LostInACrowd wrote:HartfordWhalers wrote:I get that the choice of who is the best un-drafted free agent is up to debate the same way who the best pick is at 20. But the Nets not only didn't pick the guys that others thought had the most potential, they showed no confidence in their own choices based off the contracts given them. At the end of the day, they didn't get any upside past this season in terms of potential contracts. Even if the Nets did pick a great guy, they will have to negotiate a new deal next year after the player gains a ton of leverage. KJ McDaniels turned a 1 year deal into 3m a year, as did Seth Curry.
I hope the Nets are planning on using the two open roster spots to Waiver claim guys getting cut, or get the soon to be cut players in a trade with small incentive. But so far, the use of the slots feels a lot like Trader_Joe summed it up -- "Ferrell, Beach and Mockevicius go the L.I. Nets" which isn't a use of resources I can support.
If you read my last line. I agreed with you about the contract length.
KJ was an early second round pick. The Nets second round pick Whitehead was signed to a 4 year deal.
I don't think not signing them to longer contracts is a show of no confidence. How many undrafted players become solid NBA player? You listed 2 guys who became contributers but weren't signed to longer contracts.
That makes it sound like it's common practice as opposed to a show of no confidence. Honestly, I'm not sure why you are so caught up on this.
EDITED:
Are you a talent scout at DX?

That wasn't the intention, but rather to show that there is a downside to not signing guys to longer deals.
Teams without cap space are forced to only be able to offer up to 2 year deals, but looking at undrafted rookies just this year:
Atlanta -- Matt Costello to 2 years using 50k guaranteed to get it
Boston -- Marcus Georges-Hunt just to 1 year. Given that Boston is already cutting guaranteed contracts of 1st/2nd rounders I think this is understandable, but Bentil is 3 years as a very late 2nd rounder, etc.
Charlotte: Mike Tobey and Treveon Graham to 2 years (using 75k per guaranteed to get it), Andrew Andrews and Rasheed Sulaimon got just 1 year deals with 0 guaranteed. (Aaron Harrison is still on roster from signing as a 2 year last year. And Christian Wood signed a 2 year).
Chicago -- none signed but Zipser was a 3+1 and Cristiano Felicio is still on the roster from signing as a 2 year last year)
Cleveland -- none signed but Kay Fielder was 2+1 (and McRae is still on the roster from signing as a 2 year last year).
Dallas -- Jonathan Gibson, Nicolas Brussino, and Dorian Finney-Smith all 3 years, Kyle Collinsworth a 2 year deal, Jameel Warney and Keith Hornsby as 1 year deals, (Salah Mejri still on roster from signing as a 2 year last year)
....
I will probably keep going through them later, but Denver has Toupane and Sampson for instance left over from 2 year deal etc.
But I think the early peek already goes to show that most are signed to multiyear deals (if we go raw players versus teams it gets worse as last year Philly signed a good half dozen to deals like that and still has a bunch on their roster). Granted, most multiyear deals might only be 2 year deals because teams don't have cap space
When it comes down to it, the Nets signings to me show either: 1) little confidence in the guys they signed, or 2) little foresight as to the advantage of having them locked up cheap long term, or 3) both. For what it is worth, I feel 1 is the better option than 2, with 3 obviously the worst sign.