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The damage to the Blazers? Because if he was not actually ready to retire (as we now know for a fact) he is now coming back to play for a different team. Let's say he actually was not in perfect health, but also not retirement ready. How does he tell the team he wants to take a year off to really heal? Especially given his salary, and the Oden issue, he could not. So he fake retired. Got a year off. And now he's no longer a Blazer.
He got a full salary, and a year off. We got zilch.
Can the Blazers trade for Roy if another team signs him first? I'd imagine no but I've never seen that rule specified for amnesty waivers.
The waiving team may not re-sign or re-acquire the player for the length of his contract (which includes seasons following an ETO, but does not include seasons following an option)
I remember when Jerry West retired. He hung on for the preseason, just so he could play one game against rookie Blazer Bill Walton, and then retired before the regular season began. (In Los Angeles, the two were each King of his own local basketball dynasty.)
Now imagine if West had returned a year later--as a CELTIC!!!!
You would have never heard of him again, as a coach, GM, or "immigrant allowed into Los Angeles."
And Minstrel, yes, I do think that if Roy had said that he was not yet done, amnestiing him would have been much harder. Remember, it was only 5 days earlier, on Monday of that week, that we heard he was back and was going to be a starter. He was the face of the franchise. He had leverage and juice and the city on his side.
Roy's contract got Pritchard fired.
Roy's departure sank the team and got McMillan fired.
In the entire season, he attended one game, despite living a 3-hour drive away in Seattle. He had long since sold his Portland house lickety-split, so he sped back to Seattle as fast as he could after the game to escape the adoring fans and media.
At that game, he noticeably avoided Paul Allen, who was sending him a monthly check of a million dollars to do nothing.
As soon as the season ended, he looked for a new employer and city and high-tailed it to Minneapolis.
Why would this bother anyone? It happens all the time.
So what you're saying is that Roy actually helped the Blazers. It would have been difficult to amnesty him, from a PR perspective, had he not said "no mas," and not amnestying him would have been terrible for the Blazers...it would have saddled them with a horrendous contract for a player who's knees are shot.
I actually don't believe the Blazers would have refused to use the amnesty on him had he said he was going to keep going. But if you are right, then we should be thrilled that Roy did what he did...it saved the Blazers from making a really bad decision.
And my question is this: Had Roy simply retired, would the Blazers still be on the hook to "pay" him? Forget about the "books" and the "cap" - I'm talking about PA having to write him a check each month. Would insurance not have at least paid those millions rather than PA paying them?
2) Had management gotten the league's permission to medically retire him, insurance would have paid most.
What is with Blazer fans and the fascination of retiring jersey's? Seriously, the guy was good and all but he never won a playoff series and we're going to hang #7 up at the RG?
Where is the proof that he was "pressured into retirement"? What difference did it make to the Blazers if he was going to be amnestied? It was not a forced medical retirement, a la Darius, where insurance would have picked it up.
He "retired", took a year off, and is now unretired. Its clever, but total bullshit form a Blazer POV.
Are we really retiring his number!?!??! I love B but man. Like you said. He never won us a Playoff Series!
HERE'S THE QUESTION: Did we amnesty Roy because he retired, or did her retire because we amnestied him?
HERE'S THE QUESTION: Did we amnesty Roy because he retired, or did her retire because we amnestied him?
One makes us look smart, and one makes us look like fools. Either way, something is fishy about the whole thing. Here is the face of franchise back, less than a year later, playing on a different team.
Aldridge has been the real face of the franchise for two years now. Brandon should have stayed retired.
Why? He's 28 years-old and hasn't played in a game since he was 26. It's all he's ever known in his life.
I think a lot of people underestimate the ego and self-belief it takes to be truly world-class at anything. Most of us, myself included, live mediocre work lives in terms of what we offer the marketplace and are easily replaceable, but Roy was literally one of the best in the world at what he did. I guess I don't see why people are so surprised he wants to give it another shot. How many All-Star level athletes quietly walk away from the game in their primes, even if they've had injury issues.
Barry Sanders and Jim Brown are the only two I can think of in a span of 50 years, and neither had major injuries, which makes their decision all the more rare.
Bill Walton 'came back' repeatedly and now can barely walk. Grant Hill missed years of his career while of "prime" age, yet still came back. I'd say that's more the norm than a guy who just says "well, I gave it a shot, but these darn knees just won't do it".
I didn't say that I don't understand why he is trying to play again. I said he should have stayed retired.
Yeah, but that's easier said than done, especially when it isn't your life and dream. This is all he's worked towards for the majority of his life and if he feels he has to make every effort to keep it alive before it's gone for good, I really can't disagree with him.
1) If he had voluntarily retired, it's like quitting a job. Allen would owe him nothing. 2) Had management gotten the league's permission to medically retire him, insurance would have paid most. 3) But they amnestied him. If insurance for amnesty exists then like flood insurance, it may not be standard in most policies. If any was covered, I doubt it was much. And Allen will pay for it anyway, when the insurance company increases his premium. I think that Allen spent a lot more by amnestying instead of medically retiring
With that said, I still think he's wasting his time and it's possible he could do further damage to his knees in the process. Is that worth it? He doesn't need money. He accomplished quite a bit in his five years with the Blazers, and at this point he has no hope of ever returning to his All-Star form, so what is he hoping to achieve? If he was hoping to win a championship, he signed with the wrong team.
I don't think it's any more complicated than to keep after what he built his life around until it's simply no longer possible. I don't think it's about money (though, of course, like almost any person, he'll take the money he can get) or about winning a title at this point.
I seem to recall that Roy was one of the five or so players that the standard league insurance didn't cover.
PA took the savings from the last (non-guaranteed) year of his contract and bought a policy.
