MagicFan41 wrote:Bobby Ray wrote:From what i hear the cba doesn't start to hit teams hard until this coming season. supposedly it's going to be the death of the middle class deals. When i think about it the owners really kicked the player's ass in this last negotiation, they basically cut out the middle class so the players that would usually fill up that space is probably going to get less money going forward
I think this is a fallacy, the death of the middle class deal. You aren't just going to get max guys and small contract guys. That's not how free markets work. If a guy is worth about $8-10 a yr, that's prob about what they'll get. The free market will work itself out. There aren't enough max guys to go around for every team and many players are worth more than $5m/yr. So of course you'll see middle deals. Looks at all the deals this summer already offered in that range. Evans, Martin, Iggy, West, Splitter etc etc. Plus you can't say that it's cuz the penalties haven't kicked in. They basically start kicking in next summer and these guys are getting 4-5 yr offers this summer. So of course the penalties are taken into account I'm these offers.
Hey don't shoot the messenger that's what i'm hearing
The new collective bargaining agreement that was born out of last year’s lockout will impose much stiffer penalties for teams that exceed the salary cap. Teams started bracing for it ever since play resumed on Christmas Day in 2011, and the reckoning is just around the corner. Owners are keeping one eye on the court and the other on their wallets.
“Every team is watching what it can do and how it can improve its team in connection with the much higher luxury tax,” Commissioner David Stern said just before the All-Star break.
The new CBA may not be responsible just for slowing down the amount of activity around the trade deadline. The total number of players traded in the week leading up to the deadline was 45 in 2010 and 49 in 2011, according to STATS LLC. Last year, that number dipped to 27. Not one player has been dealt yet this week.
Under the previous agreement, if a team exceeded the luxury tax level by $4 million, it paid an additional $4 million in tax penalties. If it went over by $14 million, it paid $14 million in penalties.
Next season, because of various increases in penalties, that $4 million will cost a team $6 million. And the team that goes over by $14 million will be hit with a $26.25 million bill.
To make matters worse, any team that exceeds the cap “apron” — which is $4 million over the existing luxury tax level — is not allowed to bring in a player in a sign-and-trade deal. That team also will only be able to offer a three-year mid-level exception deal to a free agent rather than the four-year exception that teams under the apron can offer, putting them at a bargaining disadvantage on the open market.
And to top it all off, any team that has exceeded the cap in three of the previous four seasons starting in 2014-15 will be subject to “repeater rates,” which increase the penalties even further.
“Any well-managed team is going to think about the future consequences of their roster management,” Stern said.
A reduction of $1.5 Million does not seem significant. But multiply that amount by the 30 teams in the NBA. $45 Million is a significant number which will reduce the amount received by free agents. Not for Dwight Howard and Chris Paul, and not players who will be signing for close to the minimum. Everyone else, the "middle class" of the NBA. Role players throughout the league will now face even more difficult decisions about how much money they are willing to leave "on the table" in order to sign with a contender.