guest81 wrote:shrink wrote:shangrila wrote:I don't think Glen's comments necessarily mean he wasn't willing to pay Jimmy. Making changes to the team could refer to shifting other salary like Dieng for example. However, whatever the reason is it doesn't excuse the way Jimmy went about this.
Exactly. Glen didn’t sign off on trading LaVine, Dunn and #7 for #16 without planning on spending money on Jimmy’s max deal.
Glen gets accused of being cheap way too often when fans are angry for other issues. Remember, he was one of the first owners to pay the lux tax. He has always been willing to pay when we have a competitive team. Heck, his generosity is the reason we have a max deal clause in the CBA, when he gave Garnett a then-record deal. He would certainly pay for an All-NBA player.
Also decided to pay Joe Smith under the table, and didn't want to give Kevin Love the 5 year max and gave him a player option. Let's not go overboard here
edit: Also ended up selling multiple first round picks that ended up being really good players
Oh? “Multiple first round picks, huh?” And what “really good players” were they?
Promising Joe Smith more money is the future doesn’t mean he’s cheap, and wouldn’t pay Jimmy more money in the future.
And CBA rules at the time prevented two players from getting 5 years - that doesn’t mean he’s cheap either, especially since he gave Love a max deal.
Ironic you used two diametrically opposed events, following rules and not following the rules, and came up with the wrong conclusion from both.
Glen Taylor makes mistakes, but people saying he’s cheap and therefore wouldn’t pay Jimmy a max deal - that’s nonsense.