o2cats wrote:Since Watson, and Brewer were not traded, waived, not claimed, and signed for minimum salary contracts, the players had zero value by themselves. The only value was that of being able to clear cap space, by cutting them, before they became guaranteed. Korver had enough positive value, relative to his contract, to get out from under the $500K guarantee, but not enough to bring a pick, without taking something bad back, or they would have jumped on it.
If there really were deals, that would have returned draft picks, almost by definition, the players obtained would have had a negative value, at least equal to those picks. The other team would in essence be paying the Bulls to take the contracts off their hands, sticking the Bulls with players that would tie up the limited cap space they had to work with.
So if there were any offered deals, the negative value of their contracts would make the Bulls worse short term, to gain whatever picks were supposedly offer. You can see why the Bulls would pass on that type of opportunity. I am surprised the Bulls board would want to go that route, but after the call for a Deng deal, and suggestions like this, it does support the tank idea some suggest.
I expect there was plenty of teams trying to dump negative value contracts into the non guaranteed deals. You can see how hard the Bulls are trying to fill out the roster that is now hard capped. If they had taken one of those deals, they would not even had the full MLE, and the BAE, to get the players they were targeting. Even if they were willing to pass on the players they liked, and accepted the player they did not, to get the pick, they would be paying his salary, and tax.
The end result would be the player they did not want, the MMLE, instead of the MLE, and BAE, and $8.5M in salary, and tax, in the Wes Johnson example, for a 1st round pick. You can get a 1st round pick much cheaper than that. That is malpractice in the basketball sense.
There is no rule in trading consecutive 1st round picks, just consecutive future 1st round picks, so once the draft was over, Minn was free to trade this years pick.