Since no team claimed Miles off waivers, the Blazers property rights were not transferred to any team.
This doesn't mean that Portland still has them.

Since no team claimed Miles off waivers, the Blazers property rights were not transferred to any team.
Sham wrote:Since no team claimed Miles off waivers, the Blazers property rights were not transferred to any team.
This doesn't mean that Portland still has them.


d-train wrote:Therefore, a condition that is intended to be a measure of fitness by counting games played must specify which team the games are played for. And, if it’s the intent of the rule to be 10 games played for any team, it has to say the 10 game s can be played for any team. In this case, the rule just says 10 games played. So, either we can agree the games must be played for the team that owns the players rights at the time of his career ending injury or we have a condition that is too vague to enforce.
d-train wrote:loserX wrote:They RENOUNCED his property rights when they waived him. That's what waiving entails.
When the Blazers waived Miles that gave every other team in the league the opportunity to assume the Blazers property rights to Miles' services. Since no team claimed Miles off waivers, the Blazers property rights were not transferred to any team.
d-train wrote:The relevant fact is the Blazers never assigned the right to determine Miles fitness to play in NBA games to another NBA team.
loserX wrote:It most certainly does not have to say that. The rule specifies "10 NBA games". The only stipulation is that the games are in the NBA. Were the games that he played for Memphis NBA games? In order to say that the rule was improperly applied, you must prove that those Memphis games were not NBA games. Good luck with that.
It is not by any means too vague to enforce. 10 games in the NBA = 10 games in the NBA.
loserX wrote:That was not their right to assign. They lost that right, in addition to everything else, upon the resolution of the waiver. At that point Darius Miles ceased to be a member of the Blazers (even if he was not yet a member of another team), and they had absolutely zero rights or say in what happened to him after that.

FGump wrote:More importantly, no one else in the NBA shares your view. The Blazers - who have the vested interest - have NEVER disputed the validity of Miles going back onto their cap. The rule is what it is, and at the end of the day the fact you are laboring so hard to make it say something other than the obvious isn't going to change it. The Blazers are paying Miles this year and next after having waived him, and his salary counts against their cap like every other waived player does.


d-train wrote:loserX wrote:It most certainly does not have to say that. The rule specifies "10 NBA games". The only stipulation is that the games are in the NBA. Were the games that he played for Memphis NBA games? In order to say that the rule was improperly applied, you must prove that those Memphis games were not NBA games. Good luck with that.
It is not by any means too vague to enforce. 10 games in the NBA = 10 games in the NBA.
The CBA says nothing more than what it says. The CBA doesn’t say 10 NBA games played for the Grizzlies, which is different from 10 NBA games played for the Blazers. You can’t add the stipulation into the CBA that 10 NBA games played with the Grizzlies is the equivalent of 10 NBA games played with the Blazers. The CBA doesn’t say the 10 NBA games can be played for any team.
(4) Notwithstanding Section 4(h)(1) and (2) above, if after a player’s Salary is excluded from Team Salary in accordance with this Section 4(h), the player plays in ten (10) NBA games in any Season, the excluded Salary for the Salary Cap Year covering such Season and each subsequent Salary Cap Year shall thereupon be included in Team Salary
d-train wrote:I agree that after Miles cleared waivers his property rights were his to market to other NBA teams. The pertinent facts are the CBA didn't require the Blazers to transfer the right to determine Miles' fitness to play NBA games to another team and they didn't. That leaves the Blazers as the only NBA team that can put Miles back on their salary cap after the NBA determined that Miles sustained a career-ending injury.
You don't know that no one else in the NBA shares my view and neither do I.
The Blazers might or might not share my view. If they don't, then of course this entire argument is moot.
Nowhere does the rule transfer the Blazers authority to determine the fitness of its players to another team.
based on what the Blazers have said about it there is going to be a FA signing this summer the NBA will not approve and an appeal
The Blazers never transferred their discretionary right to be the ultimate judge of Miles’ fitness to play in an NBA game
When the Blazers waived Miles that gave every other team in the league the opportunity to assume the Blazers property rights to Miles' services. Since no team claimed Miles off waivers, the Blazers property rights were not transferred to any team." ...."The relevant fact is the Blazers never assigned the right to determine Miles fitness to play in NBA games to another NBA team
The pertinent facts are the CBA didn't require the Blazers to transfer the right to determine Miles' fitness to play NBA games to another team and they didn't. That leaves the Blazers as the only NBA team that can put Miles back on their salary cap after the NBA determined that Miles sustained a career-ending injury.




d-train wrote:A player can’t play in an NBA game without playing for a NBA team. The decision by NBA team’s of which players to play is subjective and can’t be equated to each other. Therefore, the team is an essential variable that can’t be left undetermined. An agreement is only an agreement if the parties agree to all the essential terms.
d-train wrote:I agree that after the Blazers waived Miles and he cleared waivers it is too late for the Blazers to transfer any rights associated with Miles’ contract. However, that is not a bad thing for the Blazers.
The critical issue is after the NBA signed the CBA it’s too late to go back now and add the requirement that the Blazers transfer their right to determine Miles’ fitness to play NBA games. So, the NBA can’t put Miles back on the Blazers salary cap because the Grizzlies determine he is fit to play in NBA games.
d-train wrote: I agree that after the Blazers waived Miles and he cleared waivers it is too late for the Blazers to transfer any rights associated with Miles’ contract....
d-train wrote:... the requirement that the Blazers transfer their right to determine Miles’ fitness to play NBA games.
d-train wrote: So, the NBA can’t put Miles back on the Blazers salary cap because the Grizzlies determine he is fit to play in NBA games.
loserX wrote:d-train wrote:A player can’t play in an NBA game without playing for a NBA team. The decision by NBA team’s of which players to play is subjective and can’t be equated to each other. Therefore, the team is an essential variable that can’t be left undetermined. An agreement is only an agreement if the parties agree to all the essential terms.
To which agreement are you referring? If it's the determination of Miles' fitness to play for the Grizzlies, only the parties with any right to participate in the agreement are required to agree. The Blazers had no rights in that determination, so it doesn't matter what they think.
If you're talking about the NBA adding Miles' salary back to the Blazers' cap, that is a provision of the Collective Bargaining Agreement which binds all the teams in the NBA, including the Blazers. The Blazers do not have the prerogative to ignore or be exempt from specific clauses of the CBA just because they don't like them. The Blazers ALREADY agreed to the essential terms of that provision, and every other provision, when the CBA was struck.
loserX wrote:The Blazers can only determine whether he is fit to play for the Blazers. When they waive him, that right is terminated (and meaningless anyway, since he is not a member of the team). That right ceased to exist post-waiver. There is nothing to transfer, therefore there is nothing to be required to transfer. The league does not need to specify a requirement that cannot possibly be satisfied.



d-train wrote:I am referring to the CBA. A system arbitrator can strikeout any portion of the CBA that is so ambiguous the intent of the parties can’t be determined. Additionally, the system arbitrator can strikeout any provision missing essential terms of an agreement.
d-train wrote:For example, the 10 game rule doesn’t specify for which team(s) other than the Blazers the 10 games can be played. If the system arbitrator decides the team is an essential term of agreement and the team isn’t specified, he or she can strikeout that portion of the CBA.
d-train wrote:The Blazers can only determine which players are fit to play for the Blazers and the Grizzlies can only determine which players are fit to play for the Grizzlies. The NBA can't unilaterally make rules that allow the Grizzlies to make roster decisions for the Blazers.
d-train wrote:So, if you can't find where in the CBA that the Blazers transferred the right to determine the fitness of players to play for the Blazers in unambiguous terms, then the NBA and the Grizzlies don't have the right.
d-train wrote:FGump, are you saying that the determination of a player’s fitness to play isn't individual to each team?

For example, the 10 game rule doesn’t specify for which team(s) other than the Blazers the 10 games can be played. If the system arbitrator decides the team is an essential term of agreement and the team isn’t specified, he or she can strikeout that portion of the CBA.

Sham wrote:For example, the 10 game rule doesn’t specify for which team(s) other than the Blazers the 10 games can be played. If the system arbitrator decides the team is an essential term of agreement and the team isn’t specified, he or she can strikeout that portion of the CBA.
Why the hell would they want to do that?