Who do you think Orlando takes with their late teens pick? Jase seems like a perfect fit, but he is small so they might fade him given their particular taste
They should draft Walter Clayton, but will probably draft another bricklayer.
Who do you think Orlando takes with their late teens pick? Jase seems like a perfect fit, but he is small so they might fade him given their particular taste
They will sign and trade him. We also don’t have cap space.I'd still look to sign Kuminga to force the Warriors hand
Isn't he restricted?They will sign and trade him. We also don’t have cap space.
Yes.Isn't he restricted?
Yes. They will sign and trade him. 80% certainty. They don’t want him. They MIGHT have a two-year window and he does not work there.
Trade some of our vets for himYes.
They will sign and trade him. 80% certainty.
I’m not a big believer but I think we could do it. If they would take Lauri then that is on my list of how we might trade him.Trade some of our vets for him
It’s worth looking into finding a project that we can rehab value on. It’s probably time since we’re in the wilderness for the next year.Not work Drey and Jimmy he doesn’t. But we should look into what that sign and trade looks like for us.
Not a huge fan either but we desperately need talent with high end potential, plus he's only 22 years oldI’m not a big believer but I think we could do it. If they would take Lauri then that is on my list of how we might trade him.
What does this mean? Counts for half for Warriors next years cap or?So I’ve learned that Kuminga’s outgoing salary counts for half but still counts as full for the receiving team. Makes a deal difficult unless you cap space. I would still like to explore that angle if possible.
What does this mean? Counts for half for Warriors next years cap or?
Oh damn thats an annoying apron penalty as it hurts the player by limiting his landing spots (thus impacting S&T contract value) as well as other teams without cap space who would like to go after him.If, for example, Kuminga starts at $25M on his new deal that means he only counts as $12.5M outgoing salary (for matching purposes) for the Warriors but counts as $25M incoming for the team receiving Kuminga.
So there is only one team (other than Warriors) that could give him more than 28 million a year, right? Everyone else could only do double the exception. I'm not high at all on Kuminga, but I would be in at that price.If, for example, Kuminga starts at $25M on his new deal that means he only counts as $12.5M outgoing salary (for matching purposes) for the Warriors but counts as $25M incoming for the team receiving Kuminga.
View: https://youtu.be/EgI5TgKwamQ?si=rmeyvydRooeLbq0W
This guy brings up a pretty good point. This year's draft shows the league why this current lottery system doesn't work. Silver needs a future face of the league so bad yet his lottery system puts both Cooper and Harper in the literal worst situation possible with Mavericks and Spurs.
Spurs doesn't really have a place for Harper in the starting five whereas Mavs don't have anything to build around Cooper for the foreseeable future unless they trade AD ASAP and tank for this upcoming season, which is the last thing Nico and their current owner would do.
So the best way out is for both guys to get traded on draft night and we all know it would be near impossible which begs the question, why are we here in the first place?
No. There's a reason other sports league don't implement the same lottery system as the NBA. Flattening the odds sucks and it shows when the worst team in the NBA from each season has not won a single lottery ever since they implemented the new system in 2019 and ended up with the 5th pick for half of the time. This "rich get richer, poor get poorer" approach is not healthy for the league, the fans or the players going into the draft.So should the league handpick where each player is to go?