tester551 wrote:Scoot McGroot wrote:DeathLineup wrote:Really?
Let's say the Warriors trade for James Johnson on July 1. Then they trade him for Aaron Gordon on July 4.
If I'm not mistaken teams must wait a certain period of time to retrade a player that they just traded for.
Remember, usually July 1-6th or 7th is the moratorium, so theoretically, with Iggy’s TPE expiring 7/7, the deals would have to happen the same day.
It’s technically illegal, but has happened. However, it’s possible the league may not allow it if the trade happen on the same day as there’s no argument that “we would’ve kept the guy but another offer to flip him came along and we couldn’t resist” if you’ve been in line on hold with the league office post moratorium to process all your deals you made. But, we could probably operate as if it’d be allowed in this forum Until we see otherwise

A trade could easily happen 'after' the season in May or June. There's no need to wait for a trade to happen in July.
Also, the trade scenario is NOT illegal. The league offices go by the written CBA agreement of what is allowed or not. They don't have some hidden agenda where they say 'we don't like this , so we're not going to allow the trade to happen'.
It's legal or not... very black & white. Just because you don't understand the rules doesn't mean they aren't clearly defined.
This is incorrect.
The CBA and the league handbook of rules spell out what is legal. They also spells out what is illegal. They spells out is illegal to do something that is intended to circumvent the rules intentions... even if it is technically legal individually.
This isn't uncommon. Some tax rules have a similar setup, whereby doing multiple things that are technically legal to do something that is explicitly illegal is ruled illegal; even if all the individual steps are themselves legal.
Fundamentally the situation is:
Trading for JJ via TPE --> legal
Trading JJ for AG --> legal
Trading TPE for (directly) AG --> illegal.
If the league says you did two legal steps to avoid one illegal one, the net effect is the same and therefore it is illegal; they can. It is in the rules. On the other hand, they could shrug, and not hassle enforcing the rule.
Similar to jaywalking rules. It is illegal but very very few people get arrested for it.
What recently happened with Nene is Houston did something technically allowed --> offer big (mostly) unguaranteed salary with the idea to use him as a non guaranteed deal in a trade. Which would be fine but non guaranteed deals are only matched as the guaranteed portion and thus not useful as trade ballast.
So Houston offered the non-guarantee instead as a "likely" bonus, even though it was clear it was not going to happen (League rules set up what is likely so no value judgment can be added to apply commonsense on what is likely).
And thus Houston had found a perfectly legal loophole ... to do something that is illegal.
Summarizing:
Sign someone to a deal with bonuses that are listed as likely --> legal
Use those likely bonus as part of salary in a trade --> legal
Trade someone using a matching salary higher than they will get 'likely' paid --> illegal.
The league stepped in and said that all your legal steps are aimed to make a mockery of another rule, and therefore not allowed...
despite being legal.
This absolutely could happen with GS laddering up the TPE. Or it could not. As mentioned, the steps are legal. Using the steps intentionally to do something not allowed is itself illegal. Whether that illegal is enforced, is unknown.