Golabki wrote:Scoot McGroot wrote:Golabki wrote:Assuming the Celts have zero interest in Vando (which I think is probably true) the benefit of the trade is that you keep that salary slot on the books for a future trade.
The benefit of the stretch would be that you save a couple extra million per year over the course of the deal and you keep a bit more flexibility in terms of the extra roster spot.
Would you rather have a 13M non-expiring to move next offseason, or a little extra space and an extra roster spot? I can see your argument for not burning the salary slot, but it doesn't strike me as obviously way better. So that's maybe where I'm missing your point.
Again, not claiming Simons is a big value. If you flip Maxi in for Vando in this deal, it's an easy yes for the Celtics.
If this is he argument, you could still do the swap proposed and just stretch Vando? It’d either be a $5m per year cap hit over 5 years, or a $5.5m cap hit over 7 years, depending on how his player option is contractually negotiated. That would be less than Simons’s $9.2 per annum cap hit?
But I tend to think that Boston wouldn’t necessarily view Vandy as a worthless player. In fact, at least this year, he’d be their best defensive option at the forwards spot? He seems like he’d be in line for solid minutes at the forwards, for sure, as he provides a defensive presence at those spots that Boston doesn’t otherwise have on the roster?
As for the Maxi swap, I’m sure Boston would love that. I don’t know they’d love it enough to pay the first round pick or so of value it would cost though?
As a C's fan I'd rather not have the stretch out that far... but you're right... it's debatable.
I don't think he's worthless, like he deserves to be in the league. But if he was a FA this offseason he'd been on a 1 year vet min deal. The Celtics have Walsh, MInott and Tillman as cheap no-shoot defensive forwards, and I don't really see Vando is a big upgrade on any of them. He's better than Walsh and MInott, but I'd prefer to have the younger guys who still have more of a chance to develop a semi-consistent 3. And he's better than Tillman if healthy, but he always seems to be hurt, and the Celts seem to like Tillman as a culture guy, so I don't really see it as a big upgrade.
Put a different way... I look at what the Lakers are giving up for Simons in this deal, and it looks to good for them because of how bad the Vando contract is. Could they trade Vando, Dalton and a distant second for a tire fire on an expiring?
I think Vando is just different from all of those guys? Tillman is a guy who's an undersized 5. Add in that he's not very good, and not very good defensively, and I don't see a conflict? Minott and Walsh are definitely 2/3 kind of players, while Vando is really a 3/4?
As for the valuation differences, I think it's all pretty close as, in theory, LA is eating a large amount of immediate salary, while Boston is shaving a TON of immediate salary? But, change it to have it legal from an apron perspective, and LA would definitely be paying more as they'd have to include Kleber or something larger to Brooklyn, so the cost would be higher in that regard.
Just, cutting almost a full MLE of salary immediately off the books, while ALSO getting under the tax line completely is a TON of value. And Boston is paying essentially nothing here in doing so? Seems pretty solid value. And for a guy that Boston will likely bring off the bench anyway? So the whole concept of trading for Vandy to come off the bench probably isn't a big issue?
It's not sexy, for sure. But when you're getting a ton of value and paying nothing, it makes sense?