Worm Guts wrote:guest81 wrote:Worm Guts wrote:
I don’t know. I don’t think he was taking advantage of Joe Smith with that deal. It seemed like the league was Ok with it as a wink and handshake deal. Glen was just dumb enough to put it in writing.
I mean he was taking advantage of the salary cap. Just goes to the intelligence of Taylor that he did it with Joe Smith, instead of an actual superstar player. Obviously the league wasn't ok with it as stern gave the wolves the death penalty
Everyone knew what was happening when it happened. There was no penalty until it was found in writing, and obviously they have to because they can’t allow such blatant circumvention of the salary cap. I just think it was so freaking stupid more than anything.
Calling it the death penalty is a little ridiculous though.
That’s how I saw it too. The Wolves offered to pay Joe Smith the most possible under the CBA, but were limited for one year by the rules. Smith could have gotten more signing elsewhere, so McHale and Taylor promised if he took an under-market contract for one season, they would pay him well the following year. And while this stuff goes on all the time, McHale and Taylor gave Smith that guarantee in writing.
This is a big deal for the NBA. The entire system is based on the CBA’s financial restrictions, and the assumption that players will sign contracts that maximize their earning potential. If players are intentionally signing for less, based on future contracts or incentive, it messes up parity between teams. If every team has a payroll of $150 mil, we want them to have $150 mil in talent to make games competitive. However, imagine if all teams were competing for All Stars, bidding against each other, but the stars all agreed to play for the Lakers for one year, for a tenth of their market value, but a big bonus later, they would have an unfair amount of talent.
You’re right, Joe Smith was not the caliber of player to do this with, but the NBA had to show it would come down hard, if other owners got caught. Non-FA destinations like MIN would be even more out of luck. This was a dumb move, and fully worthy of fan criticism (though I’d place the bulk of the blame on the GM for knowing the rules, not the owner). But it was hardly snake-like, the opposite in fact, because Taylor was guaranteeing Smith a payday, and willing to put it in writing.