Please explain the "asset" thing to me

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We shall find out soon enough if they are assets or dead weight. Our assets as a team is last in defensive output.
 
Still trying to understand how having a "team culture" that "builds from within" got us to our present record. Personally, I think it's a lot of "smoke" up our "collectives asses."
 
How do you know that?

Why wouldn't they be?

There are teams that need wing players who can hit 3pt shots. There are teams that would take a chance on our lotto picks (Leonard, etc.).

Heck, the team we played last night, Toronto, is starting Pascal Siakam at PF and the career 30% 3pt shooting Corey Joseph as 6th man.
 
Why wouldn't they be?

There are teams that need wing players who can hit 3pt shots. There are teams that would take a chance on our lotto picks (Leonard, etc.).

Heck, the team we played last night, Toronto, is starting Pascal Siakam at PF and the career 30% 3pt shooting Corey Joseph as 6th man.

Do you really need to ask? They are massively over-paid. Take a look at the calibur of player that makes 18 mil per season, even adjust that down to account for the cap increase. You don't find many guys that are just "ok backups". Boston liked Turner but didn't even match that contract. Pascal Siakam is making 1 mil per year. If we called Toronto up and offered Crabbe, who do you think they'd package to get him? They wouldn't even bother.

Leaving aside the issue of how over-paid he is, the other team would have the challenge of putting together a group of contracts that come close enough to matching his 18 million dollar salary. A team would basically need to have a massively overpaid player they want to throw away in order to even begin trade talks.
 
Do you really need to ask? They are massively over-paid. Take a look at the calibur of player that makes 18 mil per season, even adjust that down to account for the cap increase. You don't find many guys that are just "ok backups". Boston liked Turner but didn't even match that contract. Pascal Siakam is making 1 mil per year. If we called Toronto up and offered Crabbe, who do you think they'd package to get him? They wouldn't even bother.

Leaving aside the issue of how over-paid he is, the other team would have the challenge of putting together a group of contracts that come close enough to matching his 18 million dollar salary. A team would basically need to have a massively overpaid player they want to throw away in order to even begin trade talks.

Wait until next year. The salaries will look way smaller after another bump in BRI. It's not the amount, it's the % of the cap (or LT threshold, really). There will also be another class of FAs signed to the much bigger sized contracts.

Even then, contract amounts are significant for ballast in trades, per CBA.

Consider if we wanted to trade for a $30M/year player. If we have a $18M salary player and a $10M salary player, we can make the 2-for-1 trade. If we have a roster full of $5M players, we'd have to trade 6 of them to match the contract size.

As well, it's important to be over the cap (and ideally just shy of the LT). If you're under the cap, you can't make trades that get you much over the cap. Assuming price does equate to how good the players are, $15M players are going to be better than the $5M ones. Having LT/$15M means more really good players vs. CAP/$15M.

NO knows what he's doing, as do the other GMs.

Plus our players aren't bad players. The panic about their play is a bit unwarranted.

Like Crabbe's .415 3pt % is VERY valuable to teams.
 
Wait until next year. The salaries will look way smaller after another bump in BRI. It's not the amount, it's the % of the cap (or LT threshold, really). There will also be another class of FAs signed to the much bigger sized contracts.

Even then, contract amounts are significant for ballast in trades, per CBA.

Consider if we wanted to trade for a $30M/year player. If we have a $18M salary player and a $10M salary player, we can make the 2-for-1 trade. If we have a roster full of $5M players, we'd have to trade 6 of them to match the contract size.

As well, it's important to be over the cap (and ideally just shy of the LT). If you're under the cap, you can't make trades that get you much over the cap. Assuming price does equate to how good the players are, $15M players are going to be better than the $5M ones. Having LT/$15M means more really good players vs. CAP/$15M.

NO knows what he's doing, as do the other GMs.

Plus our players aren't bad players. The panic about their play is a bit unwarranted.

Like Crabbe's .415 3pt % is VERY valuable to teams.

The cap is going up about 10%, and these guys contracts are escalating as well, so no, they won't look way smaller next year. And I don't know if teams will be having oodles of cap money like last year, because the cap isn't taking such a sudden leap.

And Crabbe's contract is about 20% of the cap. Sizable for a guy who is nothing more than a decent bench player. 20% is what you'd pay a good starter. Crabbe has a good 3pt shooting percentage, yes, but his jumper is really his only skill. Dude is averaging 12 points per 36.
 
The cap is going up about 10%, and these guys contracts are escalating as well, so no, they won't look way smaller next year. And I don't know if teams will be having oodles of cap money like last year, because the cap isn't taking such a sudden leap.

And Crabbe's contract is about 20% of the cap. Sizable for a guy who is nothing more than a decent bench player. 20% is what you'd pay a good starter. Crabbe has a good 3pt shooting percentage, yes, but his jumper is really his only skill. Dude is averaging 12 points per 36.

Crabbe's contract is 16% of the cap. 1/6th. Like a 6th man should get paid. It'll be less than 16% next season. CJ will be paid $6M+ more.

Crabbe is playing almost 30 MPG. He deserves to be paid.
 
Crabbe's contract is 16% of the cap. 1/6th. Like a 6th man should get paid. It'll be less than 16% next season. CJ will be paid $6M+ more.

Crabbe is playing almost 30 MPG. He deserves to be paid.
18.5 /94 = 19.6%

And I'd dispute your other two points as well, that Crabbe deserves the title of "6th man" and that the the 6th man should earn that much.

Considering how max contracts are being dealt out these days, most teams are going to have at least 50% of the salary cap invested in their top 2 players (which is the boat Portland is in with CJ and Dame. That leaves the other 50% to divide between the other 10 players. You think 20% of that should go to one bench guy? What about the other 3 starters? Your logic does not add up.
 
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18.5 /94 = 19.6%

And I'd dispute your other two points as well, that Crabbe deserves the title of "6th man" and that the the 6th man should earn that much.

Considering how max contracts are being dealt out these days, most teams are going to have at least 50% of the salary cap invested in their top 2 players (which is the boat Portland is in with CJ and Dame. That leaves the other 50% to divide between the other 10 players. You think 20% of that should go to one bench guy? What about the other 3 starters? Your logic does not add up.
The LT is $113M, not $94M.

What a difference ~$20M makes!

Next year, LT is between $122M and $127M. Dame and CJ will make ~$49M of that. 39% of the payroll.

Crabbe' contract is again $18.5M, or 15% Of the payroll next year. You bet I think he's worth it.

Edit: I used the $122M figure for next year %.

References:
Edit 2: NO spent us to within about $1M of the LT. Ideal. Well done. The payroll is $112M and change. You don't want to be so close to the LT that a player earning a bonus for making the all-star or all NBA teams or DPOY / MIP type awards puts you over.
 
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We will be $7M (worst case, best case $2M) over the LT next summer, assuming we don't re-sign Plums, Quarterman, Connaught on, and Ezeli.

To stay under the LT, we need to trade away $7M in salaries. It's not hard to do. Ed Davis for a TPE or conditional 2nd round pick might be enough.

To re-sign Plums, which I think is the idea, we need to trade away that much more to stay under.

NO has until the trade deadline to get under the LT.

It is also a reasonable strategy to pay the LT, too. For one season, only if they want to keep the roster together another season.

One possibility to get under the LT and re-sign Plums is to trade both Davis and Leonard for trade exceptions (someone else's cap space). That would be ~$10M for Plums.

We can go into the LT to sign Plums to any amount up to his max salary. Bird exception.

Some of it boils down to the owner's willingness to spend. We do not want to be in the LT for 3 of any 4 consecutive seasons; the penalty for that is staggering, even for a $billionaire.

Edit: I believe my figures are accurate enough for illustrative purposes.
 
The way I see it, we'll be at 124 mil if we renounce Festus and Pat. The projected cap is 102, and so the luxury tax will probably be around 111 (it's 9 mil more than the cap this year). So that's 13 mil over the LTT before we do anything, which is better than I thought, because I forgot Festus was not guaranteed next year.

But Plumlee will get at least 10 mil, so signing him will push us into the 20 mil range (which would result in a 45 million dollar tax). Anyone we sign beyond that would be $3.75 per dollar. (then it escalates next year)

In 2018, we have 121 mil locked into 7 players. That will be near the tax threshold for 7 guys (a core that isn't even good). So I think Neil has us in a bad situation financially.
 
The way I see it, we'll be at 124 mil if we renounce Festus and Pat. The projected cap is 102, and so the luxury tax will probably be around 111 (it's 9 mil more than the cap this year). So that's 13 mil over the LTT before we do anything, which is better than I thought, because I forgot Festus was not guaranteed next year.

But Plumlee will get at least 10 mil, so signing him will push us into the 20 mil range (which would result in a 45 million dollar tax). Anyone we sign beyond that would be $3.75 per dollar. (then it escalates next year)

In 2018, we have 121 mil locked into 7 players. That will be near the tax threshold for 7 guys (a core that isn't even good). So I think Neil has us in a bad situation financially.

Well, you see it different than the dozens of sports articles I've seen that say the LT will be $122M, down from $127M. That's the league projection. They're not always right, but close enough.

NO isn't stuck with any or all of the players. That's just wrong thinking. There simply isn't one player he's signed that someone else wouldn't take, given their contracts. Nobody, not even NO, can tell us who's going to be here in 2018.

If you're all bothered by contract sizes and wasted money, we paid $5M last season to a backup C who was way over the hill and who played very little. Good money down the drain.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nba/2016/04/15/nba-salary-cap-higher-than-projections/83095482/

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The way I see it, we'll be at 124 mil if we renounce Festus and Pat. The projected cap is 102, and so the luxury tax will probably be around 111 (it's 9 mil more than the cap this year). So that's 13 mil over the LTT before we do anything, which is better than I thought, because I forgot Festus was not guaranteed next year.

But Plumlee will get at least 10 mil, so signing him will push us into the 20 mil range (which would result in a 45 million dollar tax). Anyone we sign beyond that would be $3.75 per dollar. (then it escalates next year)

In 2018, we have 121 mil locked into 7 players. That will be near the tax threshold for 7 guys (a core that isn't even good). So I think Neil has us in a bad situation financially.

Where on earth dfo you get your info from to provide this view as how you see it?

I posted a week or so ago about the projected jump based on the new CBA agreement.....

Your numbers are off. It isn't a "The way I see it"
The numbers are black and white. yes there are variables based on options as to how we look next year, but the numbers are numbers. Black and white. It isn't a see it one way or another way....
 
The luxury tax has historically been 10-12 mil over the cap, but according to that report, it's jumping up quite a bit. But even if it is 122, we're still right at the threshold before signing anyone. In 2018 we have 121 mil locked in to 7 players, and according to your chart, that'll only be 5 million short of the luxury tax. It's Paul Allen's money, but I just think he may be very hesitant to keep guys that'll put them deep into the luxury tax when we don't even have a chance to compete in the playoffs.

Sure, we have some very tradeable contracts, but they would basically be salary dumps. We're not going to get any needle movers for Ed Davis or Plumlee. And Crabbe/Turner/Leonard have negative trade value.

If Portland had done nothing but resign Harkless this offseason, we'd be going into next season with 81 mil on the books. So at least we'd have another shot at a good FA.

Layman, Napier, and Vonleh would not be downgrades over the guys that we resigned that are making 10x as much. 45 mil next year for Leonard, Turner and Crabbe....that's almost what you'd pay for 2 max players. You guys think teams will want those contracts?
 
Where on earth dfo you get your info from to provide this view as how you see it?

I posted a week or so ago about the projected jump based on the new CBA agreement.....

Your numbers are off. It isn't a "The way I see it"
The numbers are black and white. yes there are variables based on options as to how we look next year, but the numbers are numbers. Black and white. It isn't a see it one way or another way....
See my post above, it still sucks even with a higher luxury tax.
 
If Portland had done nothing but re-sign Harkless this offseason, we'd be the worst team in the NBA by far.

NO did exactly what he was supposed to do. Each and every move was exactly what a GM should do. Any GM worth his salt.

Being under the cap is not such a great position to be in. Maybe you sign a FA, and maybe you get someone like Turner. You're stuck without much ability to use the full $122M to build a roster. The guys you put around your three main guys would be awful talent.

The roster isn't a static thing. We're not stuck with anything this summer. We just have a starting point to make whatever moves are available and worthwhile.
 
Aren't they only assets if someone else wants them?
Just by asking the question only 30 games in, I can see you're right, you don't get it. It's all good, others don't seem to grasp it either. Asset collection is a LONG term strategy that is supposed to pay off after 2 - 4 years. Like stocks, player values go up and go down. Ultimately, this means that the best time to cash in your assets is precisely when the fans DON'T want a trade. Conversely, the best time to hold onto your assets are when the fans DO want you to make a trade. This is why there are so many knee-jerk Trade Machine wannabes who think the GM is an idiot.
 
If Portland had done nothing but re-sign Harkless this offseason, we'd be the worst team in the NBA by far.

NO did exactly what he was supposed to do. Each and every move was exactly what a GM should do. Any GM worth his salt.

Being under the cap is not such a great position to be in. Maybe you sign a FA, and maybe you get someone like Turner. You're stuck without much ability to use the full $122M to build a roster. The guys you put around your three main guys would be awful talent.

The roster isn't a static thing. We're not stuck with anything this summer. We just have a starting point to make whatever moves are available and worthwhile.
The thing you are not understanding, is the guys we put around our three main guys are awful talent. If you don't get difference makers (NOT Crabbe/Turner/Meyers), it's much better to shop in the bargain bin. As you said, the roster is a static thing. However, you have a whole lot more flexibility when aren't $5 from the luxury tax level.
 
The thing you are not understanding, is the guys we put around our three main guys are awful talent. If you don't get difference makers (NOT Crabbe/Turner/Meyers), it's much better to shop in the bargain bin. As you said, the roster is a static thing. However, you have a whole lot more flexibility when aren't $5 from the luxury tax level.

If you think this talent is awful, the talent that would replace them is even worse. We'd be the Knicks before PJax took over.

I said the roster isn't a static thing. We have all the flexibility we need to achieve virtually any deal that comes our way.

NO tried to get difference makers to come here, but they all went somewhere else. It wasn't about the money, because he offered as much as was possible. I don't see how you can fault him for that, or for doing everything in his power to make us the best possible team.

Crabbe is horrible, right? He and his .400+ 3pt shooting and defense (in place of Dame last game, was evident). And he'd get us Noel if some of the rumors are correct. I think that's a pretty good assessment of "awful" or not.
 
Just by asking the question only 30 games in, I can see you're right, you don't get it. It's all good, others don't seem to grasp it either. Asset collection is a LONG term strategy that is supposed to pay off after 2 - 4 years. Like stocks, player values go up and go down. Ultimately, this means that the best time to cash in your assets is precisely when the fans DON'T want a trade. Conversely, the best time to hold onto your assets are when the fans DO want you to make a trade. This is why there are so many knee-jerk Trade Machine wannabes who think the GM is an idiot.
There were a large group of fans who were angry that the players were resigned at the prices they were to begin with.
Asset collection only works when the intrinsic value is worth more than what you paid for the item. A player like Crabbe is NEVER going to be worth $18M+ per year. We spent $80M on a Honda Civic.
 
Just by asking the question only 30 games in, I can see you're right, you don't get it. It's all good, others don't seem to grasp it either. Asset collection is a LONG term strategy that is supposed to pay off after 2 - 4 years. Like stocks, player values go up and go down. Ultimately, this means that the best time to cash in your assets is precisely when the fans DON'T want a trade. Conversely, the best time to hold onto your assets are when the fans DO want you to make a trade. This is why there are so many knee-jerk Trade Machine wannabes who think the GM is an idiot.
spot on
 
There were a large group of fans who were angry that the players were resigned at the prices they were to begin with.
Asset collection only works when the intrinsic value is worth more than what you paid for the item. A player like Crabbe is NEVER going to be worth $18M+ per year. We spent $80M on a Honda Civic.

There is your flaw. FANS... Because we know sooo much more right?

You derailed your argument by trying to validate an argument that fans know more than our GM or other GM's.
Don't you think that Harks previous team thought he was awful too? but we picked him up and now he is a starter. Value is not just determined by the numbers a player puts up. Many factors play into this including the scheme of the team. Leonard might be awful here, but fit another coaches scheme much better and thus have a higher value to them than to us, or some other teams.

So many things are relative and X factors that I think its silly for large groups of fans to think they know it all and know we just cant trade our guys and that's it.
 
I bet Thibs would love to have Leonard as a backup C, though he already has Dieng.

He was able to turn Asik into a fine defender, and Leonard has more ability both offensively and to play defense.

Thibs would yell and scream at Asik all game long, to get him to do the right things, and it paid off for the team and for Asik in the end.

Leonard's salary is extremely favorable given how massive the total salaries can now be.

Minny wouldn't be the only team where Leonard would be a great fit.

I do think he needs to play C.
 
Just by asking the question only 30 games in, I can see you're right, you don't get it. It's all good, others don't seem to grasp it either. Asset collection is a LONG term strategy that is supposed to pay off after 2 - 4 years. Like stocks, player values go up and go down. Ultimately, this means that the best time to cash in your assets is precisely when the fans DON'T want a trade. Conversely, the best time to hold onto your assets are when the fans DO want you to make a trade. This is why there are so many knee-jerk Trade Machine wannabes who think the GM is an idiot.

Only 2-4 years more of being the worst team in the league? And then, what if your estimate is short a few years. In this incarnation of ruination, we didn't even need the Oregonian to force it.

There is your flaw. FANS... Because we know sooo much more right? You derailed your argument by trying to validate an argument that fans know more than our GM or other GM's.

You derailed your argument by being wrong. Incredible as it may seem to you and your call to authority, sometimes the GM is wrong.
 

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