gom wrote:twix2500 wrote:I havent really looked at the new CBA. What is the most that the Heat can offer Gordon Hayward.
He is a 7 year vet, so 30%, the same as Serge Ibaka:Spoiler:
Ibaka, Hayward: With Bird Rights: 5/$181M or 4/$139M, without Bird Rights: 4/$133M. Ibaka and Hayward can make $48M more in Orlando or Utah over 5 years.
Rudy Gay, Paul Millsap are 10+ year players: Heat can offer 4/$155.4M. A 5-year deal with bird rights give 5/$211.5.
A designated player deal like Blake Griffin will get is 6/$264M
Scenario 3: Hayward Signs a Long-Term Deal With the Jazz, Without the Super-MaxSpoiler:
Scenario 4: Hayward Signs a Long-Term Deal With Another Team
The problem for the Jazz in a non-super-max scenario?
Any team could give Hayward a four-year deal. And even if he were to sign with another team this summer, the follow-on deal could pay out the very same five-years and $243.6 million, for a cumulative total $340.9 million.
If he were to sign a long-term deal with another team this summer, his payouts could look like this:
2017-18: $30,900,000 (Player Option Declined, 3+1 Deal Signed)
2018-19: $32,445,000
2019-20: $33,990,000
2020-21: $42,000,000 (3+1 Option Year Declined, New Five-Year Deal Signed)
2021-22: $45,360,000
2022-23: $48,720,000
2023-24: $52,080,000
2024-25: $55,440,000 (Player Option Could Be Negotiated)
Guaranteed Total: $132,870,000
Total Over Six Years: $233,415,000
Total Over Seven Years: $340,935,000
There’s not a huge difference between Scenarios 3 and 4 – less than $2.8 million, in fact, over the course of eight years. And in either case, Hayward would become a free agent as a 14-year veteran in the summer of 2024, at age 34. Under the league’s new Over-38 rules, he’d again be eligible to sign an up to four-year max contract.
Which could present a murky problem for the Jazz: If a super-max deal is off the table, the contract Hayward is likely to want isn’t significantly different whether he signs it with the Jazz or any other NBA team. Which could, in turn, cause him to test the free agent market in search of an opportunity that gives him a better chance to win.
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What does it all mean?
Gordon Hayward has a ton of potentially intriguing options this summer. How he chooses to proceed will be dictated by whether he earns All NBA honors this summer, whether the Jazz would be willing to provide him a super-max contract if he does, whether he’s willing to take the financial risk of a shorter-term deal so that he could qualify for it if he makes All NBA in the following two seasons, and where he wants to player next season.
There will be two key dates to consider:
End of May: That’s when All NBA honors are typically announced. If Hayward makes the cut, he’d be eligible for a super-max extension that could potentially cause him to exercise his player option and pre-empt free agency.
June 29, 2017: That’s the date by which Hayward has to exercise his $16.7 million player option for next season. In the unlikely event he exercises it, his next move is clear – he’ll sign a super-max contract with the Jazz this summer. No other team will have a shot.
But if Hayward doesn’t earn All NBA honors this summer, as is perhaps likely, every team with max level cap room could have a shot at stealing him away. To do so, they would need to show him a legitimate path toward success that tops out higher than where the Jazz finish this season. The Jazz certain hope that’s with a few playoff victories.
Will Hayward qualify for the super-max? Would the Jazz pay it if he does? Would you?
If what Albert says is accurate. If Hayward does not make the All-Star team and not qualify for the Super-Max, the Heat could be in play for offering Hayward a competitive contract against what the Jazz can offer.