FloridaMan78 wrote:DetroitSho wrote:FloridaMan78 wrote:
If Killian had a small cap hold we could let him go into restricted free agency. His small cap hold wouldn’t effect us going after other free agents. And we could probably still match any reasonable offer.
You're basically talking out of both sides right now. Matching a "reasonable offer" means absolutely nothing, it's just a talking point. Somehow he's not worth much but at the same time in danger of having a big enough offer thrown to him that we wouldn't match. Huh?
If you've already drawn a line in the sand at $10 million/year max, it doesn't matter if Killian's cap hold was $2 million, you're not matching a 3 year $39 million offer. In sum, THE CAP HOLD MEANS NOTHING. It's the actual/potential contract terms that matter. J.H.C.
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Who's gonna offer Killian 3 yrs 39 mil?
The point is if Killian had a smaller cap hold you could wait out all of free agency for someone to offer Killian a contract.
I don't think Killian is an awful player. I think his 22 mil cap hold is awful and can become a deterrent to holding on to him through free agency if you want to sign other players.
Cap hold matters for the other players you can target. It limits your options.
I'm really not understanding what you mean.
It seems like you're completely ignoring the benefits of having control over a restricted free agent and the leverage that the team has.
At some point I really would love for you to grasp the concept of HYPOTHETICALS. If you think it's absurd Killian being offered $13 million a year then you're literally proving my point and don't even realize it.
It's weird for you to have a need to have restricted rights over a player but at the same time not even think he'd be offered more than the max amount you're willing to pay.
Do you think he'd get an offer for more than $10 million/year? Even if he did, it doesn't matter because that's where you've HYPOTHETICALLY drawn your line in the sand so you're not matching anything above that. SOOOO, AGAIN, you can renounce his rights and just leave $10 million in space for him while he's out in the market shopping. Keep in mind, when a player is unrestricted, it gives teams less incentive to overpay that player just to get the current team to not match. Doing that might even lessen the offers he'd receive.
At this point either cognitive dissonance is in full effect or you're still not grasping cap holds and you're giving it way more power than necessary.
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