minimus wrote:Posted this on reddit, need some deep CBA knowledge from you, guys:
If I am not mistaken we can resign Reid and trade him later before trade deadline. Tax will be calculated after regular season ending. Another option could be (correct me if I am wrong and that is not possible) a front loaded Jeremy Lin type of deal (for example 15+5+5). Again I don’t remember who was behind Jeremy Lin deal, but if that was Morey then I can see Gupta considering this option, assuming that Gupta derives from Morey/Hinkie school.
First, let me be very specific about the words “re-sign” and “extend,” since sometimes people reading this will perceive them as synonyms. The new CBA doesn’t kick in until this summer, so all those rules are the same. We can extend Naz’s contract all the way up to the last day of the NBA season, with the first year starting for up to 120% of the average salary ($10.5), or $12.6. [new CBA is raising this to 140%, but too late for Naz extension]. If we don’t extend him this year, we could re-sign him, just like we could sign any free agent. We have Bird rights, so we can offer any amount, up to the max. However, Naz was undrafted and is an unrestricted free agent, so we don’t have the right to match any team’s offer to keep him.
Regarding taxes, yes, taxes are calculated based on the players on the roster at the end of the season (plus pro-rated 10 day deals, etc). If we signed or extended Naz to a reasonable deal, then traded him midway through the season to a team with cap space, he’d count for zero in our tax calculations. We do need to stay under the lux next season to avoid starting the repeater tax a year early, but we have some space below the lux next year. Connelly might be able to afford to keep Naz for one season, then try to do a deal like this in 2024-25. The key would be getting him to accept a low enough number that makes him tradable later. Freshly signed free agents can’t be traded until December, unless it is done immediately in a sign-and-trade.
As for front-loaded deals, I believe the NBA has rules for how much a salary can decrease, unless your team is not even up to the salary cap (which enabled Myles Turner’s recent renegotiation). What most teams do now to avoid that is offer “dollars not years.” For example, a couple years ago the Hawks were a young cheap team, and Gallinari was a useful sixth man for them, but a borderline starter elsewhere, so perhaps an $8 mil a year player. To encourage him to stay, while not locking him in longterm, they offered him $18 mil for season 1, and an unguaranteed $18 mil for the next season. For Gallo, this was a better offer than say, 3 for $26 that another team might offer. I could see MIN making a similar offer to Naz,