tiderulz wrote:The Other Ankle wrote:tiderulz wrote:
that is very much on Henny. He lowballed Harris with an $8mil/yr offer and never negotiated after that. Word was that he could have gotten him much under the $16mil/yr or so he ended up with.
Maybe that happened. You don't really know.
It is true that Harris worked his ass off AFTER not getting the extension, specifically on his 3-ball and improved quite a bit.
What was he worth at the 3-point percentage he had up to that point? Did NOT getting the extension light a fire under his ass?
It's a muddled subject that I don't think any of us want to spend any time on at this point.
My point is just that I don't understand why no GM -- again, except maybe Ainge -- saw the new NBA economy coming and used it to their advantage. Lightly regarded free agents with potential could have been given long term contracts two years ago that would now be well below league average. Our own Bismack Biyombo signed with Toronto for how much last year after being allowed to walk by the team that drafted him? His stock was LOW!
Wouldn't guys who hadn't yet panned out, but still might, have taken long-term deals for $4 million a year with team options? I'm not talking about KNOWING who was going to develop better than other GMs. I just don't see why there wasn't more creative betting on long-shots. It literally could not have hurt, and if even one panned out you would end up with a significant roster advantage.
we do know that he offered him $8mil a year, as much as he offered a much older Channing Frye. And i agree with your view on working before the cap rise, though i dont many agents would have agreed. They saw the bigger paydays coming too, and had their clients wait it out.
That's the part that I just don't buy into. An agent for a guy who was getting one-year, minimum offers would have a hard time arguing against a guaranteed money deal of $8 million on a four year contract with two team option years. And a player who was on the fringe would have had a hard time NOT taking that money.
Again, I'm not saying that GMs needed to be prescient about who would develop. But if they wrote three such contracts and just one guy became a rotation player, then they would have a huge roster advantage in years 3 & 4, even if they other two washed out sooner.
Anyway, it's 2017 now and lots of guys who don't start just got 8 figure annual salaries for the first time in the history of sports.
We have one extension "bargain" in Vuc at $12 million. Boston has Thomas, Bradley, & Crowder for a combined $21 million in deals inked during that period. Crowder was a near throw-in in the Rondo trade that took what seemed to be a reasonable offer at the time. Then "BOOM" went the dollars!