LarryCoon wrote:FGump wrote:How would a partial season contract of any kind not be considered to be changing teams? It's a contract with a team, right?
I believe (without having it in front of me) that a 10-day contract is specifically excluded.
Are you saying a player is NOT considered to have changed teams if he signs a 10-day contract? Where would it say such a thing in the CBA, for example? That's counterintuitive to me.
I see where 10-day contracts are treated differently in regards to waivers, and can understand how they might not want a 10-day deal which runs out in the middle of a season to START the Bird clock. But why wouldn't him signing a 10-day with a new team END his prior Bird clock?
LarryCoon wrote:FGump wrote:Part of what has caused confusion imo is the understanding of what is meant by "signed contracts exclusively with what will become his Prior Team" during that 3 year window. Using McDyess as an example, it's not requiring that each contract in the prior 3 years have been signed with his most prior team to summer of 2009 (ie Detroit), but rather that each signing in that 3 year window be done with the same team with whom he had the immediately preceding contract. There's a big difference.
"Prior Team" is a defined term in the CBA. It refers specifically to the last team for which the player played prior to becoming a VFA. Since this year McDyess will finish the season with Detroit, they are the only team to which "Prior Team" applies. Even though he changed teams in 2008-09, he only signed with his Prior Team (Detroit). The part of the rule that keeps him from being Bird is that he changed teams by signing with his prior team in the THIRD year, not the first.
Larry, I respectfully still think you're off base on this one.
I know that Prior Team is defined in the CBA. I looked at the definition very carefully BEFORE i asked you the above - and I don't believe it's saying what you claim it does as pertains to AD.
To be specific, when you say "Even though [AD] changed teams in 2008-09, he only signed with his Prior Team (Detroit). The part of the rule that keeps him from being Bird is that he changed teams by signing with his prior team" what you just said is in specific contradiction to the definition of Prior Team.
Read the definition again (which is what I was trying to get you to focus on by talking about the teams in all 3 years), and you'll see that when he signed with Detroit, Detroit was NOT his Prior Team at that point. His Prior Team - at the point of free agency after the waiver - had become DENVER when he was traded. The first year-third year stuff is irrelevant.
