jbk1234 wrote:toooskies wrote:JonFromVA wrote:
Even if true, it still does not indicate it's time to start the luxury tax timer just so we don't have to fill out our bench with different cheaper players.
The question is if we think the different cheaper players will be significantly worse than what we think Okoro will be.
Which players do you think we should look at his off-season if we part ways with Okoro?
My concern with Okoro is more due to how his contract will age (if we just want to duck the tax, I'm moving Niang). Outside of our core 4, we don't have much in the way of assets. If you pay Okoro at the very the top of his market, you could get stuck with him. Worse yet, you could have to attach even more future draft capital in a trade.
Okoro is useful on a team with Mitchell and Garland given his ability to be a situational POA defender. However, if Garland ends up getting traded for a guy like Ingram, Okoro's minutes and role could get even further reduced. If Daniels is part of that trade, Okoro could struggle to get minutes. Part of me thinks that Okoro should sign the Q.O. if he doesn't get a solid offer in the first week. He's the rare player who might actually benefit from it.
Again, this is assuming that the QO at $12.8m isn't too much money but a contract at $14+m per year is. If the Cavs aren't confident in Okoro's continued development then they shouldn't offer him the QO, they should go find someone on the MLE instead.
The only way Daniels is on the Cavs next year is if the Cavs make a bad trade, but even then, he's a worse shooter than Okoro in terms of both percentage and volume.







