Scoot McGroot wrote:jbk1234 wrote:Scoot McGroot wrote:
Sure, but players have expenses with trades. Moving sucks. And he'd probably still get traded anyway. So why not have the money?
I mean the premise here is that Kuzma really isn't worth his current contract and there won't be a trade if he doesn't waive the kicker. He's making $23M this season, I think he can spring for moving expenses in order to get himself to a more competitive situation.
Guys get traded all the time whether they're worth their contract or not.
Again, I always view trade kickers as taxes teams pay when the player is involved in a trade they'd veto if they could.
Or, you could view it as money that is legally owed the player if their team trades them. Whether they would veto it if they could. The default is to accept it because their traded. If they decline it, they're generally just giving money back, which the players association has been asking players not to do for awhile now.
Yes, if there's a trade, then the player is legally entitled to the money. If the receiving team won't consent to the trade unless the player waives the kicker, then the player can agree, or not agree, in which case there's no trade and no extra money.
If the union wants kickers not to be waivable, they should negotiate for that, but I suspect their own members would object for two reasons: (1) it will be a lot harder to get trade kickers included in contracts; and (2) players in Kuzma's situation could find themselves stuck on a rebuilding team for half a decade.