Celts17Pride wrote:Parliament10 wrote:Curmudgeon wrote:No No No. The Suns declined his rookie option. Please read my five posts on this topic.
IINM, Celtics would keep his Early Bird Rights.
https://boston.cbslocal.com/2022/01/12/celtics-trade-rumors-jeff-green-jalen-smith-nba-deadline/But the C’s or whoever trades for him would own his Bird Rights, and would only have to offer him a max of $4.7 million in the offseason. That could be the most intriguing part of the young big.
_________________________________________________________________________________Larry_Russell wrote:
No, they declined
Most we coild sign him for is 4.7 million
Yeah. He still has the 2 years.
He's got Early Bird Rights, if he gets Traded.
Smith would be a UFA and the Celtics can only offer him $4.7 million. If another team offered him $5.0 million he is gone. Celtics would have to have cap space or MLE to offer Smith more.
We could off him the same thing.
But the point I'm making, is that we'd have 2 years (more) of Bird Rights on him, over anyone else.
Edit:
So after 3 years in the League, Jalen Smith/Celtics would have Full Bird Rights. (It would essentially be like 3 years with the Celtics.)
No other would get that Extra 2 years.
https://www.hoopsrumors.com/2021/01/hoops-rumors-glossary-gilbert-arenas-provision-3.html
The Arenas provision limits the first-year salary that rival suitors can offer restricted free agents who have only been in the league for one or two years. The starting salary for an offer sheet can’t exceed the amount of the non-taxpayer mid-level exception, which allows the player’s original team to use either the mid-level exception or the Early Bird exception to match it. Otherwise, a team without the necessary cap space would be powerless to keep its player, like the Warriors were with Arenas.











