dschroeder01 wrote:MN7725 wrote:winforlose wrote:
I call BS. We traded for him and acquired his bird rights from Utah. We then resigned him. Unless NAW left as a free agent in between or we waived his rights to get out of a cap hold, we should have his bird rights.
the only thing i can think of is that the Wolves declined NAW's qualifying offer, that caused them to lose his rights?
https://www.startribune.com/minnesota-timberwolves-free-agency-karl-anthony-towns-trade-nickeil-alexander-walker/600286434By not giving Alexander-Walker a qualifying offer, the Wolves are likely hoping to sign him to multiple years for less money per year than the qualifying offer was worth. But it's a gamble, as the Wolves now do not have the rights to match any offers Alexander-Walker gets elsewhere.
I'm not sure this is right. From Larry Coon:
The basic idea is that a player must play for the same team for three seasons for his team to gain Bird rights (two seasons for Early Bird rights). It can be a single three-year contract, a series of three one-year contracts, or any combination that adds up to three seasons (two for Early Bird).
NAW has 3 uninterrupted seasons in a row with the Wolves (partials count). My understanding is that the Wolves have his Bird Rights no matter how the current contract came about. I get that the current deal is only 2 years, but he ended the season here the previous year. That's 3.
In between contracts TC waived his rights to sign him cheaper (no qualifying offer.) At that point he needed a 3 year deal to reestablish bird rights. If this is true, going off the posts above, TC will be 100% responsible for NAW leaving Minnesota. Which is funny given that TC didn’t want NAW and Finch had to pound the table for him (going off of what is common knowledge.)








