coldfish wrote:Up until now, the Bulls have frequently spent less than they could have and certainly less than their market. That doesn't necessarily make them small market but it does make them look cheap. The people who defend Jerry don't want to look at it from a macro viewpoint because that's pretty ugly. They want to break it up into a bunch of spending decisions which makes it look better, certainly.
Hmm. Sounds like what I just did in the post immediately before yours, fish.
"Macro viewpoint." That sounds pretty learned. Could you please expound on that macro viewpoint and what Bulls management should have/could have done to make it less, as you say, ugly? And yes, I want to get into spending details because I think that, when it comes to what the Bulls did when given the choice of spending or not spending, they've tended to spend when it made basketball sense to spend.
We will have another such litmus test this year. The Bulls probably are not getting Carmelo or Love. That is going to leave them with an amnesty decision on Boozer. Amnestying him will only cost them a few million dollars net but there are reports that Reinsdorf really doesn't want to do it.
If the Bulls refuse to amnesty Boozer or even worse, give away a pick or something just to save the cost of doing it, it will be a rather large piece of evidence that the Bulls value profits far more than team value or other teams do.
Ooh, thanks for reminding me. Remember when it was reported that the Bulls could have unloaded Hamilton's contract if they'd give up future picks and they refused? Please add that to the balance sheet of decisions where Bulls management favored the team over the bottom line.
As for Boozer, I'll be very surprised to see him on the 2014-15 Bulls roster, but I can foresee scenarios where not amnestying may be a good basketbll decision (there are worse backup PFs in the league).
I do think that Chicago's unique ownership structure hurts the team in this regard. It sure looks like a bunch of different partial owners use the Bulls as a cash cow where yearly profits are required. Other team owners look at the team as a long term asset, much like a growth stock and are just looking to maximize franchise value.
Just to make our disagreement complete, I think you badly misread what makes Bulls ownership tick. The one situation the Bulls ownership can't accept is a bad team that loses money. It offends their business sensibilities. They've proven to be OK with having the highest payroll in the league if the team is primo. After the dynasty ended, they showed that they could accept bad team performance and moderate profits, at least in the short term.
The group of multimillionaires who own the Bulls could each lose his entire Bulls investment tomorrow and we wouldn't be holding a tag day for any of them. No one is more aware of this fact than they are. It's fun to own a piece of the Bulls. It's decidedly more fun when the team is winning and really fun when the team is the talk of the town (right now they're envious as hell of the Blackhawks owners).