League Circles wrote:DuckIII wrote:League Circles wrote:
It's a beautiful catastrophe. On one hand having next year to more fully evaluate him prevents us from having to take the same risk in overpaying him that we would if he was a UFA this summer. On the other, he'll be a young UFA, and if he even has a healthy season similar to this to date, let alone like he's played since the trade, we might have to pay a ton. Guys like him don't very often become UFAs at his age. Though maybe we'll be saved by not enough teams having true cap space then, but I have no idea if that's true like it is this summer with Giddey where it seems it's probably Brooklyn or bust.
It’s a concern because our FO is bad and may overpay him for basketball like he played earlier this year which would be a mistake.
But there are legitimate reasons to believe that post-trade deadline Coby is a real, sustainable thing. And if next season proves that out you can’t really overpay because that is a max quality shooting guard.
The only downside to having the extra year is that AK has been really terrible so far. It casts a shadow over all strategies discussed.
Agreed on the risk that AK overpays. I don't think there is any realistic scenario where Coby can be a true max guy on a contender. IMO, if he's making a max contract, that pretty much assures that the team won't be much above average. That's why the entire concept of max contract sucks. Though maybe I'm traumatized by seeing 30% and 35% "max" guys on nba teams not living up to that pay. Coby could maybe possibly be OK at 25% max if this is the real him. But isn't he going to be eligible for 30% or even more?
TBF, a DNP David Lee and Bogut were max guys on a contender. One of the best teams ever. Wiggins in the next iteration of that team.
Not saying your points suck, but the grandiose statement of being handicapped by contracts… you’re only handicapped by bad players on big contracts. We literally improved by trading Zach Lavine for 3 “scrubs.”
I’d work backwards with this one, and evaluate by the end of next season how many playoff teams would covet Coby as a starter. If the answer is “most” , you have to seriously consider the weight of his marginal under-performance (to salary) against his value as a prime top-20 guard.