Infinity2152 wrote:From a straight value perspective, I wouldn't worry about what other teams who can't make moves, are over the cap, have starting PF's, drafted PF's, etc aren't bidding on Kuminga. There are 50 reasons why many teams aren't bidding on Kuminga other than they don't think he's worth a contract. How about the fact that any bargain offer is probably matched by the Warriors, he's a restricted free agent.
In this case, the Warriors seem quite willing to trade him, so that is a bit different than some of the other situations. And sure, there might be plenty of reasons teams aren't interested, but given the Warriors are very open to trading him, no one else seems to be in the mix right now, and that should be a red flag.
Straight value assessment. From a pure asset point of view, is getting an asset of Kuminga's level for expiring Ayo, expiring Carter and a second a better long term value? As in past this year. The every other teams, many teams are clearing cap as hard as possible. Every summer before this, most high level RFA's get offers in the first week, if not day 1, minute 1. Usually overpriced, only way to steal a RFA. The Warriors would be selling Kuminga undervalue in my opinion, since they really don't want to bring him back. As long as they get something positive. I'd consider Ayo, Carter and a second a bargain price to pay for a guy considered one of the top RFA's this summer. Ouside the second round pick, Ayo and Carter cancel each other's value out at best on our team, and they're expiring.
From the Bulls perspective, Ayo is likely a positive asset they can get something else for. Carter is basically a neutral for us as he's just salary filler. Say Ayo is worth a non lotto first, then for this to be a good value play, you'd need to later get more than a non lotto 1st and a 2nd for Kuminga vs just trading Ayo for that now.
The Warriors aren't selling Kuminga undervalued. If he was willing to sign undervalued, they'd just sign him.
This is looking at Kuminga as an asset, not as a player. If your contention is he won't be considered a deal on a front loaded contract next summer, I just disagree. People keep thinking teams are going to act differently than they have every single summer except this one and not go crazy bidding for guys. Teams are paying stupid amounts to keep players, they don't care about the cap, and worse players than Kuminga will get big contracts next summer.
Agree that each summer is unique. Worse players than Kuminga is an interesting statement. I think Kuminga kind of stinks. Like if Kuminga never got better than this, I'm not sure I'd want him on the MLE.
The value is expiring Ayo, Carter who we'd love to get rid of and open up the roster spot, and a second. Basically just expiring Ayo, because we'd probably give up a second just to move Carter and open up the roster spot. Is Ayo above replacement level player right now? Which is zero positive value by contract (small-medium expiring).
Carter does nothing negative for us, Ayo has positive trade value IMO. The opportunity cost is trading Ayo for something else.
Is every player who signs a market value, non max contract overpaid in your opinion? How many free agent signings between $25 mill and $45 mill have you said, great job?
Yeah, I think the majority of these contracts suck. i've stated that before that I would not want to build around guys in this price range and think its a losing proposition. Kuminga on a 25M AAV contract should be your 4th best guy, I don't think Kuminga is that guy today or in the future.
Then tell me why those players couldn't have had a bad year the next year and underplayed their contracts.
Not sure what you mean.