kg01 wrote:Nothing wrong with this thought process.
I simply don't understand folks being scared to pay our guys. The Hawks developed Jollins into what he is. Why let some other team reap the rewards? If that's not a guy you pay, who is?
Guess what? Winning is expensive. Get used to it or get comfortable rooting for losing. That's kinda the choice.
I agree with that, but then why Schlenk was afraid of giving him 100M/4yrs instead of 90M ?
There's a 50-50 chance that it would have been done.
The only reason I see is that Schlenk knew John got benefits from playing in a empty team last season and him and Trae were doing easily superstars stats because of that more than than providing the truth they are.
And since the market value is a totally biased thing because depending on how many teams have cap room, the need to a player at the same spot, the numbers a good free agents available... it's not the right way to evaluate the real value of a player.
In this way, yes, I would say that Bogi got underpay a bit and he proved it. Like John proved this season that he deserves no more than Capela or Bogi real value, that I would set above their actual contract, but not at 28M/yr, maybe for Capela.
Who build the best contender with real value of player in the last two decades ? SAS, and only Duncan was at Max. Yes they had Popovich, but Parker and Ginobili or the other players signing there wanted 50% to win and 50% to be paid, and they knew that wanting 100% to be paid would have cost them some titles.
ATL is on the verge to have the perfect team to become contender for years, and even if I'm not afraid to pay John 100M/4yrs, I'm afraid that a Max contract would destroy the possibility to build that contender.
Now, I already said that, but the problem came from last season, and only from that. Letting shine some players in an empty team is bad, and leading often to gamble on players. That's what a lot of teams have done, and Schlenk refuse it by offering 90M only, but he was also the one that created it.
It's a great thing to have trade for Capela last season, we can't say the opposite, we have proof now, but if he had been to play last season, John would never have had these numbers last season, and would have been more on the market with real value than a virtual value.
It's not Capela's fault, but Schlenk by not having a bigger roster with some better veterans last season, and it's because of this that the negotiation failed last December, more than anything else.
Yes, you need to spend money to win, but it means more spending at least up to the luxury tax (or maybe paying a bit of tax as I'm not sure there are champion teams not paying tax these last years), it doesn't meaning overpaying some players.
Spending a lot for a good team is not the same thing than spending a lot on some players and because of the cap rules not being able to have a good roster.
Don't get me wrong, I don't like letting free agent walking for nothing, CLE was the best example at overpaying guys to keep them but at least having them under contract and being able to trade them for even higher contracts and that's the way they got a good team around LeBron and a title.
jayu70 wrote:?s=20
That's exactly the kind if stats that makes a biased value, and that John agent will use. Good to see him leading this stats, but it would give more sense if at the same time, the defensive equivalent was shown, because basketball is a collective sport, with offense and defense. It also doesn't show if this is happening partly because of playing with Capela.
The worst thing that hurts the negotiation was John being one of the few last year to average 20/10 with a high FG%, and let lead to thinking that he was like the few other ones in this category, which you can''t without looking at other numbers and the roster they play with. At least, we got the proof that Schlenk knew that
