Yuma
Suns are my Kryptonite!
The way I am reading the new CBA one time waiver rule, either we use it this summer, or lose it. The rule applies to this summer only.
Assuming the above, I know big salary players like Allen Houston were mentioned for the waiver. However he still counts against the team's cap, but not luxury tax. Plus the team still has to pay him.
I am thinking this rule could be used for "small" salaries, too. The player I am thinking of is Jake Voshkul. We could jettison him, free up a roster spot, and only eat his $1.9 million salary. It's clear D'Antoni won't use him. Plus we can tell him no thanks to his player option! I know this isn't the way the exception was envisioned, but if we need a roster spot and Jake IS dead wood, then we could use the exception on him.
I can't think of a high salary guy we would use it on. Without being over the luxury tax threshhold, it really makes no sense for Phoenix to jettison a high salary for the waiver exception. Why eat a high salary when it counts against your cap anyway if you aren't paying the luxury tax?
Assuming the above, I know big salary players like Allen Houston were mentioned for the waiver. However he still counts against the team's cap, but not luxury tax. Plus the team still has to pay him.
I am thinking this rule could be used for "small" salaries, too. The player I am thinking of is Jake Voshkul. We could jettison him, free up a roster spot, and only eat his $1.9 million salary. It's clear D'Antoni won't use him. Plus we can tell him no thanks to his player option! I know this isn't the way the exception was envisioned, but if we need a roster spot and Jake IS dead wood, then we could use the exception on him.
I can't think of a high salary guy we would use it on. Without being over the luxury tax threshhold, it really makes no sense for Phoenix to jettison a high salary for the waiver exception. Why eat a high salary when it counts against your cap anyway if you aren't paying the luxury tax?