shrink wrote:For those that are worried about Towns’ supermax after all the news of the super lux came down in the new CBA, I wrote a couple economics things for the Trade Board this morning that might allay some of your fears:shrink wrote:Ever since the max deal was created in the CBA during the 1998-99 lockout, many people have held the belief that only the truly elite players are deserving of the deal. This opinion is often stated as a fact, and economically, it’s pretty easy to disprove.
First, just to get it out of the way, the max is an artificial threshold. I have seen people argue that if you pay KAT what you pay Jokic, KAT’s deal must be a bad one. The truth is that both deals can be good, but you simply get less additional value with KAT. If I was selling cars for $5000, and I sold one person a new BMW for $5000, it doesn’t mean a new Camry for $5000 is a bad deal.
But let me address the heart of your issue - less money available for total team construction. In 24-25, when Towns extension kicks in, the second apron will be almost $180 mil. Team One could fill its 15 roster spots with $12 mil players. Team Two could fill its roster with Towns ($49) and 14 roster spots with $9.35 mil players. The NBA is a competition, so getting more production on the floor any given night is going to give one team a win, and the other a loss, even if they are close. This drives up the value of players that are even a “little bit better” than your guys. Finding bargains is important, but five Austin Reaves aren’t going to win games - you still need to maximize your total payroll to get the most production, to put better guys on the floor.shrink wrote:And just to be clear, there are limits to a team having multiple max deals, and MIN may be pushing into it with KAT, Gobert, Ant, and whatever McDaniels get paid. This is what the new CBA restrictions are about - multiple max deals. MIN has reason to be concerned in 2024-25.
However, since most teams don’t carry three max deal players, it creates auctions for buyers of sub-elite max players like Towns and Dame, and if they are still productive, will maintain trade value. This is another thing about max deals that many on the trade board (myself included) have gotten wrong for the last two decades, when we are shocked year after year by how much actual teams get in trade for their sub-elite max players, who we had previously deemed “untradable.”
Do the two underlines not contradict each other?










