BucksRUS wrote:emunney wrote:BDUB_30 wrote:RFA's get offers all the time . Its just excuse making from the Ramon fan club. Nobody wants to pay this guy what he wants because hes not good enough. Dance around it all you want , its the honest to god truth.
Weve heard so many excuses for this its pathetic . The same exact thing about david lee. Hes sitting unsigned because he wants a certain amount of money that nobody wants to pay .
Uh, yeah, that is obviously true. The relevant matter, though, is what he's asking for. If he wants 7 a year and nobody will give him that, that's very different than being unable to get 3. The real fact is that you don't know what he's asking for, nor do you know what he's being offered. So what are you talking about? Maddenisms, basically. "Ya see, the reason Sessions can't get a contract is that he can't agree on a contract with any team." Brilliant.
We don't know exactly what he is looking for other than statements from beat writers who are to be trusted only as far as their sources. Maybe, but Sessions can't command over the MLE for the first two seasons. So since no team can give him 7 a year, what is the point. Half the teams in the NBA still have enough money to sign Ramon to a MLE offer, so why haven't they?
What do you mean? First off, the full MLE is ~6.7m/yr. 2nd, they haven't given him that offer because they don't want to pay him that much money for what could be any number of reasons. Maybe they don't think he's good enough, maybe they're too close to the luxury tax, maybe they're saving it for 2010, maybe their owner is hemorrhaging worth... who knows? Not you nor I.
Let's get back to the RFA/UFA thing. Please find another way to explain why you think they're the same for Sessions, given that no team wants to offer him the MLE, no team (except the Bucks) can offer him a one year contract, and the Bucks can match any offer deemed reasonable. You've said yourself that RFAs typically sign, when they sign, for ABOVE market value, to try to ensure their original team won't match. Isn't that alone enough to make RFA and UFA very different for Ramon? Could it be that the reason the Knicks, for example, haven't offered him a contract yet is that they DO want him, and they don't want to offer something the Bucks will match -- thus losing any chance at him -- yet they don't want to tie up too much money for 2010? And that maybe they're working on something to free up space so that the weight of the latter decreases?