Stratmaster wrote:The market is the market. Basically what you are saying is NBA players get paid more than they are worth. You won't get any argument from me on that. Unless you are LBJ or Steph you are getting overpaid if you play in the NBA right now.Ice Man wrote:Stratmaster wrote:]I don't know, you tell me. What is a freakishly athletic 23 year old player, who has already shown signs of being a scoring machine and has tons of upside worth in the NBA?
If by "worth" you mean "will be paid," the answer is "a lot." If you mean instead how useful are these guys, the answer is not much. Jumper/chuckers who aren't good NBA players by Year 4 rarely do much. OJ Mayo, Brandon Jennings, Rudy Gay, Jordan Crawford, etc. Well, JR Smith ended up being modestly useful, so there's that.
Those type of players are for loser franchises.
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Stars get paid way less than they are worth. Average players get paid way more than they are worth. If the NBA was an efficient market without max contracts, nobody would consider this type of contract for LaVine because people would be trying to clear as much money as possible for an actual star. Your post is implying that the NBA is an efficient market.
I'm sure I'm not telling you what you don't already know, but a very high percentage of 2nd contracts in the NBA that aren't going to max players are bad deals. This is because rookies and stars are way, way, way underpaid. The "market" may say the likes of Tim Hardaway Jr. (using example of a decent player) and Luol Deng were worth $18M a year, but teams who sign guys to deals like that usually suck.
Bulls had the right approach the last time they were re-building in that they attempted to attract stars into max contract slots after already building a team of players who people would want to play with. No, it didn't work out completely (though we were good for a while), but I think that's the correct approach and ones that bad teams don't have patience for.













