LibertyPrime wrote:Shrink, if you're around, I'd love to hear your assessment of the Justise Winslow extension, and the probability of the deal being offering to MN being some combination of Richardson/Winslow and a pick.
Personally, I'd be good with adding two two-way wings on cap-friendly deals for Butler.
Pretty good posts in front of me, so let me add just a couple things.
First, the Winslow contract is simply okay.  $13 mil a year is more than the MLE, which is where we try to price borderline starters.  Winslow is a top 10% defender in the nba, but three years in and he is still a bottom 10% offensive player.  One-way players generally don’t get more than the MLE, especially ones that are bad on the offensive (ticket-selling) end.  However, I don’t think this is a negative deal.  Winslow certainly has the chance to improve, and even though we expected more, injuries and inconsisties have nagged him for three years.  I also think that making the final season a team option compensates for the higher annual salary that he probably deserves at this point.  Finally, don’t forget you still get this year’s service on rookie scale.  He received a market value contract, which most players do with an average agent, so his trade value is neutral.
Second, as others have said, the poison pill provision generally makes a player less likely to be traded, which was it’s intent.  The variance in in-going and out-going money usually makes the process difficult for salary matching.  However, a fair MIN-MIA deal,already has problems with salary matching.  MIA’s positive assets don’t make enough money to match, and much of their spending since the Tyler Johnson contract has led to negative contracts.  The Heat were “use it or lose it” with their money, so they used it, but made bad deals,
The interesting things now is that it might lead to a new pathway.  Right now, MIA wants to include a bad deal to salary match, but it drains the deal of value.  They could make up that value if they took Dieng, but they only have bad money to match him - two bad deals to one.  The way to make the money work in a poison pill situation is to expand the deal, so that the PP deal is a smaller percentage of the overall trade.  You may see something like Domejandro suggested - Richardson, Winslow (maybe that late pick), plus MIA contract, for Butler, plus Dieng.
I disagree with Heat fans that they wouldn’t give up Richardson and Winslow, especially since they are getting Butler back to play SF.  They may like the player, but Winslow on the extension is neutral value.  If they still want to dump Waiters, swapping him for a Dieng makes the money work.  They have plenty of nba-worthy swingmen to play with Butler, like Wade, Wayne Ellington, Waiters got paid, McGruder is better than people know, and they like Derrick Jones Jr.  if there is one team that should consolidate wings, it’s MIA.