djFan71 wrote:Captain_Caveman wrote:NuckyPowell wrote:And his market value is a matter of opinion until it's revealed this summer, if he opts out. You said earlier in this thread that you'd like to sign him for 3/90, which I want no part of. If somebody wants him for that, bon voyage, Gordon. Seriously, though, it'd be stupid to let him walk with no return, as we have no cap space. I'd rather trade him to keep cap flexibility. If that doesn't happen before Feb 5, we'll just have to wait and see what his market value is. There ARE dumb franchises out there, so you might be right, and he'll get 3/90. I don't see Wyc paying 4 guys ~ 30M a year unless they morph into Steph, Klay, Durant, & Draymond (and Draymond only gets that because they already had the other guys.)
He said he'd go deep into luxury tax for a real contender. Resigning Hayward basically keeps what we have now, in terms of headliners, and we're not a real contender. Regardless of my own likes, I don't think the Celtics resign him for 30M per. We'll just have to wait and see, though.
So solve the riddle, then. Barring a major injury, Hayward will likely opt out and get a much bigger contract than 3/66. With that knowledge, do you trade him at the deadline, and if so, for what? Or do you let him walk for nothing, and if so, what do we do from there?
Everything else is just white noise until people articulate a realistic plan. Speaking in non-specific generalities is not being intellectually engaged at all.
I would offer that 3/90 for Hayward carries little opportunity cost, and does little to limit our options, and that Jaylen is the one who has to go if we actually want a **** decent return.
I think you're pretty close, unfortunately. Not much point in opting out to sign for 3/$66M when he can get over half that by opting in. People thought we'd get Al for similar money on a resign deal and that didn't happen.
Obviously, his health the rest of the season determines things. Big injury, he opts in. Healthy, he opts out and gets in the range you say since the FA class is so weak. The big question is if he muddles along like he has since returning last month. Foot still bothers him, he has some really good games, then some ineffective ones, but never really hits a full stride. At that point, I'm not sure what he would get or what he does. Probably opt in and see if another year helps him recover more.
I think the only option on trading him is to just split up the next year cost into more easily tradeable chunks. You can't get value for him this deadline with all the uncertainty, so a lot of the proposed deals don't seem to be realistic, imo. Gordon for Dedmon/Joseph/POR 2nds with rounding salary filler to make it work. Horrible trade for us on the court, but SAC gets out of guys they don't want and hope Gordon plays well and/or opts out and we can use the smaller salaries and picks on draft day for trades, so we don't lose the salary.
Obviously, that's not super attractive. But can you flip Dedmon/Romeo/BOS 20 for Myles Turner at the draft? Dedmon basically an expiring ($1M guarantee for 21-22). Or something similar with Joesph. Gives you a little more maneuverability then Gordon's "will he opt in or not" max deal.
But, you're still better off hoping Gordon gets back to where he was in Nov and resign him.
Your idea of trading Gordon for a couple smaller salaried guys is basically where I'm at, too, mainly to retain flexibility for trades next year. Plus, if we get a couple of guys who will be real upgrades to our bench, I don't think it'll impact winning this year much at all. The Jays can absorb a couple extra minutes. They're young. And like I said, I'd like to pick up Markieff Morris for the stretch run, too, who could absorb a chunk of Hayward's minutes, and would provide a level of toughness that the current squad lacks.
Here's a tweak to your Sac trade: Dedmon/Joseph/Bjelica for Hayward/Poirier/Edwards. Picks to tweak as necessary. Then pick up Morris. I think we'd be a little improved going into the playoffs, and retain flexibility going forward with those contracts. We've got way too much youth on our bench. This fixes that a bit, and yet retains Romeo and Grant.