NBA offseason 2016-2017...NBA offseason best in sports....This offseason is lit to the 3rd degree!!

Leave it up to Boston to do this
Go after someone get him and now don't know how they gonna make room to even sign him

Man they have to move 2 key players for then... This shit is a shame, don't know if that brings them closer to the Cavs or put distance the gap with the Wizards

That just means they didn't think they'd actually get him. Or any of then

Racists ass Team. Could have had PG or Butler for less than its going to cost them to keep Hayward and gut that team but they had to have a white face as the face of the franchise.

Watch how much his face is plastered on all things Boston next season.... :hmm:

Naw man they were going to trade their whole team for Butler who at the time said "I want turn the Bulls around..." and Paul George who said he's going to LA.....i'm not trading all my assets for either one of them dudes.

Pacers stopped Ainge from making the biggest mistake of his career. He should thank them.

didn't even have a plan
i wouldn't offer them anything for bradley or nothing just scraps cause they can't keep them

If UTAH gives Boston more compensation for this trade :hmm::smh:

Celtics, Jazz Close To Gordon Hayward Sign-And-Trade Involving Jae Crowder
JUL 6, 2017 2:19 PM

Crowder_Jae_bos_150623.jpg

The Boston Celtics and Utah Jazz are close to an agreement in which Gordon Hayward will go to Boston in a sign-and-trade with Jae Crowder involved.

A press conference introducing Hayward in Boston is expected within the next two days.

The Celtics need to clear cap space to sign Hayward and a sign-and-trade between the two parties could benefit them both multiple ways.

Crowder is on one of the NBA's best contracts, which means Boston will receive asset compensation in addition to Hayward.
 
Grading The Deals: Warriors Sign Nick Young, Omri Casspi
BY CHRISTOPHER REINA

JUL 5, 2017 7:28 PM

Casspi_Omri_min_170401.jpg

The Golden State Warriors’ position of strength is perhaps best felt in the offseason when they seemingly have their pick of rotation player free agents. When you have four of the best 15 players in the league and they each complement each other, even imperfect players fit in expertly. The Warriors wisely prioritized shooting and defensive versatility in agreeing to terms with Nick Young and Omri Casspi. The way they approach free agency has become formulaic, yet constantly unpredictable on who they actually sign.

Over the past few months, Golden State has expressed interest in Jamal Crawford and even signing Jose Calderon for a few hours, but neither player fits in and can do as many things as Casspi and Young, while Matt Barnes is past the point of making a meaningful impact.

When we initially considered Kevin Durant joining the Warriors, we thought of how much they’d be better in simply swapping out Harrison Barnes in their Death Lineup. But Durant also allows the Warriors to swap out Draymond Green as the center of the Death Lineup with both Young and Casspi able to function in the Harrison Barnes role with their versatility on defense while they’re both far more reliable three-point shooters. The same goes for Patrick McCaw in the Andre Iguodala role.

Young was nearly out of the NBA this time last year when the Lakers were considering waiving him just to move on with their rebuild without the extraneous distraction and elite chucking, but he had a productive season in which he applied himself on defense and continued to be more judicious with his shot attempts. Young’s usage rate dropped from his peak Swaggy P seasons at 26.0+ to sub-20.0, taking more three-pointers and fewer long two-pointers. Young shot 40.4 percent on 13.2 three-point attempts per 100 possessions last season. The utility of what Young does is perfect for the Warriors' second unit.

On the surface, Young becomes this year's version of JaVale McGee but McGee wasn't even guaranteed a roster spot and was on the minimum while earning his roster spot in camp, while the financial commitment to Young is significant. Young isn't in need of proving himself all over again, however, as Luke Walton already put in that work for the Warriors this past season.

The Warriors have become progressively better in every season since 14-15 instead of merely trying to sustain and getting the margins of their roster chipped away at.

Grade for Warriors on Nick Young: A

Young opted out of his contract with the Lakers and found a contract for almost as much money with the team most likely to win the title. Young will be featured in a way that perfectly showcases his game and he can likely move on to another team in 2018 on a final multi-year deal.

Grade for Nick Young: A

Casspi has enigmatically bounced around a lot during his career despite being a career 36.7 percent three-point shooter who can defend most forwards at either position.

The Pelicans unwisely released Casspi following his thumb injury during his first game following his trade in order to create a roster spot. Casspi would have fit perfectly with New Orleans and they could have paid him more than the veteran’s minimum since they had his Bird rights.

Grade for Warriors on Omri Casspi: A

Casspi has never appeared in a playoff game and he has a career record of 180-319. Casspi will have the chance to showcase his game in a winning situation and become a free agent again at the age of 30 in 2018.

Grade for Omri Casspi: B+
 
You talking as someone who saw him suck in the playoffs two years ago.....Barnes proved he was a solid player. He's not a superstar.....he's a all star caliber player in this league though.
Nah, Im talking as someone who watched his production in Dallas after that contract he got.
 
Grading The Deals: Thunder Get Andre Roberson, Patrick Patterson On Value Contracts
BY CHRISTOPHER REINA

JUL 6, 2017 1:08 AM

Patterson_Patrick_tor_161214.jpg

The Oklahoma City Thunder pursued better all-around players in free agency like Rudy Gay but decided to stick with the guaranteed defense and availability of Andre Roberson on an affordable contract for a starter while hoping his glaring deficiencies on offense will be less of an issue now that they’ve added Paul George, and to a lesser extent, Patrick Patterson. Roberson signed a three-year, $30 million deal in a cap climate where average starter salaries are in the $15 million per year range.

Roberson is legitimately one of the game’s best defensive players, yet one of the most difficult to keep on the floor late in games due to his limitations on offense. Opposing teams can help off Roberson without consequence. Roberson dropped from 31.1 percent on three-pointers in 15-16 down to 24.5 percent in 16-17. On top of that, Roberson became a 42.3 percent shooter at the free throw line during the regular season and went 3-for-21 from the line in the playoffs as the Rockets used the hack-a strategy upon him.

Roberson’s self-awareness has undoubtedly compounded the situation where it is mental and mechanical instead of strictly mechanical. Once it starts for a player like that, it is difficult to reverse it. Roberson will need some irrational confidence to get back to being passable.

With George and Patterson significantly better on offense in terms of spacing and playmaking than Victor Oladipo and Domantas Sabonis/Taj Gibson, Roberson can revert back to how he was used in 15-16 as a screener and baseline cutter. Roberson even hit 36.4 percent of his corner three-pointers in Kevin Durant’s final season on a decent volume. When Roberson was hitting those three-pointers, the Thunder outplayed the 73-win Warriors. When he stopped hitting those, they blew a 3-1 lead.

On the defensive end, Roberson can defend 1-4 on-ball and he also makes an impact as a help defender. Roberson is truly elite on that end of the floor and the Thunder should improve from their ranking as the 10th best defense in the NBA last season into the top-5 or so if George recommits on defense as a No. 2 scorer. The length and athleticism of their projected starting five will be uncomfortable for even the best offenses to play against.

Grade for Thunder on Andre Roberson: A-

Roberson rejected a four-year, $48 million extension offer from the Thunder before the start of the season and he loses $6 million over the three years of his actual deal.

The restricted free agency market is exceedingly problematic for players of Roberson’s caliber, who their incumbent teams clearly want to keep and aren’t quite worth the gamble on the part of rival teams to tie up their cap space.

If Roberson would have shot 35 percent on three-pointers, then he gets maxed out in this market at the league’s thinnest position. For players like Roberson to turn down an extension offer, you have to be fully prepared to take negotiations late into the summer and even play for the qualifying offer to become an unrestricted free agent.

Since Roberson didn’t even wait until the end of the moratorium, he showed he lacked the appetite to wait for a better offer or the uncertainty of 12 months before he can sign for life changing money.

Roberson will at least be young enough when he reenters free agency at 28 to get a significantly bigger contract if he can figure out how to shoot by then.

Grade for Andre Roberson: C+

Like Roberson’s $10 million AAV deal, the Thunder will likely have another player making way less than typical starter money on Patrick Patterson’s three-year, $16.4 million deal. For a cost conscious small market franchise, these types of value contracts by Sam Presti are essential.

The Thunder have lacked two-way role players who can space the floor around their stars, which Patterson will bring at the 4. Patterson has shot no worse than 36 percent on three-pointers in any single season since he started shooting them regularly in Year 3. Patterson plays intelligent team defense and is versatile enough to switch against all positions.

Oklahoma City paying Patterson $5.5 million per year is an exponentially better value than deals signed in the offseason by Taj Gibson, Paul Millsap, Zach Randolph or Serge Ibaka.

The significance of the Paul George trade is really felt in these types of signings because they can target role players with a more narrow set of abilities on value contracts since is less will be asked of them.

The Thunder outperformed expectations in Year 1 without Durant and will enter 17-18 with a significantly better chance of competing in that tier below the Warriors.

Grade for Thunder on Patrick Patterson: A

Patterson had a disappointing walk year, which depressed his market though he presumably had better offers from teams who don’t figure to be relevant.

Patterson at least has a player option for Year 3 when he’ll be entering his 29 year and could have a later career surge the way we saw Marvin Williams Jr. become an eight-figure per year player with the Hornets before the 2016 offseason.

Grade for Patrick Patterson: B
 
Grading The Deals: Kings Sign Pair Of Veterans In George Hill, Zach Randolph
BY CHRISTOPHER REINA

JUL 5, 2017 3:56 PM

Hill_George_ind_161104.jpg

George Hill is coming off a five-year, $40 million contract signed in 2012, which turned into a great value for an Indiana Pacers team that was the greatest Eastern Conference threat after the Boston Celtics went into contender emeritus status. After one season with the Utah Jazz in which he fit perfectly and had a career year, Hill moves on to join the Sacramento Kings on a three-year, $57 million contract.

Sacramento just had their best draft since selecting DeMarcus Cousins in 2010 and have been on a far more promising trajectory since trading him. While building around a young core, they've somewhat inexplicably decided to use their cap space on veterans.

Hill ranked 23rd in the NBA in Real Plus Minus last season, a jump from 100th in 15-16, but he only played in 49 games and was unable finish out the playoffs due to a toe injury. Hill’s age (31), injury concerns, role player status and the dearth of available starting point guard spots contributed to his depressed market.

Hill’s value comes from his defense and ability to play off the ball at the point guard position. Hill’s 22.8 assist rate ranked 31st in the NBA and decidedly on the low end amongst point guards. Hill does run the pick and roll well still but he’s limited in that role. Hill has shot better than 40 percent from three on a high attempt rate in each of the past two seasons and has been in the high thirties since his second season in the NBA. Hill’s shooting will of course age over the life of his contract better than his defense and auxiliary playmaking.

Hill is a good signing for Sacramento in terms of on-court fit since he can play beside De’Aaron Fox even though they already have a lot of depth at shooting guard, but they can more importantly keep him on a traditional rookie point guard timeline.

The opportunity cost for the Kings on Hill, as it is with Zach Randolph, comes from using their cap space in this way instead of taking on bad contracts that can come with assets attached. Sacramento has their pick this year to add to their core, but they're infamously without that 2019 selection. Hill and Randolph almost certainly won't be on the Kings' next playoff team.

The Kings did well with the veterans they chose to sign, but the logic of the strategy at this level of financial commitment only accomplishes things that are unquantifiable. The Kings essentially took the wisdom of the three-year, $24 million deal to Garrett Temple from 2016 and tripled down on it.

Grade for Kings: C+

Hill and the Jazz were unable to agree upon a renegotiation and extension in February. The Jazz were allowed to offer up to a four-year, $88.3 million deal, which computed to a three-year, $74.7 million deal plus an additional $13.6 million for 16-17. This computes to a $17.7 million miscalculation and while the market moved with several of the teams with cap space and a point guard need drafted players and the Wolves not only traded his Utah replacement in Ricky Rubio but immediately signed a point guard of their own for identical money in Jeff Teague.

Hill did well to at least find $57 million with the Kings, even if the final year is partially guaranteed, but this is a clear rebuilding situation and he’s grown accustomed to playing meaningful playoff basketball.

Grade for George Hill: C

Dave Joerger and the Kings ended the Grizzlies’ Grit & Grind era by signing Randolph to a two-year, $24 million deal. When the Grizzlies were eliminated by the Spurs in a series that featured their customarily tenacious style, we knew then there was a good chance that would be the end of an era.

The Kings need to prioritize their frontcourt minutes to developing Willie Cauley-Stein and Skal Labissiere, and Randolph will get at least 20 of those available 96 minutes at the two big man positions. Randolph is in clear decline but he can still score in the halfcourt, especially since more teams are playing small forwards as power forwards. Randolph doesn’t get to the line as often and is less efficient overall as you’d expect from a guy about to turn 36 with over 33,000 career minutes.

Grade for Kings: C

The stretch from 2007 until 2009 when Randolph was traded by the Blazers to the Knicks and then to the Clippers and then to the Grizzlies was troubling, but he found the perfect home with Memphis where his immense talents were correctly used and the town embraced him on a personal level.

Randolph growing into a value veteran locker room presence was completely unforeseen a decade ago, but he’s earned it and he’s also earned this contract by taking care of himself physically and remaining a productive player.

Grade for Zach Randolph: A
 
The NBA would like the Nets to keep their dirty hands off their restricted free agents

by Derek James4 hours agoFollow @DerekJamesNBA

According to The Vertical’s Chris Mannix, teams are upset with the Brooklyn Nets for signing their restricted free agents to large offer sheets. This comes after The Vertical reported that the Nets signed Washington’s Otto Porter to a four-year, $106 million dollar offer sheet. In turn, the Wizards are reportedly going to wait as long as possible in effort to punish and tie up the Nets’ cap space.


This isn’t the first time the Nets have forced teams to match large offer sheets on their restricted free agents. It happened last summer with Miami’s Tyler Johnson and Portland’s Allen Crabbe. Each time, the other team was forced to match at a price (much) higher than they would have liked to pay, or let a young talent walk. And each time that team chose to match.

There’s not much sympathy from the Nets for other teams’ cap situations and little being reciprocated for the Nets’ as a franchise.

The Wizards had the chance to lockdown Porter when they met on July 1 but couldn’t come to a deal. Teams like the Blazers and Heat had similar opportunities to come to agreements before their players reached restricted free agency. In each case, all three of the players have come out as winners.

For the Wizards, matching the Nets’ offer for Porter is financially concerning. They already owe Bradley Beal $105 million over the next four years. John Wall has just two years left on his deal and is owed $37 million. Matching Porter makes it tough to re-sign Wall in 2019 and build a competitive roster around him. The Wizards care more about that than empathizing with Brooklyn’s limited rebuilding options.

However, the Wizards’ or anyone else’s cap situation is not the Nets’ problem either. Brooklyn is still dealing with a lack of draft picks with a young roster amidst a rebuild. While these wounds are self-inflicted, they were not done so by the current regime. The Nets’ focus is on finding talent without the luxury of top draft picks. They might as well continue forcing teams to match these lucrative offers in case a team declines in hopes of landing young talent.


Whether this leaves a team with a thin bench or puts them up against the luxury tax doesn’t matter to them.

Sean Marks has been savvy in his short time with the Nets. He inherited Rondae Hollis-Jefferson. He signed Jeremy Lin and Trevor Booker to reasonable deals. He’s also found gems like Sean Kilpatrick and Caris LaVert. On top of that, he’s moved Brook Lopez for D’Angelo Russell and Timofey Mozgov. Being able to assist teams in moving their undesirable contracts, like Mozgov’s, no doubt earns back some goodwill from the rest of the league.

As far as free agency, the Nets aren’t going to be major players. Teams can tie up their cap room for a few more days without having much effect on them. They’re not going to be landing big names anyway. They’re looking for those bargains that don’t require significant cap space. Sitting on Porter’s $26.5 million figure won’t hinder them much, if at all.

NEXT: 30 best NBA social media accounts to follow
The Nets aren’t out here to help other teams build contenders; they’re trying to turn themselves back into a playoff team. Teams should know by now that the Nets will likely pounce at these opportunities and may need to do more to avoid letting these situations escalate. The other side of that is players bet on themselves all the time. They know that they may be leaving money on the table taking the qualifying offer knowing that someone may offer more in restricted free agency. That only decreases a team’s leverage.

Teams like the Wizards are going to try to do what they can to elevate their franchises. However, they shouldn’t be surprised or upset when the Nets try to do the same.


http://fansided.com/2017/07/06/nets-dirty-hands-off-restricted-free-agents/
 
He will never be a Allstair

Stop

I said he was an all star caliber player....he won't make the all star team out West but he surely would make it out Easts if niggas like Kyle Korver can make it.

If UTAH gives Boston more compensation for this trade :hmm::smh:

Celtics, Jazz Close To Gordon Hayward Sign-And-Trade Involving Jae Crowder
JUL 6, 2017 2:19 PM

Crowder_Jae_bos_150623.jpg

The Boston Celtics and Utah Jazz are close to an agreement in which Gordon Hayward will go to Boston in a sign-and-trade with Jae Crowder involved.

A press conference introducing Hayward in Boston is expected within the next two days.

The Celtics need to clear cap space to sign Hayward and a sign-and-trade between the two parties could benefit them both multiple ways.

Crowder is on one of the NBA's best contracts, which means Boston will receive asset compensation in addition to Hayward.


Probably in Utah best interest to get something for Hayward.......

Nah, Im talking as someone who watched his production in Dallas after that contract he got.

Oh really? And what did you see?
 
Oh really? And what did you see?
I played FDS all season, so I kept up with all players. No clutch gene, he disappeared in the 2nd half often, didn't demand the ball, JJ Barrea has more heart, had a few 30+ games, but generally was a nonfactor against legit teams.
 
The NBA would like the Nets to keep their dirty hands off their restricted free agents

by Derek James4 hours agoFollow @DerekJamesNBA

According to The Vertical’s Chris Mannix, teams are upset with the Brooklyn Nets for signing their restricted free agents to large offer sheets. This comes after The Vertical reported that the Nets signed Washington’s Otto Porter to a four-year, $106 million dollar offer sheet. In turn, the Wizards are reportedly going to wait as long as possible in effort to punish and tie up the Nets’ cap space.


This isn’t the first time the Nets have forced teams to match large offer sheets on their restricted free agents. It happened last summer with Miami’s Tyler Johnson and Portland’s Allen Crabbe. Each time, the other team was forced to match at a price (much) higher than they would have liked to pay, or let a young talent walk. And each time that team chose to match.

There’s not much sympathy from the Nets for other teams’ cap situations and little being reciprocated for the Nets’ as a franchise.

The Wizards had the chance to lockdown Porter when they met on July 1 but couldn’t come to a deal. Teams like the Blazers and Heat had similar opportunities to come to agreements before their players reached restricted free agency. In each case, all three of the players have come out as winners.

For the Wizards, matching the Nets’ offer for Porter is financially concerning. They already owe Bradley Beal $105 million over the next four years. John Wall has just two years left on his deal and is owed $37 million. Matching Porter makes it tough to re-sign Wall in 2019 and build a competitive roster around him. The Wizards care more about that than empathizing with Brooklyn’s limited rebuilding options.

However, the Wizards’ or anyone else’s cap situation is not the Nets’ problem either. Brooklyn is still dealing with a lack of draft picks with a young roster amidst a rebuild. While these wounds are self-inflicted, they were not done so by the current regime. The Nets’ focus is on finding talent without the luxury of top draft picks. They might as well continue forcing teams to match these lucrative offers in case a team declines in hopes of landing young talent.


Whether this leaves a team with a thin bench or puts them up against the luxury tax doesn’t matter to them.

Sean Marks has been savvy in his short time with the Nets. He inherited Rondae Hollis-Jefferson. He signed Jeremy Lin and Trevor Booker to reasonable deals. He’s also found gems like Sean Kilpatrick and Caris LaVert. On top of that, he’s moved Brook Lopez for D’Angelo Russell and Timofey Mozgov. Being able to assist teams in moving their undesirable contracts, like Mozgov’s, no doubt earns back some goodwill from the rest of the league.

As far as free agency, the Nets aren’t going to be major players. Teams can tie up their cap room for a few more days without having much effect on them. They’re not going to be landing big names anyway. They’re looking for those bargains that don’t require significant cap space. Sitting on Porter’s $26.5 million figure won’t hinder them much, if at all.

NEXT: 30 best NBA social media accounts to follow
The Nets aren’t out here to help other teams build contenders; they’re trying to turn themselves back into a playoff team. Teams should know by now that the Nets will likely pounce at these opportunities and may need to do more to avoid letting these situations escalate. The other side of that is players bet on themselves all the time. They know that they may be leaving money on the table taking the qualifying offer knowing that someone may offer more in restricted free agency. That only decreases a team’s leverage.

Teams like the Wizards are going to try to do what they can to elevate their franchises. However, they shouldn’t be surprised or upset when the Nets try to do the same.


http://fansided.com/2017/07/06/nets-dirty-hands-off-restricted-free-agents/
The Big Russian is being an asshole! :roflmao2:
 
They wrong for giving dirk that baby contract.

He should go to the warriors

They fucked him over a few years ago but now.......he's 39 now.....he got the going rate for that....he's probably the oldest guy in the league now.......or shit him or Vince Carter.
 
They fucked him over a few years ago but now.......he's 39 now.....he got the going rate for that....he's probably the oldest guy in the league now.......or shit him or Vince Carter.

Nah.... Dirks a dumb ass... He opted out of his contract that would have paid him 25 mill next season. This shit ain't on Cuban, its on him. All due respect but its not like he's taking shorts like Durant did, so the Mavs can contend for some shit! After how they've shit on him financially all these years, he was dumb as fuck for opting out. Maybe he has a side deal for percentage of team ownership or something, but if not its on him. How the fuck do you leave 25 mill on the table and THEN sign a 2 year 10 mill deal with a TEAM OPTION for the second year!

Dirk has been pimped worse than any player in league history... All that bread he's helped make Cuban, and Cuban is signing him to these deals like this :giggle:
 
Nah.... Dirks a dumb ass... He opted out of his contract that would have paid him 25 mill next season. This shit ain't on Cuban, its on him. All due respect but its not like he's taking shorts like Durant did, so the Mavs can contend for some shit! After how they've shit on him financially all these years, he was dumb as fuck for opting out. Maybe he has a side deal for percentage of team ownership or something, but if not its on him. How the fuck do you leave 25 mill on the table and THEN sign a 2 year 10 mill deal with a TEAM OPTION for the second year!

Dirk has been pimped worse than any player in league history... All that bread he's helped make Cuban, and Cuban is signing him to these deals like this :giggle:
Opting out was dumb on his part. I'm not even talking about that. I'm talking about the deal he got. That's far better than most 40 year olds. Dirks being loyal to a fault. Couldn't be me especially after y'all wasted my money on Chandler Parsons..........

I got a feeling though Dirk gonna get this cash back post NBA career. He's had to have had some promises made to him to be doing all of this. They look out for each other so wouldn't shock me a bit. Hell I just found out Finley been getttig checks with the Mavericks still.
 
Opting out was dumb on his part. I'm not even talking about that. I'm talking about the deal he got. That's far better than most 40 year olds. Dirks being loyal to a fault. Couldn't be me especially after y'all wasted my money on Chandler Parsons..........

I got a feeling though Dirk gonna get this cash back post NBA career. He's had to have had some promises made to him to be doing all of this. They look out for each other so wouldn't shock me a bit. Hell I just found out Finley been getttig checks with the Mavericks still.
No doubt hopefully he does... but ultimately they are gonna shit on him next year and not pick up the team option....

Dude gave up 20 mill guaranteed for a team who has shit on him for years. I wonder what Cuban has on him :confused:
 
Grading The Deals: Thunder Get Andre Roberson, Patrick Patterson On Value Contracts
BY CHRISTOPHER REINA

JUL 6, 2017 1:08 AM


Grade for Thunder on Andre Roberson: A-

Roberson rejected a four-year, $48 million extension offer from the Thunder before the start of the season and he loses $6 million over the three years of his actual deal.

The restricted free agency market is exceedingly problematic for players of Roberson’s caliber, who their incumbent teams clearly want to keep and aren’t quite worth the gamble on the part of rival teams to tie up their cap space.

If Roberson would have shot 35 percent on three-pointers, then he gets maxed out in this market at the league’s thinnest position. For players like Roberson to turn down an extension offer, you have to be fully prepared to take negotiations late into the summer and even play for the qualifying offer to become an unrestricted free agent.

Since Roberson didn’t even wait until the end of the moratorium, he showed he lacked the appetite to wait for a better offer or the uncertainty of 12 months before he can sign for life changing money.

Roberson will at least be young enough when he reenters free agency at 28 to get a significantly bigger contract if he can figure out how to shoot by then.

Damn. Consider Roberson annihilated.
 
Jamal Crawford interested in joining Cavs?
i_97_3e_4f_jamal-crawford.png

Veteran guard Jamal Crawford is “very interested” in joining the Cavaliers if he becomes a free agent after a recent conversation with LeBron James,sources told cleveland.com. Crawford, 37, was traded by the Los Angeles Clippers to the Atlanta Hawks, and will negotiate a buyout with Atlanta. He has two years and $28.75 million remaining on his contract, but only one year (about $14.2 million) is fully guaranteed. About $3 million is guaranteed from the following year.
 
Agree this shit in Dirk, Dallas rebuilding you don't take a pay cut for that shit
Nah.... Dirks a dumb ass... He opted out of his contract that would have paid him 25 mill next season. This shit ain't on Cuban, its on him. All due respect but its not like he's taking shorts like Durant did, so the Mavs can contend for some shit! After how they've shit on him financially all these years, he was dumb as fuck for opting out. Maybe he has a side deal for percentage of team ownership or something, but if not its on him. How the fuck do you leave 25 mill on the table and THEN sign a 2 year 10 mill deal with a TEAM OPTION for the second year!

Dirk has been pimped worse than any player in league history... All that bread he's helped make Cuban, and Cuban is signing him to these deals like this :giggle:
 
Jamal Crawford interested in joining Cavs?
i_97_3e_4f_jamal-crawford.png

Veteran guard Jamal Crawford is “very interested” in joining the Cavaliers if he becomes a free agent after a recent conversation with LeBron James,sources told cleveland.com. Crawford, 37, was traded by the Los Angeles Clippers to the Atlanta Hawks, and will negotiate a buyout with Atlanta. He has two years and $28.75 million remaining on his contract, but only one year (about $14.2 million) is fully guaranteed. About $3 million is guaranteed from the following year.
This would be a helluva pick up for the Cavs! :yes:
 
Dirk gotta be getting paid under the table, or something.
I have no proof but he has to be.....no way nobody taking a 20 million dollar pay cut on a team that's essentially starting over......hell naw. Either he getting money under the table or he got something set up to give him his money post career off the salary cap.
 
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