VDT wrote:HotelVitale wrote:Iverson Armband wrote: You make good points, and I agree he’s fairly paid right now, but I think there comes a certain threshold where the price bubble for him bursts no matter how much anyone else is making if he doesn’t improve. For example, I don’t think Al Horford is necessarily overpaid as a starting caliber-ish center relatively speaking, but that’s still considered a bad contract.
Woah down there, you're talking yourself into something strange. Simmons isn't 'fairly paid' he's getting paid what most teams would be very happy to pay for him. He's already an all-star and just entering his prime so the value should hold steady, and 90% of teams would happily give us assets to take him on. There's no other way to measure a good contract. Horford by contrast is already making more than any team wants to pay for him, plus he's at the age where steep decline might come and thus in danger of becoming a really bad contract. We of course had to trade a 1st rounder just to get off him.
What teams (i.e at least one team) are happy to pay is not necessarily related to the contract being good. The Wolves were happy to pay Wiggins and, as you mentioned, the Sixers were happy to pay Horford. In fact someone was happy to give all of the league bad contracts. What is important is whether the contract helps you win, i.e whether it has above average value for money. That is true even more for max players who are expected to provide most of the extra value. If you max players are not providing this extra value you have almost no chance to win the title. Is Simmons providing that? Most would say no, at least with the current team construction. He still has some upside though (less and less every year) which is what you are basically giving up in a trade.
This feels like an argument we don't need to have, difference is obvious here. We're talking about current value, not value at the time a contract was given out: Wiggins now is obviously a bad contract and no teams would happily/readily take him on with compensation, while Simmons is the opposite and many many teams would line up to give us assets to take him on. Horford is obviously the former. And at the time Wiggins' contract was a reluctant bet made on someone who was not a plus player yet but had a chance of becoming one, Simmons' contract was an easy decision that any other team would do for a player who was already an all-star and had a chance of becoming better.
Also this idea that all max players on a contending team have to be enormous value 1st options is ahistorical and cuts against the norm. Most contenders are carrying at least two full max slots and usually have at least one other very large contract; one of those 3 players usually needs to be mega-elite but the others don't. The Warriors were maxing Steph, KD, Klay and Dray at one point, and before KD they also had Iggy on a near max, the Cavs had Lebron, Kyrie, and Love on full maxes, Raptors had Kawhi as their main guy plus Lowry and Gasol making near-max $ (plus Ibaka making a ton of $, and they added Siakam to the max list the next year), and so on. We obviously don't have a Lebron or Kawhi now...but if one becomes available we'll need a Simmons-type to either be his elite sidekick or be trade bait to get him to come.