Curmudgeon wrote:165bows wrote:Curmudgeon wrote:
Which top 25 player are you talking about?
All of them.
So if Hayward says no, what's your plan B?
Let me add that Hayward isn't necessarily a top 25 player, although he's close.
Plenty of ways to go, but a top-25 guy that will be in his prime the whole contract that only costs money (plus the loss of 1-2 decent role guys to be fair) is far and away the best value available to the team.
He was top-25 in the all-NBA team voting, and he's over a couple of guys that were ahead of him (Whiteside and DeRozan), plus a few older guys that won't be as good as he is 4 years from now (Millsap, M. Gasol, Aldridge). As a current FA, he's top-25 value, especially as a FA from another team.
Under-rated aspect of contracts these days is that getting a top-30ish player from another team in FA is a very good value, since the contract is limited compared to teams signing their own players. It's a weird niche 'value' in the contract structure, since in most sports signing a FA on the open market means a team is outbidding all other teams. In other words, to sign a free agent you have to pay more than a player's market rate (ie what every other team is willing to pay). But compare Hayward on a 4-year FA max compared to a 5 year DPE contract that Utah almost was able to offer. It's vastly more expensive and takes him into overpaid territory.
Current contract values look like this:
Top-5ish guys on max deals, good players on rookie deals, then 4 year maxes for top-25 players.
There are going to be some awful deals doled out in the next few years by teams trying to keep guys in that 10-40 range of best players. 6 years from now when LeBron is retired and Irving is making $50M and taking up 40% of the cap, that is an absolute no-win situation, even if he still is the 11th best player in the league.
There will be a lot of Allan Houston 2.0s out there but getting FAs from other teams prevents that since the contract is limited.