LarryCoon wrote:Today I've been following the hypothetical scenario -- what if Portland makes a waiver claim in order to prevent any other team from claiming him (or signing him later) and putting him over the 10-game threshold?
So far I've heard multiple opinions (one from a team exec, another from an exec of a company that does business with the league) agreeing that while technically feasible, Portland would risk having it considered circumvention and losing their cap relief anyway.
Wow, I'm not a league exec of course, but I gotta disagree here.
While I can understand the fact that there is a risk of other franchises objecting, on what grounds exactly could they complain? Seems to me like it meets the letter of the law. Isn't this a league of lawyers where every loophole is considered allowable until the rules are rewritten?
Circumvention - Art XIII - pertains to a prohibition of "outside the rules" agreements and contracts that secretly hide player compensation from the league. That's all.
http://www.nbpa.com/cba_articles/article-XIII.php It is well within the rules for the Blazers to claim Miles on waivers. And they won't be hiding compensation to him.
Would other franchises argue that the Blazers should NOT be allowed to make a move that's in their best interest? I can't see how that would be a precedent any of them wouild favor. Would they argue that the Blazers should now be FORCED to be exposed to huge tax risk, even though they in good faith got him declared medically unfit in the first place? Again, none of them would want to go there either. Would they claim a semi-impaired Miles playing mop-up minutes for a few more games this season - or not - is somehow going to alter the NBA landscape? Now we're getting absurd.
Little technical moves made for payroll, cap, and tax purposes are done all the time (including players being waived or players being sat for insurance/payroll purposes), so how would this be any different?
1 - There is nothing secret being done. He's been waived, and they are making an allowable claim.
2 - Miles will still get paid in full. In fact, if they claim him, he'll end up with more pay not less than if he hits the street unemployed.
3 - Another team can claim him first. If anyone else wants him, that is. If no one else wants him and Portland does, isn't that de facto evidence that the Blazers haven't got in anyone else's way by putting him on their roster?
4 - By claiming him the Blazers are merely taking steps to prevent ANOTHER team from fiddling with the Blazer cap and thereby with cap/tax issues, aren't they?
5 - There is no question that they would be claiming him in accord with their own best interest.
6 - Teams are always allowed to dole out minutes in whatever fashion is in the teams best interest (and surely $18M is in the Blazers' best interest).
The only thing I can see to question is, is there any evidence that Memphis waived him as a collusive favor to Portland, with a quid pro quo hidden somewhere either now or later? I can understand how such collusion could and should be hit hard, if any is involved here. Otherwise, I don't see the problem.