Mediocre Man
Mr. SportsTwo
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Completely foolish if they don't use it on Roy
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Completely foolish if they don't use it on Roy
Not if you can't replace Roy, though.
Roy can't replace Roy. What are we replacing at this point? Certainly not the All-Star player that he once was. I would love to see Roy return to the player of old, but I don't think he can do it. Either way, it's not my choice but I think at this point the team can't afford to hold onto hopes so that he can eat up cap space for the next four years.
What cap space? In the scenario Rasta hypothesized about, waiving Roy accomplishes nothing outside of saving some potential tax money. The other option, and I'm not even sure it is possible, is to bring on a similar contract from a team that wants to rebuild in exchange for Roy, and then that other team could waive Roy to clear cap space for a rebuild.
Wow.
Many of you are still thinking in terms of the current soft cap. Hard cap = Roy must go...period.
The only way keeping him is a bad thing is if he is completely deluded about his new limitations and demands a larger role or more mpg than his abilities are worth.
A second reason is that he's a distraction. McMillan spends time practicing contingency plans for if he can play someday. Management spends time fishing around the league for his trade value. If he has one great quarter, all plans are off the rest of the playoff series.
Same for Oden. There's a mental cost to keeping them both. It's like a business with one profitable line and one product line kept in reserve. Energy is expended on "just in case" scenarios, so real situations get less attention.
Sources say that there’s a determined push led by San Antonio Spurs owner Peter Holt to allow teams to have at least two years to decide whether or not to amnesty one player, with multiple sources telling ESPN.com this week that they believe the concept -- with restrictions that are still being haggled over -- has indeed won sufficient support to be included in the new labor deal.
Ding, ding, ding!!!
Not so fast on the idea that Brandon won't be in a Blazers uniform this season:
http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/32935/more-flexible-amnesty-clause-on-way
This would be great for the Blazers, IMHO, because it would let them look at what Roy, or potentially Oden if they sign him to a new contract, can do this season before having to decide whether to waive them for cap reasons.
I would be surprised if they allowed any "new" contracts to be included. So I doubt Oden would fall under this scenario.
Overall it would be a smart clasue for the owners to approve. Since they have to pay the player regardless.
Some teams want to restrict amnesty eligibility to the players on a team’s roster when the lockout ends. Others want the freedom to use it on any player they acquire over, say, a three- or five-year span, arguing that there are teams out there which currently don’t have an ugly contract to shed but should have the right to atone for a future mistake.
If that's the case then I think we'll keep Roy and see how he does.
If that's the case then YOU OWE ME A BEER!
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/30/s...but-last-hurdle-is-a-big-one.html?_r=2&src=tpHard to say at this point how it will work out, but there's some interest in making it more open-ended:
I have no problem buying you a beer because you're a Blazer fan but you never did finalize or agree to the bet.
It would be hard anyway, as I live in Michigan and have no immediate plans to visit Portland anytime soon...
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/30/s...but-last-hurdle-is-a-big-one.html?_r=2&src=tp
¶ Amnesty clause: Each team will be permitted to waive one player, with pay — anytime during the life of the C.B.A. — and have his salary be exempt from the cap and the luxury tax. Its use will be limited to players already under contract as of July 1, 2011.
I think this is fair.
