JujitsuFlip wrote:toooskies wrote:JujitsuFlip wrote:You said Okoro would have reason to believe he's worth Dillon Brooks/Jaden McDaniels money.
Brooks is $21.5 million AAV and McDaniels is $26.2 million AAV.
I was just saying, i wouldn't give him anywhere near that, because he's not worth it.
Yep. I'm just saying the agent walks into negotiations with that number and the QO looks pretty bad with that expectation. Okoro can say he's Brooks without the attitude and bad shots. He arguably was better on offense than McDaniels last year and a similar caliber of defender.
Brooks and McDaniels are both All-Defense, Okoro cannot say he's like them at all.
They're both actually taller than 6'4".
Brooks may take bad shots but the guy has been a dang near 20 PPG scorer several times. Okoro has never broke 10ppg for any season in his career.
I'd rather a guy take bad shots than be scared to shoot. Hence why I'm high on Strus and most other people didn't want to sign him.
Okoro is more like DJJ than he is Brooks or McDaniels and even then, that guy is more athletic than Okoro could ever dream of being.
Brooks is listed at 6'6", same as Okoro, with only a 6'6" wingspan. I think high volume with low efficiency is a much worse trait than low volume with high efficiency, and Brooks has been sub-LeVert efficiency on his career (without the passing or rebounding). Okoro had a higher score in EPM, LEBRON, DWS, DBPM than Brooks last year, and that was a GOOD year for Brooks. We talk about Okoro not producing in the playoffs but Brooks had a much worse playoffs before he was a free agent.
Jaden McDaniels got his contract before he was named to an all-defense team and had a worse BPM than Okoro when he signed his extension. Last year McDaniels posted a negative VORP, because somehow despite being taller, Okoro outrebounded McDaniels. The Wolves played much worse when McDaniels was on the court last year. Okoro has had a more efficient TS% every year of his career compared to McDaniels.
The only difference is both of the above have had some playoff success, and while Okoro's on/off playoff stats look good, the perception is that he was individually bad despite the team playing better with him out there.
Okoro may not have a case for being quite as valuable as either of those guys but the Cavs also don't have a case for him not being close. The justification for giving him such a low contract offer is that they simply can't afford it and stay under the tax. If the cap went up 10% this year, they would've had space for more moves.
The Cavs can't afford losing rotation spots as they head into the tax next year. That's the biggest threat to our ongoing success-- after the core four, we have Strus and Tyson locked in but we have likely planned on dropping LeVert since the day he signed his contract. Merrill is going to be a UFA next year. Wade and Niang are hard to project as guys who will stay in the rotation, and our group of second rounders hasn't produced any promising cheap rotation guys yet.
The Cavs gambled that Okoro wouldn't get offers that he'd accept and they won that gamble. Now they're playing hardball to either keep Okoro for cheap or move him for another piece, and that doesn't really have an effect on the team until games start being played in October, so I'm in no rush for that to be resolved.