Ruzious wrote:willbcocks wrote:I heard it's a player termination option, whereas Ariza's is a player option (or he has an opt out clause, can't remember which I read). It sounded like a difference in name only. Both have player options they would be fools (or wiser men than me) to decline.
Fools is the correct option. Thanks Will.
I know it's fun to post with such certitude; I do it all the time. But I think there's a reasonable chance that one of those guys opts out. More likely Ariza than Okafor because of the amount of money Okafor makes, but here are the reasons I think it's possible:
1) Recent precedent: Jameer Nelson is walking away from $8.5M this year because he reportedly doesn't want to be traded and wants to choose his next team. Gerald Wallace is walking away from $9.5M. Sessions from $4.3M. Richard Jefferson and David West walked from guaranteed money in recent years -- Jefferson took a big haircut (note, he's now bald) in annual salary to do so for more overall guaranteed money.
2) Jameer Nelson's reasoning: he may want to exercise some choice in where he plays. This is Ariza's 5th team in 8 years. He'll, like Nelson now, enter next offseason as an expiring contract. Rather than risking getting traded to a bad situation or a city he doesn't want to be (good news Trev, you're headed to Milwaukee!) he may wan to pick place of business, at least for as long as he can. He's from LA and reportedly very much a "west coast guy"
3) Guaranteed money. He'll only be 28 next summer. He should be able to get a 3 year deal pretty easily. I imagine he wont have trouble getting $5M/yr. No less than $4M, and maybe he gets $6M. With the threat of a career threatening injury always looming, it's better to be locked in for $12M than it is $7M, even if the years are longer. Remember everyone thought Jefferson was nuts to opt out of his max or near max deal ($15M) and then he turned around and signed for 4/$39M. If he had played out that final year he may have gotten that 3/$24M that was the difference, but he would have carried that huge amount of risk that an injury could erase his future earning potential.
I haven't given Emeka's situation a ton of thought yet, but I do not think Ariza staying a second year is a slam dunk; it may be 50/50 or "better."