SacKingZZZ wrote:Yeah, but you also have to factor in the situation with contending teams and their cap structure. Most contending teams have a few max level guys and as a result won't really be giving out too many contracts in that range, and because they are contenders they'll get a discount on some free agents and/or target players entering the final few years of their career. JT was a bad deal the day he was signed, period. Not because he's not capable of living up to that deal IMO, but because he won't ever be able to live up to that deal here. It's been long enough though that no team will touch him now.
I completely agree with what you said, but I think the fact that we live in a superstar driven league, there is no place for the Carl Landrys or Jason Thompsons of the world on a contending roster. Unless you have the one outlying perfect roster (ie Pistons) or perfect situation (ie Mavericks), you aren't winning without a few stars/superstars.
If you look at most of the teams that have been in the championship contention in the past decade or so, all of the teams had maybe 70-85% of the teams total salary going to 2-3 players. With the remaining 9-10 players or so getting that last sliver. It's just the nature of basketball. 1 DeMarcus Cousins will have far more impact than 3 Carl Landry's. This isn't the NFL or MLB, depth isn't necessarily that beneficial, at least not depth making a lot of money.