Djamel Jackson. Jackson will stay in Dallas to attend to Ellis’ AAU club while Ellis pursues his NBA comeback.

In Las Vegas, Nelson said Ellis will conduct a workout simulating live game situations to how ready and serious he is about this comeback bid.

Ellis said in a previous interview with Empire Sports Media when he announced his NBA comeback bid that he could still play for five years.

At this point, money is no longer a motivation for Ellis, who turned down a lucrative offer to play in China last season and is still set to earn $2.25 million this season from the Indiana Pacers, the last year of his salary stretch provision when he was waived in 2017.

“My main thing is, just bring me in and give me a look. Like you could make the decision on me. I just want a shot. I ain’t asking for a contract to get $5 million, $10 million, or even $1 million. All I’m asking is, give me a look. That’s all and let my game speak for itself. I just want an opportunity, a workout, and that’s not the end of the world, that’s not gonna hurt anybody,” Ellis said. “I will pay my own plane ticket and hotel to go to a workout.”

Now, Ellis is finally getting his shot. And he doesn’t want to miss it.

Follow this writer on Twitter: @alderalmo

This article first appeared on Empire Sports Media and was syndicated with permission.

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