casey wrote:It's irrelevant whether a player is fit to play with a certain team. What matters is whether he is fit to play in the NBA. That's how his salary gets taken off the books, and that's how it goes back on.d-train wrote:Nowhere does the rule transfer the Blazers authority to determine the fitness of its players to another team.
Nowhere does it grant them the authority. It's about the player's fitness, not any team's determination of whether a player is fit.
The rule doesn't say that a player that sustains a career-ending injury isn't fit to play in the NBA. The rule just outlines an objective procedure for determining whether a player has sustained a career-ending injury and if the team that receives the benefits of salary cap relief later decides the player is fit to play they lose their salary cap relief.
casey wrote:d-train wrote:I don't believe that Article XI, Section 5.(b) by itself answers my question. There is another paragraph that I haven't found or the matter could be decided either way, IMO. Section 5.(b) just says a team needs have sufficient cap Room to tender an offer sheet. Whether the team has sufficient cap space is the subject of the dispute in my hypothetical example.
If the NBA says you don't have cap space, you don't have cap space. If a team wants to dispute that they can, but in the meantime the number the league gives is what matters, not the number the team gives. If that weren't the case a team $50Mil over the cap could say "hey, we have cap space" and then sign a player to a max offer sheet.
You could be right but I think it could go either way. If a system arbitrator decides the NBA calculated salary cap space of a team incorrectly, I don't see why the arbitrator can't reverse the error from day 1, unless there is another rule that I haven't yet found.













