thesack12 wrote:Snakebites wrote:thesack12 wrote:I've also read a couple places that players who are already earning their maximum, won't be awarded their trade kickers.
Same, but then why do max deals with trade kickers exist? Only in the event that cap increases outpace the salary increase for a player? Did that happen in this case?
After further reading, it looks like the trade kickers get triggered if they are traded in the offseason. If they are traded in season, the kickers don't get triggered.
No, it gets triggered but they are pro-rated depending on what point in the season the player is traded. Like halfway through then the value left for that time amount goes down 50% for the remaining year plus an other years left after that that are still factored in. And then:
http://www.cbafaq.com/salarycap.htm#Q100The value of a trade bonus is applied to the team salary among the remaining seasons of the contract (excluding non-guaranteed seasons -- see question number 63, and seasons following an Option or ETO -- see question number 57), in proportion to the percentage of salary in each of those seasons that is guaranteed. For example, suppose the player from question number 99 is traded at the start of the third season of his contract. Per the chart in that question, the actual value of his trade bonus at that time is $3 million. If every season of the contract is fully guaranteed and there is no Early Termination Option, then $1.5 million of the trade bonus is charged to each of the final two seasons of the player's contract. The allocation is not proportionate to the salary itself, but rather to how much of the salary is guaranteed. If the fourth season was only 50% guaranteed, then two-thirds of the bonus would be allocated to the third season, and one-third to the fourth season.
So in terms of the cap for Detroit it doesn't really matter that Oklahoma City would be paying it since the extra money is still getting counted against the Pistons' cap.
Trade bonuses can be a nuisance. When a team trades for a player with a trade bonus, it must count the portion of the bonus that applies to team salary in that season as incoming salary. Let's say a taxpaying team wants to trade its $9 million player for the player used in the example above, in the third season of that player's contract. Assuming there is no Early Termination Option or non-guaranteed season, $1.5 million of the trade bonus counts in the current season, so the trade cannot be made. The team trading the $9 million player can accept up to $11.35 million in return (see question number 85), but the player with the trade bonus counts as $11.5 million in incoming salary.
It's messy, especially with something on the scale of Westbrook's contract.