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This is completely self-congratulating myself but last year when the crazy contracts started flying around I was advocating for us to dump long-term salary rather than making those signings. The reason being you end up with maximum flexibility. You could end up being one of the only teams that could start offering max money while other teams would be riddled with large contracts, get picks for bad contracts, or get bench players as a third-party. It would again delay our win-now mentality but man, that's how you play the game and avoid the game playing you (unless you're just trying to save your job from your owner who can't see past 2 years in the future). I didn't know the cap could go down but that would have been another argument for it as it would have made us look even better as fewer teams can offer as much money.
Look at all the teams trying to dump players right now. The Nets are building for the future so they are taking up one of those routes. The route of "we're an okay team who hasn't gone overboard on contracts and are just a piece or two away from making a decent playoff run" could make up a lot of ground in this climate. I'm sure we'll see someone emerge as that team as I haven't done much looking into teams' salaries lately but I'll bet someone emerges as that team and they'll do well because of it.
It also makes me solidify further the "GMs are dumb" theory. I argued for years that GMs aren't as dumb as everyone thinks until last year. I understand that the jump in salary cap changes contracts, but so many of those contracts were obviously bad from the start, and many signings didn't show any coherent vision form the teams. I genuinely believe that there are probably a good 10 posters on this board that would run an NBA team better than probably half the current owners/GMs in the league.
That overspending cost Mitch Kupchak and Griffin there jobs. There's some logic and leeway for overspending for fit, but ultimately no team/GM should massively overspend for Harrison Barnes', Tim Mozgov's, or Tristan Thompson's of the world. And I'll say at least in Harrison Barnes case he was brought there to be a franchise player.
I didn't see this posted earlier, but how jerky of the Warriors and Cavs. They are the ones who helped kill the salary cap spike, and they are also the ones who look to gain most from it.
http://www.sportingnews.com/nba/news...e1d4y49ge9o79w
If you Jimmer it, they will come.
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