bws94 wrote:BlackOutBuzz wrote:The problem for Lin is the money divide between starter and backup. If a team believes he can come in and be their guy, as a starter, then there's no reason to believe he CAN'T net 8 figures annually given the current cap landscape. However most backups make, well, what Lin got paid this year. So it comes down to the starter/backup distinction.
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What about Lin as Ginobili-lite 6th man? That's kind of how he's used on the Hornets now. That's how he was used in Houston in the 2nd season and how other clubs may see him as well. So maybe it isn't starter or backup because Lin isn't really either one and is really a backup in terms of literally backing up Kemba and Batum when either is out. But he's more than a 2nd unit guy, he's not that exclusively.
Well the problem with that is, like Lin, Manu just took a discount. He's only making $2.9M this year after signing for the Room Exception in the offseason.
There are some sixth man types that make a good bit more, though. Andre Iguodala and Tyreke Evans come to mind. Both make about $10M and are older contracts, so they would've gotten quite a bit more had they signed them more recently.
Conversely, defending sixth man of the year Lou Williams just signed for about $7M annually, which is also around what Kevin Martin, Calderon, Stuckey, Corey Joseph, and even JJ Redick make (not a sixth man, but you get the point).
Then we start getting into MLE (about $5.4M) and lower range: Gerald Green, Jamal Crawford, Vince Carter, both Mavs and Bulls backup point guards (2 each), Livingston, JR Smith, Sefalosha, Mills, Barton, Brian Roberts (ok, bad example) hell...Jason Terry signed for the minimum.
I'm not putting Lin in any particular category per se, just saying it's tough to gauge what's fair.
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