PandaKidd wrote:ATLHawksfan21 wrote:PandaKidd wrote:Lebron and Riley convince people tot ake less, its what they do.
LBJ-20 million
Bosh-15 million
Wade- 10 million
45 million, that leaves them with what, up to 77 million tax threshold to sign players?
They cant find someone like Gortat/Blatche etc? Hell Kris Humphries is URFA he could replace Birdman.
Theres lots of options, but it all starts with Bosh and Wade accepting they have to get paid market value. Bosh is an All Star, I really think the way he plays, Wade playing badly hurts him. I think if they convince wade to take the bench role, Bosh will be a better player, especially with another good big next to him.
They will retool. Thats just my gut feeling
I may be wrong on this, but I thought you cannot sign a player for more than the MLE once you go over the initial cap which is projected to be 63 million next season.
That still leaves them with 18 million to sign 1 GOOD player and then -2 or 3 role players right?
They could convince someone like Gortat or Blatche to take less because they could actually win a title.The current mid-level exception allows teams that have no cap space to spend a maximum of $5M for four years as long as the team did not pay the luxury tax in the previous season. If the team is over the cap and did pay the luxury tax the previous season, the mid-level exception is only $3M for 3 years. If the team has cap space, they may spend $2.5M for 2 years. These amounts are set in stone for the 2012-13 season, but will go up 3% each subsequent season. Prior to the current CBA, the mid-level exception amount was pegged to the average salary of players on teams over the salary cap.
I think with 18 million they could sign 1 really good player (not a superstar) and 2-3 good players. Then use the MLE to fill it out. Hell they could convince Bosh and LBJ to take even less IMO if they REALLY want rings.
I believe you have to factor in cap holds when it comes to signing people before the 63 million limit. . I am a novice when it comes to the cap requirements though.
They will also have to convince Haslem to turn down his 4.6 million option for next year when I doubt he will ever see an offer close to that.
I do agree that he stays in Miami if they all restructure but I don't think them restructuring is as sure of a thing as you do. I think this is the point where we disagree.

















