He was asleep, dreaming about playing basketball somewhere, preferably back with the Lakers -- with his cellphone turned off -- unaware his agent had worked out a deal.
When Lamar Odom awoke Thursday, the free-agent forward turned on his phone and heard the message from his agent, Jeff Schwartz:
"You're still a Laker," the message said.
Odom called his agent back to confirm it. Odom and the Lakers had agreed on a four-year deal, reportedly for $33 million, with a team option for the final year.
The versatile 6-foot-10 forward will earn less than the last Lakers offer of about $36 million over four years, but that offer was pulled off the table two weeks ago by owner Jerry Buss.
But after a month of talking, posturing, having the Lakers' offer taken away and then both sides resuming negotiations, and with the Miami Heat making a push to sign him, Odom is back with the Lakers.
Through it all, Odom said Thursday he wasn't worried that the Lakers' first deal was pulled off the table.
"Naw, only because, if worse came to worse, I was going to go somewhere that was comfortable," said Odom, referring to the Heat, which gave him a six-year, $63-million deal in 2003 before he was traded a year later to the Lakers as part of the Shaquille O'Neal deal. "I was going to fight for what I wanted first and that was being in L.A. and being a Laker. L.A. was the first place that came to my mind. That's where my heart was at."
Early in July, the Lakers presented two offers to Odom.
One was a four-year deal for $9 million a season, worth up to $36 million, but only three years and $27 million was guaranteed, with the Lakers' buyout in the fourth year worth $3 million.
The other offer was a three-year, $30-million deal that would have paid Odom $10 million a season.
"If I would have heard that one, I think I would have jumped on that," Odom said Thursday. "I don't remember hearing that one."
When Odom and his agent didn't respond quickly enough, Buss pulled the deals off the table.
Odom then spoke with Buss. His agent and Lakers General Manager Mitch Kupchak kept an open dialogue.
"I knew this was going to take time," Odom said. "I knew where the Lakers were as far as money. Organizations are trying to save extra money. Players are trying to get extra money. That's the way it is."
Miami President Pat Riley met with Odom this week. Heat guard Dwyane Wade was also in Los Angeles making his pitch to get Odom to return to Miami.