SBM wrote:spaceballer wrote:SBM wrote:More impact than Parsons and Hayward. Deserves the max more than they did.
Not the same thing at all.
He's asking for more money than Lowry just got. Lowry is arguably a larger impact player than the injured Bledsoe.
Parsons and Hayward aren't point guards. PG is a very talent stacked position right now. Supply and demand means that a PG like Bledsoe isn't going to get more than other positions that aren't as stacked. See Lowry.
Parsons and Hayward also don't have the same injury issues and doubts that plague Bledsoe.
Disagree that is why I used the word impact. Bledsoe could carry a team before Parsons or Hayward could. So, in my mind he is more worthy of the max salary which should only be giving to players who have first option potential on a winning team in my mind. Neither Parsons or Hayward have that.
Ask the Raptors fans how much impact Lowry had in pulling their team into the playoffs. He has more impact than Bledsoe. If Lowry isn't worth the max in this market as an unrestricted free agent, then injury prone Bledsoe certainly isn't.
Parsons and Hayward don't need to have as much impact to be paid more than Bledsoe. Supply and demand, point guards are more talent flush than other positions, so you're going to be paid less, regardless of whether it's fair or not based on "impact." Besides, many think Parsons and Hayward are definitely at the high end of their payscale and possibly overpaid, which means you can't use those contracts as the base price for Bledsoe.
And whatever "impact" Bledsoe has is worthless if he can't stay on the court. He needs to prove he can put up a full year as a starter without getting injured before he's worth the max. The market has spoken, and they're not giving him the max with those injury concerns. Not when the market price of point guards like Lowry aren't getting maxed.
Again, don't use Parsons and Hayward as the basis of your argument:
1) supply and demand. PG's are more talent-saturated in the league right now. Look at Lowry's market price as an unrestricted free agent this year.
2) Health. Parsons and Hayward have it, Bledsoe doesn't yet due to injury risks, whether perceived or real.
Do you think Bledsoe, with his injury concerns and inability to put up a full season of good play as a starter, should be paid the max, more than what Lowry as an unrestricted free agent was able to get in the current PG-saturated market?