Walton1one wrote:Let’s use Ant as an example, many, myself included, thought his value was 1st round+ extra in terms of value and that a team like ORL would have interest in trading for him. He is an above average offensive player, good shooter, which ORL lacks, is from there, always a plus, still young (25) on a slightly overpaid deal ($25/yr), but with only 2yrs left.
What did ORL do?
They signed KCP TO 3yr FA deal, for less money, giving up zero assets to get him. He is nowhere near the offensive player that Ant is, near end of his career and I question whether he will be impactful as they think he will be (playing with Jokic /Murray inflated his impact IMO, he won’t get that luxury in ORL).
So, older, less offense, MUCH better defense, cheaper, no assets lost. I don’t think he improves them by much a all, but not sure Simons’ would either, other than he fits better with their needs/roster/age
So where does that leave POR?
With an overpaid, offensive only player, whose offense does not make up for his defensive shortcomings, who will not come off the bench (especially for POR, bet he would for a playoff team though), where he is best suited, who takes away shots/development from younger players with his high usage, who wants to win, meaning he isn’t resigning with a rebuilding POR team when his contract expires & whose value is already declining b/c of new NBA landscape and will only continue to decline
So Cronin is left with a very fine needle to thread, he has to hope that as options dwindle or that a team with playoff aspirations loses a key player, that someone gets desperate enough to try and acquire Ant, but he is delusional if he thinks it will be at a premium. If he can get any decent draft capital (1st round pick) or a young (2nd/3rd yr) player for him, he should jump all over it, just not sure that opportunity will present itself.
This is the reality of where POR is\where Cronin’s actions put them, and dealing Grant looks to be similar/more challenging.
I mentioned this as soon as the detail of the new CBA started coming out--it's going to vastly change the way GMs operate, both in the short-term and long.
Having what amounts to a passive hardcap on salaries means that unless you are a Top 3 team, GMs are unlikely to overspend...and even then it may not be worth the revenue to go too deep into the second apron. That all depends on media deal money.
IMHO, the new Meta is going to shift to teams with one or two star players surrounded by many above average, toolsy do-it-alls on budget contracts. Steph Curry is great, but having 3 players that are 70% of Steph will be better under the new CBA. That way if one goes down you still have production.
I'll say it again, Rookies that produce will be the most valuable contracts in the NBA, even though they are basically untradeable.