The only technicality here is that Boozer's contract wasn't technically a poison pill. You can split hairs all you want, but the intent was still the same with the way the contract was structured. That is, when you decide to pursue an RFA, you go after a team that is in a tight spot financially, and then you make it as difficult as possible for the other team to match. Otherwise, you are just wasting your time. Jazz fans aren't pissed because of the details of the contracts offered to Sap and Wes. They are pissed at another team for trying to steal our players. Period. Therefore, it IS NOT a totally different situation. It's the same thing thing.
The way that Boozer became an RFA is completely irrelevant to this discussion. RFAs are fair game, regardless of how they became such.
Can't speak for everybody on this but I think part of the issue is it happened back to back years with "fan favorite" type players so it felt like Porty was trying to mess with the Jazz. Also one could take into account how well the DWill trade worked for the Jazz that netted DWill and left Porty with not a single person/draft pick from that is still with Porty, makes it easy to find motivation besides just being a NW Div rival.
The only technicality here is that Boozer's contract wasn't technically a poison pill. You can split hairs all you want, but the intent was still the same with the way the contract was structured. That is, when you decide to pursue an RFA, you go after a team that is in a tight spot financially, and then you make it as difficult as possible for the other team to match. Otherwise, you are just wasting your time. Jazz fans aren't pissed because of the details of the contracts offered to Sap and Wes. They are pissed at another team for trying to steal our players. Period. Therefore, it IS NOT a totally different situation. It's the same thing thing.
Not quite. Greg Oden was 100% healthy at the time. Millsap would have been buried behind Aldridge and Oden. Assuming they both played 36 minutes a game, Sap was in line to be getting about 24 minutes a game there....forever..
Allen does not make this offer if Sap's rights were held by a wealthier owner, .
Allen does not make this offer if the team wasn't in his division. Classic bullying job.
It's a weird loophole in the CBA.
Houston gets to average their offer to Lin over the 3 years of the deal, so it will count about $8.3M per year against their cap. However, if NY matches the deal, then the contract terms are matched EXACTLY, so NY has $5M, $5M then $15M count as their cap numbers.
Not quite. Greg Oden was 100% healthy at the time. Millsap would have been buried behind Aldridge and Oden. Assuming they both played 36 minutes a game, Sap was in line to be getting about 24 minutes a game there....forever. Allen does not make this offer if Sap's rights were held by a wealthier owner, or if the team wasn't in his division. Classic bullying job.
Not exactly. IN previous CBAs, cap numbers and tax numbers are counted differently. I think Lin would still count as 8.3M against the cap every year for the Knicks, and would cound as 5, 5, 15 against the tax for the Rockets.
For the team making this offer, this contract would count for $9.0 million (i.e., the average salary in the contract) of team salary in each of the four seasons if they sign the player. If the player's prior team matches the offer and keeps the player, then the actual salary in each season counts as team salary.
Was I the only one hoping that the Jazz would have signed Darius Miles to a contract the year Allen was threatening all the other owners with a lawsuit if they signed him?
Greg Oden was 100% healthy at the time.