SideSwipe wrote:From Coon:
•In all trades (no matter how many teams are involved), each team must send out and take back at least one of the following: ◦A player under contract.
◦A future draft pick. If a pick is protected (see question number 87), then no more than 55 picks in a single draft can be protected.
◦The draft rights to an "NBA prospect" -- a player with a reasonable chance of becoming an NBA player during his career, or a contributing player in a reputable professional league (as determined by the league office).
◦The right to swap unencumbered picks in a future draft.
◦$75,000 or more.
No matter how you slice it, this is really looking like it needs to be two trades, and two trades requires two assets. Also I tried Realgm trade checker and it does not allow a Morris for Harris swap either so far as I can tell.
So, here is an example to help show how this only applies to the trade in the broad sense, and not how the matching is done within it.
Kirilenko, Guitterez, Right to swap Nets 2018 2nd with Cleveland's 2018 2nd, Nets 2020 second-round pick, and 1m cash for Brandon Davies.
Nets sent 5 things (2 players, 1 pick, 1 pick swap, 1 pile of cash), Philly sent 1 (player).
If the minimum consideration was applied to all sub-trades, then this would have to be viewed just as 1 trade.
However, the Nets viewed it as 3 trades:
Kirilenko for a TPE equal to his full salary
Guitterez for a TPE equal to his full salary
and then Davies taken via the minimum salary exception
The worry about minimum consideration only applies to the greater trade, with the question of how salary matching is done for the largest TPE's then ignoring it.