Mike D'Antoni's brother's name is Dan?
thegrahamcrackr said:Wrong. No matter what size contract a team offers Finley, he will get the same total amount of money.
The Mavericks have to pay Finley:
Total Buyout - New salary
Where the new team obviously pays the new salary.
So no matter what Finley signs for, he will not get any more than the total buyout. It is just a matter of who gets footed with the bill.
I can't imagine Fins would be doing anything to help Cuban after releasing him, especially at the expense of his new team since his finances are unaffected.
krepitch said:Mike D'Antoni's brother's name is Dan?
playstation said:I know this has been debated numerous times, but I still have a hard time with it. Exhibit A: Dikembe Mutombo. This man was waived from NJ with a $14M salary, then signs for the MLE with Houston for $4.5M, and is now making $18.5M (http://www.hoopshype.com/salaries.htm), NOT $14M, as your postulate would assume.
Thus, I still have difficulties believing that a player can't get more $$$ after being waived. IMO, that passage from Larry Coon's article assumed the player waived is only offered vet. min on the open market, and is thus paid that amount. If he was offered more, he'd get more. What say you?
Joe Mama said:are you sure Mutombo didn't negotiate a buyout? Teams almost never flat out waive a player with a contract of that size.
Joe Mama
devilalum said:I'd think the Suns would tell Payton, "You can have as many minutes as you earn." Its not like the rest of the team is a bunch of rookies and Payton knows that.
cly2tw said:So true. In fact, in the playoffs, only those who can perform under pressure will get significant minutes. With Payton's experience, he shouldn't worry about it as long as he is physically top fit. DA will always play the best talents available.
coloradosun said:That is all the Suns wanted from Payton was insurance to get deep into the playoffs if Nash got hurt, that was all. Get Gary Payton out your minds.
Joe Mama said:SAR - I'm sorry, but I think he is a horrible fit with the Phoenix Suns. The team does not need more scorers,
Yes this guy can score averaging 20 pts a game on bad teams. You overlook the fact that he also averages 8 rebounds a game and 3 assists. Average a block and a steal a game just like Thomas. He is 6'9' (same as Amare and Thomas) 245 lbs. (heavier than Thomas). I think it would be great to have 3- 6'9" guys that you can rotate. This is the guy.
Payton - he could be a possibility,
I don't see it as a possibility in Gary's world. He is on trial in Canada this weekend and could face up to 10 years in prison.
Finley - like Q could play the 2 or the 3.
Bell - Bell is absolutely not a point guard.
You are right here, he is no point guard. I prefer Juan Dixon
Lithuanian - no way, we still have Milos.
Marshall - I've liked Marshall for a long time.
This guy is the scorer you think SAR tends to be, this guy is a chucker.
Chris Andersen - I like this guy. This guy is a flake he will not fit in.
Joe Mama
JCSunsfan said:First, the new guy (forget his handle) with the insider info about the Suns going to sign a pg that played with Nash in Dallas--he was right. Its Raja Bell. Good choice.
Second. Hunter says he expect to return to the Suns. He also said that his desire is a longer term deal. The Suns could offer Hunter a 4 year 10 million deal and he would stay. Its probably worth it. Split the mle between Hunter and Arvydas. I'm ok with that.
thegrahamcrackr said:Deke did negotiate a buyout
For example, suppose a fifth-year player is waived during the 2003 offseason, with one guaranteed season remaining on his contract. If this player signs a $1 million contract with another NBA team for the 03-04 season, his original team gets to set off $1 million minus $563,679 (the minimum for a one-year veteran in 03-04), divided by two, or $218,160.50. If this player had a $5 million salary with his prior team, then his prior team would be responsible for the remaining $4,781,839.50. Note that between his prior team and new team the player will earn a combined $5,781,839.50, which was more than he made prior to being waived.
thegrahamcrackr said:Deke did negotiate a buyout
George O'Brien said:The reason buys agree to buyouts is so they can get the extra money (and perhaps play). Otherwise, why give up a million or two like Eisley did, when all he has to do is sit around on the injured list and collect his check.
As for Michael Finley, I just don't know how healthy he is. He recently had surgery following a season where he was clearly not 100%, but still averaged 36.8 minutes a game.
If he returns to the level he was the year before, Finley would be a major addition: 18.6 ppg, 44.3% shooting plus 40.5% for three, 4.5 rpg, and almost 3 assists per game.
The Suns would have to make a major commitment to him in terms of getting him minutes, but for a guy who last seaons on bad wheels shot 40.7% for three that doesn't sound so difficult.
i dont know being close to mexico might be a draw (just in case he gets convicted he can make a run for the border.)thegrahamcrackr said:Gary's trial in Canada has absolutely zero relevence on him signing anywhere.
Have you seen Mexico's new stamps?myrondizzo said:i dont know being close to mexico might be a draw (just in case he gets convicted he can make a run for the border.)
elindholm said:For example, suppose a fifth-year player is waived during the 2003 offseason, with one guaranteed season remaining on his contract. If this player signs a $1 million contract with another NBA team for the 03-04 season, his original team gets to set off $1 million minus $563,679 (the minimum for a one-year veteran in 03-04), divided by two, or $218,160.50. If this player had a $5 million salary with his prior team, then his prior team would be responsible for the remaining $4,781,839.50. Note that between his prior team and new team the player will earn a combined $5,781,839.50, which was more than he made prior to being waived.
asudevil83, which site is this from? If it's from Coon's FAQ, that's very strange, because it's contradicted by something else on the same site.
If you'd be willing to post the exact source and location, that would help a lot, and maybe we can get to the bottom of this.
coloradosun said:Yes this guy can score averaging 20 pts a game on bad teams. You overlook the fact that he also averages 8 rebounds a game and 3 assists. Average a block and a steal a game just like Thomas. He is 6'9' (same as Amare and Thomas) 245 lbs. (heavier than Thomas). I think it would be great to have 3- 6'9" guys that you can rotate. This is the guy.
coloradosun said:I don't see it as a possibility in Gary's world. He is on trial in Canada this weekend and could face up to 10 years in prison.
coloradosun said:Finley - like Q could play the 2 or the 3.
coloradosun said:You are right here, he is no point guard. I prefer Juan Dixon
coloradosun said:Lithuanian - no way, we still have Milos.
coloradosun said:This guy is the scorer you think SAR tends to be, this guy is a chucker.
coloradosun said:This guy is a flake he will not fit in.
George O'Brien said:The reason buys agree to buyouts is so they can get the extra money (and perhaps play). Otherwise, why give up a million or two like Eisley did, when all he has to do is sit around on the injured list and collect his check.
Joe Mama said:Chris Andersen - I like this guy.
That is some great analysis. Perhaps you could explain more thoroughly. Are you talking about his play on the court or his mental makeup?
Joe Mama
52. Do released players count against the cap?
Released (waived) players with guaranteed contracts continue to be included in the team salary. Players whose contracts are not guaranteed, including training camp invitees who do not make the opening day roster, are included in team salary in the amount they made while they were with the team.
If another team signs a released player who had a guaranteed contract (as long as the player has cleared waivers -- see question number 53 ), the player's original team is allowed to reduce the amount of money they still owe the player (and lower their team salary) by a commensurate amount (this is called the right of set-off). This is true if the player signs with any professional team -- it doesn't even have to be an NBA team. The amount the original team gets to set off is limited to one-half the difference between the player's new salary and the minimum salary for a one-year veteran (if the player is a rookie, then the rookie minimum is used instead).
For example, suppose a fifth-year player is waived during the 2003 offseason, with one guaranteed season remaining on his contract. If this player signs a $1 million contract with another NBA team for the 03-04 season, his original team gets to set off $1 million minus $563,679 (the minimum for a one-year veteran in 03-04), divided by two, or $218,160.50. If this player had a $5 million salary with his prior team, then his prior team would be responsible for the remaining $4,781,839.50. Note that between his prior team and new team the player will earn a combined $5,781,839.50, which was more than he made prior to being waived.
There was some controversy about what happens to player options (see question number 48 ) if the player is released before the option can be exercised. Newer contracts contain specific language that details exactly what happens to option years when a player is waived. But older contracts still exist which are ambiguous about this point. For example, it was rumored that the Heat would waive Anthony Carter (whose contract contains the older, ambiguous language) in 2003, before Carter could exercise his option for the 03-04 season. Any such action would likely be greived, but so far every team that has found itself in this situation has instead agreed to a buyout with the player, so this situation has yet to be tested.
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53. What are waivers?
It's a temporary status for players who are released by their team. A player released between August 15th and the end of the regular season stays on waivers for 48 hours. A player released at any other time stays on waivers for 10 days. During the waiver period other teams may claim a waived player. If more than one team tries to claim the player, the team with the worst record gets him. If a player on waivers is claimed, the new team acquires his existing contract and pays the remainder of his salary. There is also a fee of $1,000, payable to the league office, for claiming a waived player.
A team can claim a waived player only if one of the following is true:
The team is far enough under the salary cap to fit the player's entire salary.
The team has a disabled player exception for at least the player's salary (see question number 17 ).
The team has a trade exception for at least the player's salary (see question number 68 ).
The player's contract is for one or two seasons and he is paid the minimum salary.
If no team claims a waived player, he is said to have "cleared waivers." The player may sign with the team of his choice at that point. The player's new team only pays the pro-rated minimum salary to the player. The player's original team continues to pay the balance of the player's salary. For this reason, few players are actually claimed while on waivers.
If a player is waived after March 1, he is ineligible to be included in the playoff roster of any team that signs him for the remainder of that season.