Jamaaliver wrote:Time will tell. But don't teams make extra revenue for sellouts, nationally televised games and deep playoff runs?
Kyrie might sell jerseys, but if the team isn't selling out and is running in last place I'd have to think Horford on a more palatable contract leading a playoff team might help their bottom line over an injury prone, under achieveing player who gets lots of highlights on ESPN.
Again, you sell a stock at its highest value. Waiting till the last minute could drastically decrease what the team might garner in trade.
Another difference: Cavs haven't sniffed the playoffs in years and the GM's and coach's jobs could be at stake.
You don't get it.
The Cavs have greater attendance than the Hawks.
http://espn.go.com/nba/attendanceAccording to Forbes their franchise is ranked 8 spots higher than the Hawks and valued at almost $100 million more with an actual operating profit rather than loss.
http://www.forbes.com/pictures/mli45ehe ... cavaliers/They even receive more nationally televised games than the Hawks
http://www.sbnation.com/2013/8/6/459568 ... v-scheduleYes, this is a small market team and yes, this is a team that hasn't even sniffed a playoffs yet alone a playoff race in 4 years yet from top to bottom they are regarded as greater than the Hawks franchise. You don't seem to recognize why the Hawks trudge on in pursuit of playoff mediocrity instead of rebuilding and that's highly due to the fact that they have to scrap together whatever
extra income comes from a playoff run because the team can't make a profit or even offset its debts off of
base revenue.
You sell a stock at it's highest, sure, but you don't sell a stock while it's still accumulating value by the fistful. Kyrie was just voted in to start an All Star game after all and you see a Cav fan mention selling Kyrie for a newborn, an arm and a leg.......and you think that that is a small price to pay? You think Al Horford and change equates to that? You think Irving will turn down a max extension? And then what, sign with another team? .......Only to watch the Cavs match a deal that would be less than the max that they could offer him. Nothing but win-wins across the board for the
Cavs, not Kyrie (well besides becoming extremely rich).
There is no "last minute" apocalypse approaching for the Cavs considering that Kyrie is still over a season away from
Restricted free agency. They will move heaven and earth first before they even attempt to consider moving their cash cow for anything less than another cash cow. The wiretap you quoted even said it...despite Kyrie being the crux of the problem they are still likely to give him a max extension and trade everyone else.
Your whole argument is in line with an
UNrestricted free agent not a restricted one, you need to remember why Josh never played for the Grizzlies and why Jeffrey isn't a Buck. The rules just so happen to favor teams more than players at this stage of their careers.