jredsaz wrote:jbk1234 wrote:jredsaz wrote:
That is antiquated thinking. After the first week of 2016 free agency his value will jump significantly. Lesser players will begin to see similar, more money on the open market. Teams that miss out on their first and second options will begin to look at trades.
At that point, players who are locked into contracts like Knight will only gain value over the course of the next two years. With every increase in the cap, with every free agency period the market will continue to shift towards higher salaries.
So he'll go from negative value to neutral value - maybe. Knight will stop being paid like a top 10 pg and instead be paid like a top 20 pg and he'll still be the sixth man on a good team.
The term negative value needs to be eliminated from these boards. Smh. You were super on point with Morris a couple months ago with that. In a $100 million cap world, Knights contract becomes affordable given his talent.
Again, he is not a classic point guard. He is a combo guard who can come off the bench, run a second team or play off the ball next to a starting point. He needs to be on a good team and used correctly. As the cap jumps the cost of the contract will scale with his value on the court.
At any rate, I guarantee that if traded at the draft, or any time after, he will individually, or more likely as part of a larger package, bring back value to the Suns.
The point made in my original post was that the Suns have shown a willingness to hold players until a desperate and stupid GM arises and gives them what they want. But that trade was awful for the Wizards and it cost the Suns a half a season of dysfunction. If the Suns wait until after F.A., or until the deadline when someone has a need because of injury, Knight's value might increase. But if they want to move him ahead of F.A. or at the draft, then it's going to be difficult to get value for him. He's not anyone's plan A.







































