gswhoops wrote:Scoot McGroot wrote:giberish wrote:
I'd be shocked if being in the tax this year or not will ever make a difference as to whether or not GS pays a repeater tax. There won't be a 2nd year out of the tax until their post-Curry rebuild - at which point they'll probably be out of the tax for a couple years.
If it's easy enough GS could certainly make a move to get out of the tax this year (if only for the tax saving of this season). But I don't see them being overly concerned about it or making extreme moves.
They could be out of the tax this year and next if they wanted to, even competing. What if they make a deal for another star and it uses Kuminga for value and salary matching of some combo of Wiggins, Hield, SloMo, etc?
I wouldn’t say they’re desperate to get out of the repeater tax, but they’ve already effectively replaced Payton in the rotation, so why let him keep you in repeater zone going forward? If you get one year out of the luxury tax, you can then easily decide to recalibrate and stay under the tax another year. But if you stay in the tax for a guy you’ve replaced, any chance at resetting the repeater would take 2 new years of actions.
I agree Scoot. To put it another way, why wouldn't we try to get out of the tax this year if all it costs us is 2 seconds and a non-rotation player?
Yeah. Mostly, it opens up a ton of flexibility the next couple years and doesn’t really hurt them on the court, while costing so little. It’d be one of those “keep all your options open” kind of thing.