Waynearchetype wrote:I think you can pencil in Davis being sold off since he is an expiring. We aren't going to resign him, and we have actual big depth now. That is an easy one. Probably to a playoff contender out east for a late pick. Getting rid of him by the deadline takes all the money off the years books as far as taxes go, even though we will pay most of it, right? I can imagine showcasing him early (hopefully he returns to form after his surgery)
nope....that was true in the former CBA, but not the new one. Now, taxes are calculated based upon actual total payroll during the season. Obviously, that's not technically true as the tax is assigned on the last day of the regular season and at that time players still have May and June salary due....assuming standard contracts. I'm not sure what the exact process is, but if a player like Davis is traded around the deadline by mid-February, then he'd have been theoretically paid for at least 7 months of the year. Assuming a close correlation between that schedule and the contract terms, Davis might only have 35-40% of his salary left due; in that case, Portland might only clear 2.5-2.6M off their total cap. Still, that could be a 7-8M tax savings
the catch is that players can have different terms built into their contracts. Maybe Davis is one of those players that gets a bunch of front-loaded salary every year; that would reduce Portland's tax savings. I'm not sure how any deferred compensation is applied, and I don't know if any Blazer contracts contain clauses for deferred salary
DaVoiceMaster wrote:The problem is that Nurkic has not played a full season since coming into the league and Davis is our only backup center. I'm not ready to hand over major minutes to Collins if Nurkic goes down and I think we all saw that Vonleh at center did not work that well either.
well, Olshey would say that Meyers and Zach are C's.
but yeah, what we're talking about is trading an effective player, one who can bring dimensions Portland is short of, because of the bad contracts and the tax issue. The other side of that is which Davis would Portland be trading? The 2015-16 Davis led the team in defensive rating (tied with Plumlee); was 2nd on the team is PER; led the team with a 19.3% rebound rate (Nurkic was 19.7% last season in a short stint); 2nd on the team in box plus/minus; and led the team in winshares/48.
the 2016-17 Davis saw his defensive rating worsen from 104 to 110; his PER drop from 18.7 to 11.5; his rebound rate drop from 19.3% to 17.1%; his box plus/minus plummet from +3.3 to -2.1; and his winshare/48 crater from .192 to .104. A real Jekyll/Hyde performance that can't be all explained by 'injury'
losing the first version of Davis would hurt, a lot; losing last year's version, not so much. I guess the dilemma will be if Davis comes in early next season and plays well, it would give him more value in trade scenarios, but Portland might be losing some very efficient production, especially if he was back to averaging 4.4 offensive rebounds/36 like he did that season