https://basketball.realgm.com/analysis/276818/The-Era-Of-Easy-Max-Contracts-Is-Over
The Bulls desperately want to trade LaVine, a three-level scorer with All-Star bona fides who can drop 25 points with one hand while mindlessly scrolling Instagram with the other. They can’t.
That’s because in 2022, LaVine signed a five-year, $215 million maximum contract extension. It was roughly the same dollar total as Devin Booker got from the Phoenix Suns that same summer. Booker and LaVine were different players, even then. Booker was a year removed from an NBA Finals run. He had proven he can win at the league’s highest levels. LaVine had played four career playoff games. They both got max deals.
Why? Because that just what you did back then, under the previous CBA.
Within the previous salary cap ecosystem, teams gave away max contracts like donuts on free donut day.
But free donut day is over in the NBA. Now front offices must account for every sprinkle as the first and second apron looms. Teams are coming to the realization that they will only have room for two maximum contracts within this new salary-cap structure, lest they go over the second apron. That means being more discerning than ever when committing max money.
Teams don’t want LaVine, not because he isn’t a good player, but because he isn’t worth one of their two max slots. It’s a numbers game.
I am calling that Lavine will stay at least until he becomes an expiring contract (i.e. 2026). If Lavine cannot produce at superstar level, no team would trade for him. And if he can actually produce at superstar level, the team might actually get into the Playoffs so AKME won't trade him.