ReggiesKnicks wrote:JRoy wrote:ReggiesKnicks wrote:
You also save money this year, 9,336,053 to be exact if LaVine waives his trade kicker.
LaVine and Sharpe can both play some minutes at the 3. There is no problem with minutes.
RWIII and Thybulle weren't providing much if any bench defense in 2025 and the expectation should be neither are going to be valuable rotation pieces in 2026. Just because players wear a Portland Trailblazers jersey doesn't mean they provide valuable bench minutes.
You should have no problem finding a Simons trade![]()
Lavines contract becomes an obstacle to resigning young guys.
POR passes.
Which ones?
Shaedon Sharpe is the only player who needs an extension, but he can be signed to an extension up to 25% of the cap regardless of Zach LaVine being on the roster or not.
Scoot Henderson, Donovon Clingan, Toumani Camara and Deni Avdija are all due new contract after Zach Lavine expires.
By my numbers, Portland would have 7 players + Sharpe under contract in 2026-2027. I am going to assume Sharpe signs for around Desmond Bane, being optimistic here, deal starting at 35 Million in 2026-2027.
That's 8 players for Portland at just under 125 Million.
LaVine 47,499,660
Sharpe 35,000,000
Avdija 13,125,000
Scoot 13,585,523
Clingan 7,519,920
Murray 5,315,004
Camara 2,406,205
Pick #11 5,000,900
Meanwhile, the salary figures for the 2026-2027 are listed below
Cap:170,112,000
Lux: 206,686,000
Portland would be sitting 35 Million below the Cap and 81 Million below the Tax. Yet you think they would have trouble retaining their players?![]()
Portland could resign Ayton to a reasonable deal, retain a Simons return of 30-35 Million and still have plenty of cap flexibility.
Please, and I say this nicely, don't talk out of your ass.
I'm not saying your idea is good or bad -- I'd have to think about it more -- but adding to the 2026-2027 payroll does potentially inhibit the team's best opportunity to renegotiate and extend with Camara and Deni, for which the Blazers would need to preserve cap space next summer.
You might argue back that the Blazers will have other opportunities to extend those two, but it becomes far less compelling for those two to extend the longer they play on their presently undervalued contracts and the closer they get to free agency. Portland's best card to play is the ability to renegotiate their current deals.