prime1time wrote:payitforward wrote:Thing is... Bradley Beal -- playing at the level of the last 2-3 years not at this year's level -- is still NOT worth a supermax contract. Period. He's a terrific player; that's not open to question. But, he's not a superstar.
& that is the "reasonable argument... for not signing Beal" to a supermax contract. In fact, that's what "a negative value contract" means -- a contract that overpays a player.
If every player on your roster is overpaid, then you have a bad team. By definition. Or you are way way into lux tax territory. It's one or the other -- or both!
How many players in your estimation are worthy of a supermax? Are there any secondary players who are worthy of getting a supermax?
The notion that every player on your roster is overpaid, is so abstract that is has no meaning....
First off, no fight here, ok? This is just something to think about calmly & based on both reason & data.
How many players...? I can't give you an exact number but very few.
Secondary players? No supermax contracts for them.
This is a capped league. The reason for a cap is to increase competitiveness. If you will pay absolutely any amount of $$ for your roster, no limits, while also, obviously, paying any amount of $$ in luxtax & its penalties, why then, for sure, the cap means nothing to you.
If there's some limit to how much you'll go over the tax &/or for how long, then the more players you over-pay the less good your team is. For the obvious reason. The extra money you are paying leaves you less money to pay other players. So they won't be as good.
prime1time wrote:The way the NBA works as currently organized is primary and secondary stars get max contracts. Then you fill your team up with ring chasing vets who get the minimum and young players. The young players and the vets provide the surplus value....
Respectfully, I don't agree. I don't think that's how it works. Tho, of course, there are examples that resemble this. But, in general, no.
Here' is how I think it actually works: "surplus value" -- i.e. play that's worth more than what you pay for it -- can be gotten from two places & 2 places only: from superstars & from guys on rookie contracts. Rookie contracts are controlled by the CBA; that's why they under control. Superstars give you something you can get no other way. Thus they are worth whatever they can get.
Are there exceptions? Of course! A player has a significant productivity jump while in the middle of a multi-year contract -- fantastic! But, there are just as many examples in the other direction (e.g. Davis Bertans).
prime1time wrote:The goal of building a team is to win a championship, Not to pay everyone what they are worth....
I'll say! If you pay every player exactly what they're worth, then -- in a capped league -- you will have an average team.
prime1time wrote:There are a limited number of primary and secondary stars in the league. Primary players provide more value than a supermax. Secondary players don't. But you can't win a championship without them. And there aren't enough secondary stars for everyone who wants one to have one. So the law of supply and demand will come into play. ...
Is there more demand for a superstar than for a secondary player? Yes. Is it easier to find a secondary player than a superstar? Yes. Then they will make less. *That* is how "the law of supply and demand" comes into play. You left out the "demand" part.
prime1time wrote:...Also, let's be realistic here. ...The reality is that ...unless you are willing to go way into the luxury tax, you have no chance of building a championship contender....
Let's assume this is true -- & it may well be 90+% of the time. That does not mean that if you "go way into the luxury tax," you
will build a championship contender! If you go way in for players who aren't as good as the players another team goes all in for, your team won't be as good as that other team. That's true by definition.
prime1time wrote:...Here's a thought experiment, let's say Beal is generous and says "I'll resign for 35 million instead of 45 million so we can have money to build the team." Would that change your mind? And if so why? What would we do with those 10 million dollars that would be so franchise-altering?
What makes you think this is a stumper?
The answer is obvious. You'd have $10m extra to spend elsewhere in your roster, so that you have a better player at 1 or more other positions.
Does this mean you'll be a championship contender? Of course not! But you'll be better than you would be if you didn't have that 1 or more better players.
Honestly, unless I've written all the above in an incomprehensible way, I don't see how you or anyone can disagree with it. If you have more $$ to spend on a car, you can get a better car. Doesn't mean you will; you may choose to pay more for a car b/c you like it more than some other car. But, paying more for it won't make it better.
Peace!