RexBoyWonder wrote:Trade we SHOULD consider :Dump Lowry + asset for Collin Sexton and Kelly.
Sexton can shoot, score aggressively (our big need), get to the line and to the rim, he's young and hungry. Won't cost much cause Jazz are handing the team to K.George. Sexton makes around 18Mil next year - so we can keep him and also Highsmith or Msartin if we choose without blowing up the cap.
Kelly fits in our system as a backup big. He's better then Bryant for this team. He's also expiring.
THE Trade we should do :Zack Lavine for Lowry + Martin + Bryant + jovic + 1 pick.
Lavine might not be a superstar, but as your 3rd or 4th best player - he'd be awesome. He can really sahoot and score, not unlike Herro but with better efficiency, FT rate and less passing.
He's not the perfect fit but his scoring game is the type of talent injection you can't pass up on for a team like ours as long as the price is this low.
Herro
Lavine
Jimmy
Highsmith
Bam
JJJ 6th man.
It's a gamble worth taking because the cost is low, Lavine is a proven elite scorer, and Jimmy and Bam will cover for most of his weaknesses (defense and IQ).
According to Sportrac Miami is currently $246,777 from the 2nd Apron of tax.
https://www.spotrac.com/nba/cap/2023So looking at next year...
Herro 29 mil
LaVine 43 mil
Butler 49 mil
Bam 35 mil
That would be around 156 million for 4 players.
The tax should go up from the current 165 mil to say... 180, that leaves 24 million for the 10 other players on the roster to get to the minimum 14 man roster before going into the tax(repeater tax at that).
Now let's toss D.Robinson's contract in there at around 18 mil and Miami would be at 170 million for 5 players leaving 10 million for 9 other players to stay under the repeater tax.
Jaquez Jr is slated for 3.6 mil
So now 6 players leaving 5.4 mil for 8 more players while staying under the repeater tax.
Love has a 4 million player's option which I expect he picks up.
Richardson has a 3 million player's option.
Highsmith is a FA and should be getting a decent raise from someone.
IF MIAMI IS GOING TO TRADE FOR A HUGE CONTRACT IT HAS TO INCLUDE ONE OF MIAMI'S FUTURE BIG CONTRACTS TO GET OUT OF THE REPEATER TAX NEXT YEAR.
IF LOWRY IS TRADED IT BETTER BE FOR MOSTLY EXPIRING CONTRACTS!
Personally I'm not expecting any big move per usual by this FO, Lillard was about the only real chance for ownership to ok going into into the repeater tax.
If you want to see what big money players Miami could trade Lowry + assets for, go to basketball-reference's player contract page, sort by this year's contracts and look for the guys how have no contract next year so Miami will be trading for a rental. Currently that leaves Miami's options of Klay, Tobias, Siakiam,
Harden,
Hayward, DeRozan, Conely,
Dinwiddie, J.Harris,
Hield, Trent Jr, Fultz,
Valančiūnas, or even
T.Jones.
The previously bolded players... Harden, Hayward, Dinwiddie, Hield, Valančiūnas and possibly Tyus are the only ones who may be cheap enough to acquire to rent for a 1/3 of the season and the playoffs.
https://www.basketball-reference.com/contracts/players.htmlThis isn't 2k and every dollar over the tax next season comes with a $2.5 tax that goes to the NBA. Start looking at options that are under the tax for next year, it's why Beal wasn't an option but a "star" in Lillard was. Miami will only go into the tax to add a "star", not just a good highly paid player.
BTW... Sexton makes 18 mil next year, mark him off the list unless Robinson is also going out for expiring contracts.
To put it simply...
Large salary trade that isn't expiring, expect to be trading Herro because of future finances.
Want to trade Lowry, better be bringing back mostly expiring contracts.