andy582 wrote:Didn't know that, thanks- so he can be packaged as long as his salary matches someone coming back to Boston.. The league doesn't consider that to be circumventing the CBA?
Nope. In many cases it's required to break trades down into multiple parallel parts. The Rondo trade was like 5 different trades from Boston's perspective, and several from Dallas' as well. Parallel trades are totally legal, and each team can "interpret" the transactions in the way that is most beneficial to them.
cbafaq wrote:82. What are the rules regarding trades?...
Sometimes there are multiple ways to configure the same trade. For example, a minimum-salary player might be acquired using either the Traded Player exception or the Minimum Salary exception, or a two-for-two trade might also work as two separate one-for-one trades. Teams are allowed to choose the configuration that works best for them.
83. What is the Traded Player exception?...
It is important to view a trade from each team's perspective separately, rather than as a single, unified transaction. This is because the same trade may be organized differently according to each team's needs. For example, a trade might be classified as a simultaneous trade from one team's perspective, but from the other team's perspective it's actually broken into two separate trades, one simultaneous and the other non-simultaneous (completing a trade they made months earlier).
andy582 wrote:So that applies to Tayshaun Prince, too.. Interesting- I hope Danny's got a little more creative dealing in him.
Yup. Prince, Wright, Nelson, Crowder, Rivers.
It's not that you can't trade them with others, it's just that you're heavily restricted in how you can do so.