bleu wrote:Inigo Montoya wrote:SoCalJazzFan wrote:Even if those players can all be top 6 or so in the next couple of years, the problem is that the Jazz can't afford to keep them all, even with the new cap.
True, and this is something we should always keep in mind. The problem is that generally the Jazz tends to hold on to players for too long.
I disagree. DeMarre Carroll, Wesley Matthews, and Kyle Korver were examples of exactly the opposite.
On the contrary. The Jazz let them walk for nothing, which is what happens when you keep players for too long. Either trade them or extend them (generally speaking).
EDIT- I should probably say that I agree with the aforementioned examples, but I also think they point more to the exception than the rule. Big Al, Millsap, Marvin Williams, Kanter and more can be examples to the contrary. The general point I'm trying to make is that by holding on to players too long, their contract situation start to work against you. They either walk for nothing or you get bad offers for them, or you let the market dictate the value for them, which usually works against the Jazz: They didn't want to give Carroll a (pitiful) pay increase to 2.5M, they didn't want to give Korver 5.5M per season after he was paid 5M per season, they let the market dictate Matthews' value (couldn't be helped, due to his unique status as an undrafted player, but they should have kept him) and caved, they held on to Kanter for too long and got a bad return, they let Big Al and Millsap walk for nothing, could have gotten a 1st round pick for Marvin and ended up letting him walk for nothing, and they let Hayward hit free agency even when they were willing to max him, just to have him get a max with a poison pill.