TeamTragic wrote:garrick wrote:lilfishi22 wrote:That means we're stretching him
Which is the worst outcome imo
If this goes through it's Ishbia being short sighted once again and making disastrous moves with lasting consequences. Sure we will save some money this season and the next but that money is going to be on the books for a long time.
Why would anyone including Ishbia pay 230M in tax to keep Beal on this team?
Ask any owner in this league and they would have made the same decision.
Second this puts the team outside BOTH tax aprons which allows for more flexibility.
Does that extended cap hit hurt the franchise? Maybe but at least the cap is slightly increasing and Beal is not on this team.
Maybe think about that before trading away all our picks to assemble to most expensive team in NBA history?
Not having control over our picks AND having less capspace than any other team in the league is essentially the worst possible situation a team can be in.
If the Suns wanted to be under the second apron, they could have not picked up Richards and done the Detroit deal Miami made (Duncan will make about the same as Allen while being a worse player).
That deal would have put us in the 2nd apron, and we could have let Beal expire in two years, and we'd have a bunch of space when the free agency market looks flooded with talent. The 2027 free offseason is basically our way out of the current mess, but instead our front office seems to think we'll be fine assembling a roster with 25 mil of dead money on our books for half a decade.
To NOW bring up the 230 mil in tax after Isbiah actively traded to put us in this situation seems ridiculous. "here's all our picks, please give me your big name players, I'll pay whatever is needed... Oh wait, I'm paying how much?? Nevermind, let's just kill our capspace while letting the rest of the league pick up the players we traded our future for at Temu prices.