Tristan Thompson And The Fallout Of The New CBA
Posted: Fri Oct 9, 2015 2:23 pm
This is what happens when you overreach
http://ballnroll.com/basketball?post=1946
http://ballnroll.com/basketball?post=1946
Sports is our Business
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=1409369
Tristan Thompson Tanking His Overall Value As Contract Negotiations Continue
What Thompson doesn’t seem to realize is that the longer negotiations last, the more his overall value goes down.
However, Thompson’s future with the team became uncertain when Cleveland re-signed Love to a five-year, $110 million deal in July, thus setting in stone that Thompson would be a backup once again if he re-signed with Cleveland.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/joshbenjamin/2015/09/21/tristan-thompson-tanking-his-overall-value-as-negotiations-continue/
Tristan Thompson should ask Anderson Varejao about the value of holding out
It was eight years ago at this time that two Cavaliers, Sasha Pavlovic and Anderson Varejao, found themselves in much the same position as Thompson. They were restricted free agents who had not come to terms with the team, and had not signed the qualifying offer by the Oct. 1 deadline. Their holdouts dragged on, Pavlovic’s until Oct. 30 and Varejao’s until Dec. 5. Though then-general manager Danny Ferry is long gone, it’s safe to say owner Dan Gilbert learned something from that experience.
Mostly, he learned that restricted free agency in the NBA is overwhelmingly weighted toward the teams. If an owner waits long enough, he will win.
Varejao came up empty, too, and his case is the more significant of the two. His agent, Dan Fegan, had hoped to use Varejao’s situation to set a precedent in restricted free agency, aiming to upend the way the system favors owners so completely. Varejao averaged 6.8 points and 6.7 rebounds the previous year, yet was looking for a deal at about $10 million per season.
Varejao’s holdout was extraordinary for its length. But it did nothing to change the balance of power in restricted free agency. He wound up signing a three-year offer sheet with Charlotte worth $17 million over three years, and despite Varejao going through the motion of saying he did not want to play for the Cavs again (a tactic restricted free agents have since used frequently, to no avail), Cleveland subsequently matched it.
With Kevin Love and Timofey Mozgov getting healthy, this version of the Cavaliers is more suited to withstand time without Thompson than the woefully thin 2007-08 version was able to withstand the Varejao and Pavlovic holdouts.
http://www.sportingnews.com/nba/story/2015-10-02/cleveland-cavaliers-holdout-tristan-thompson-lebron-james-agent-anderson-varejao-sasha-pavlovic