Red Larrivee wrote:It's not an indictment against them if they don't want to give Brogdon huge money; they're logical to believe that. We can put all the speculation about 2021 and landing a superstar to the side. Brogdon is a high-end role-player who raises the floor of a team with better players ahead of him, including the recently-named MVP. Paying him huge money to duplicate that value without that luxury is not wise.
The greater question is "what is wise" then? What is the outcome that is better than Brogdon. Say you have a choice of having someone cut off your finger or shoot you in the face, and if you don't choose in the next 30 seconds then they'll slowly torture you and everyone you care about.
It feels like a lot of people would deliberate and say "well it's not wise to let someone cut off your finger". Yes, in a vacuum that isn't wise, but when we are measuring up against the actual alternatives what is the better plan? Maybe there is an option better than getting shot in the face in this scenario, but so far I see the general possibilities as:
1: Max Brogdon/D-Lo
Brogdon is likely going to be an above average starting caliber player for four years but a sub-all-star caliber player over that stretch. D'Angelo Russell is a guy with good potential but some flaws which are scary. Both guys have potential to be very strong additions to the roster and increase in value over time and both have the potential to end up as poor contracts. I think Brogdon is more likely of the two to be good but overpaid while Russell I think is more likely to earn his contract or fall flat on his face.
2: Split up the money into the best role players you can (probably also requires 4 year commitments)
This scenario to me is likely the worst outcome as you'll probably end up with two guys that don't help you as much as one better guy but you still have the same cap hit.
3: Split up the money into the best role players you can that will only go two years to save max cap room for 2021
2021 looks presently like a poor FA year IMO with only one great target in it (Giannis), whom, may sign an extension prior to that year anyway. It will also feature other targets that will be on the downside of their careers (Lillard / McCullum / Gobert) but will still likely command the 30% max.
I can see the appeal of this plan because you just wait and see and figure maybe something good pans out later that you can't see now. It maintains the most flexibility while giving you the minimum amount of upside this season. The question really comes down to whether that future flexibility is worth more than something you can do today.
Looking at it, I don't see how the future flexibility is likely to be more useful than Brogdon today. It could be. I mean you could be heavily positioned to sign Giannis through some strange confluence of events that I can't foresee, but I don't see how we utilize that cap room later meaningfully.