Jdiddy701 wrote:Seriously he's like TJ Warren and JJ. Too calm and cool. He wants to play in Phoenix. I think he really likes his teammates and coach. It's obvious from last season.
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Joe Johnson left Phoenix...

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Jdiddy701 wrote:Seriously he's like TJ Warren and JJ. Too calm and cool. He wants to play in Phoenix. I think he really likes his teammates and coach. It's obvious from last season.
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Qwigglez wrote:Jdiddy701 wrote:Seriously he's like TJ Warren and JJ. Too calm and cool. He wants to play in Phoenix. I think he really likes his teammates and coach. It's obvious from last season.
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Joe Johnson left Phoenix...
desertlakerfan wrote:Bledsoe is not worth a max contract, no team will give him one.
If he truly thinks he's the kind of player that deserves a max deal, he should go the 2016 route. Sign the biggest 2 year deal you can get, then try again for a max deal when they are going to be worth much more due to the new TV deal. He'll still be young enough, and if he's as good as he thinks he is he'll have no problem getting a max deal at that point.
paulpressey25 wrote:Milwaukee sits by the phone while you guys sort this out.
Ryu wrote:paulpressey25 wrote:Milwaukee sits by the phone while you guys sort this out.
Well, you can try to blow us away with an offer.
A little hint: that offer should include one of the two guys born on 1994. or younger.

Ryu wrote:paulpressey25 wrote:Milwaukee sits by the phone while you guys sort this out.
Well, you can try to blow us away with an offer.
A little hint: that offer should include one of the two guys born on 1994. or younger.
paulpressey25 wrote:Ryu wrote:paulpressey25 wrote:Milwaukee sits by the phone while you guys sort this out.
Well, you can try to blow us away with an offer.
A little hint: that offer should include one of the two guys born on 1994. or younger.
Doesn't work that way in RFA. The Suns either offer him the 4/$63 deal or they wait until someone offers it for them. And if the Suns have any concerns about paying him that much money or his potential attitude, then you mine the league for S&T offers.
My guess is that Jason Kidd has had a discussion with Bledsoe and Rich Paul and told them both that the 4/$63 payday awaits in Milwaukee but that the Bucks aren't going to shed the $2.5mm in payroll they need to extend a max offer that likely is matched, and that it is up to those two to figure out a S&T that works for the Suns. Suns meanwhile are content to sit for the moment.
I think the only thing that breaks the logjam is if the Suns propose a 5/$65 with an ETO after year three.
paulpressey25 wrote:Ryu wrote:paulpressey25 wrote:Milwaukee sits by the phone while you guys sort this out.
Well, you can try to blow us away with an offer.
A little hint: that offer should include one of the two guys born on 1994. or younger.
Doesn't work that way in RFA. The Suns either offer him the 4/$63 deal or they wait until someone offers it for them. And if the Suns have any concerns about paying him that much money or his potential attitude, then you mine the league for S&T offers.
My guess is that Jason Kidd has had a discussion with Bledsoe and Rich Paul and told them both that the 4/$63 payday awaits in Milwaukee but that the Bucks aren't going to shed the $2.5mm in payroll they need to extend a max offer that likely is matched, and that it is up to those two to figure out a S&T that works for the Suns. Suns meanwhile are content to sit for the moment.
I think the only thing that breaks the logjam is if the Suns propose a 5/$65 with an ETO after year three.
ETA: That deal works for Bledsoe because if he is injured, he still gets the $63(in this case $65) million he'd get with an offer sheet. But if he blows up and stays healthy, he can opt out after three years for a bigger payday under the new salary cap.

cosmofizzo wrote:
Hhhhhhhhonestly though, the Bucks aren't in this at all. Nothing they are willing to offer us is worth losing Bledsoe.
SF88 wrote:We won't get any amazing deals in a sign and trade.
Tell me one time in which a player was signed and traded for something even close to the same value as being traded.
cosmofizzo wrote:SF88 wrote:We won't get any amazing deals in a sign and trade.
Tell me one time in which a player was signed and traded for something even close to the same value as being traded.
Boris Diaw and a draft pick?
paulpressey25 wrote:cosmofizzo wrote:
Hhhhhhhhonestly though, the Bucks aren't in this at all. Nothing they are willing to offer us is worth losing Bledsoe.
Right. And that's why as Mark Stein said, you guys may sit in this situation for another month or more. During that time, Bledsoe is going to get resentful and the Suns fanbase will get resentful. I've seen this movie many times before as a Bucks fan when one of our young guys breaks out right before he becomes a free agent, but doesnt break out enough to justify the mega contract he wants.
I will eat the crow if Bledsoe cracks and takes 4/$48 but I don't think he does that. I think that 5/$65 ETO deal I noted above might get it done, but who knows if either side is willing to do that.

JDLAW wrote:. A 5/65 deal is not much different than the 4/48 deal - a little higher base and an extra year.
paulpressey25 wrote:JDLAW wrote:. A 5/65 deal is not much different than the 4/48 deal - a little higher base and an extra year.
It is a big difference. $17 million worth.
It works for Bledsoe because if he blows out his knee again at any point the next three years, he's still getting at least the $63 million he would have gotten with an offer sheet this year. And if he blows up, he uses the early termination provision like LeBron has and opts out while collecting say at least $46 million in those first three years. He then can re-up for a bigger deal if he's worth it then.
For the Suns, they really only risk the same $63-$65 million they risk now via an offer sheet, should his knees go bad. If he blows up, you've still got him for three years and hold his Bird rights. And he would have been worth that 3/$46 you would have paid him to date.
paulpressey25 wrote:JDLAW wrote:. A 5/65 deal is not much different than the 4/48 deal - a little higher base and an extra year.
It is a big difference. $17 million worth.
It works for Bledsoe because if he blows out his knee again at any point the next three years, he's still getting at least the $63 million he would have gotten with an offer sheet this year. And if he blows up, he uses the early termination provision like LeBron has and opts out while collecting say at least $46 million in those first three years. He then can re-up for a bigger deal if he's worth it then.
For the Suns, they really only risk the same $63-$65 million they risk now via an offer sheet, should his knees go bad. If he blows up, you've still got him for three years and hold his Bird rights. And he would have been worth that 3/$46 you would have paid him to date.
AtheJ415 wrote:You don't get it. The suns don't need to reach a mutually beneficial deal. Bledsoe wants the max. Big Whoopdeedo. Unless some team actually offers it to him that has no impact. The Suns have challenged him to find a better deal than what they're offering. He hasn't been able to get that. Until he does there is absolutely zero, and I mean zero, reason to bid against ourself and add another year or more money. No player in the history of the NBA has signed a QO and left 48 mil on the table. If that's what he wants to do then so be it, but this idea that the suns should up their offer to something that's better for both parties is crazy. 48 mil is good for Bledsoe. In fact, it's the highest amount he's been offered.paulpressey25 wrote:JDLAW wrote:. A 5/65 deal is not much different than the 4/48 deal - a little higher base and an extra year.
It is a big difference. $17 million worth.
It works for Bledsoe because if he blows out his knee again at any point the next three years, he's still getting at least the $63 million he would have gotten with an offer sheet this year. And if he blows up, he uses the early termination provision like LeBron has and opts out while collecting say at least $46 million in those first three years. He then can re-up for a bigger deal if he's worth it then.
For the Suns, they really only risk the same $63-$65 million they risk now via an offer sheet, should his knees go bad. If he blows up, you've still got him for three years and hold his Bird rights. And he would have been worth that 3/$46 you would have paid him to date.