The NBA has opened an investigation into a possible tampering violation committed by the Philadelphia 76ers centered on their signings of James Harden, P.J. Tucker and Danuel House.
Harden declined his $47 million player option to sign a one-plus-one contract with the 76ers at $33 million in Year 1 to give the team flexibility to sign Tucker and House.
Some have wondered if another deal with Harden is in place for the future, which would be a violation of league rules.
Tucker joined the Sixers from the Miami Heat on a three-year, $33.2 million deal.
In 2010, Nowitzki was eligible for a $96 maximum contract but instead signed for only $80 million to allow the Mavs to sign other players. (Which they did, winning the NBA championship the next year). And in 2014, Dirk Nowitzki again negotiated down with the Mavs--and rejected $92 mill from Lakers and Rockets--to take a team friendly 3yr/$25m deal to help sign other players.
At the time, Mavs president of basketball operations Donnie Nelson said, "You can count guys like Dirk on one or two fingers. We're so lucky to have him." So, when Dirk does it, he's a hero...but when Harden does it, he's a villain?
More to the point, this is what Forbes said when the Dirk deal was announced:
The "hometown discount" has a long tradition in salary-capped sports, in which owners and fans expect superstars to take a less lucrative contract in free agency so that teams can use that extra spending money to recruit better role players. It's an unfair expectation—made even more unfair by the fact that NBA stars' salaries are already massively deflated due to the league's maximum salary restriction—and Dallas Mavericks power forward Dirk Nowitzki may have taken that discount to new levels Tuesday after signing a shockingly small $25 million, three-year contract to stay in Dallas for his 17th-19th NBA seasons.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jimpagels/2014/07/16/dirk-nowitzki-passes-up-most-money-in-nba-history/?sh=34d5f237023d
A lot of us fans want our stars to take less money than the (super)max to enable our favorite teams to have more flexibility moving forward. Few stars do--not criticizing them, just stating fact. Why are the 76ers/Harden being potentially penalized for doing such a deal? (And don't give me any of that "they've agreed to pay Harden more later in his next contract" crap
