dougthonus wrote:jacoby1us wrote:I agree. At the point of the Butler trade it was known that Lavine would be the future. Now it’s time to pay and the Bulls are playing “ tight wallet” as usual. Guess Felicios over payment gave them PTSD.
Doesn't make much sense to think that. At the time of the trade, they got three young assets. Those three assets probably were valued at that moment as:
1: LaVine
2: #7
3: Dunn
A year has gone by, and right now, I would value those assets like this:
1: Lauri
2: Dunn
3: LaVine
There's no sense in trying to say "at the time of the trade, the value was this, so let's ignore the last 12 months and proceed as if they didn't happen and then make our decision based around that".
I don't know why so many people are so excited to give Zach all this money. I want them to play "tight wallet" and preserve as much cap room as possible for next year whether they keep Zach long term, 1+1 or not at all. I don't know why anyone would rather just dive in and give Zach whatever he wants while hurting the team future in the process, but thank god no one with that mentality is running the org.
The team knew Zach was hurt when they traded for him. He was the hold up in the trade for over 2 years.
24 games didn't change their opinion of him. He's likely valued the same as he was before the trade by the FO.
People keep talking about all this cap room and hurting the teams future if we spend it now.
Have you not watched the same FA over the past few years? Players are not flocking to teams with a bunch of cap space. They are getting traded to places already established or they are flocking to teams with talented cores in place that they can grow with.
Having 70+ mil in cap room and the Chicago market isn't going to mean a damn thing come 2019 if LaVine, Dunn, Lauri and WCJ haven't developed into a splendid core to attract those wonderful FA's you all so covet with the cap space.
If the Bulls are going to sign 2 max FA's it will be because the young talent on the roster has evolved to where they are an attraction and people think highly of Hoiberg as a coach. Otherwise it will be 2019, you guys will still be talking about having cap space, flexibility and then complaining about how the Bulls are not in on any key FA's cause they are signing with other teams.