Marty [Mori Chu] wrote:Apparently they acquired Scott to help reach the salary floor.
The s*** thing about that is, if they hadn't reached the salary floor, they would have been required to pay the difference to their roster and split it among their current players. So basically this is a passive aggressive way of them telling the entire roster, "We would rather give this complete scrub $3m than let you guys have it."
They just have to be at the salary floor by the end of the season.
Two thirds of the season are already gone, so they only have to pay $1M to Scott, instead of distributing $3M to the other players.The CBA is so darn weird.
“Are you crazy?! You think I’m going to go for seven years and try to get there? You enjoy the 2030 draft picks that we have holding? I want to try to see the game today.” — Ish 3/13/25
Marty [Mori Chu] wrote:Apparently they acquired Scott to help reach the salary floor.
The s*** thing about that is, if they hadn't reached the salary floor, they would have been required to pay the difference to their roster and split it among their current players. So basically this is a passive aggressive way of them telling the entire roster, "We would rather give this complete scrub $3m than let you guys have it."
They just have to be at the salary floor by the end of the season.
Two thirds of the season are already gone, so they only have to pay $1M to Scott, instead of distributing $3M to the other players.The CBA is so darn weird.
Marty [Mori Chu] wrote:Apparently they acquired Scott to help reach the salary floor.
The s*** thing about that is, if they hadn't reached the salary floor, they would have been required to pay the difference to their roster and split it among their current players. So basically this is a passive aggressive way of them telling the entire roster, "We would rather give this complete scrub $3m than let you guys have it."
They just have to be at the salary floor by the end of the season.
Two thirds of the season are already gone, so they only have to pay $1M to Scott, instead of distributing $3M to the other players.The CBA is so darn weird.
I read in an article that they are changing it to money spent during the year, as in, how much days you actually have to pay every contract for the players that were on your team, or so.
Marty [Mori Chu] wrote:Apparently they acquired Scott to help reach the salary floor.
The s*** thing about that is, if they hadn't reached the salary floor, they would have been required to pay the difference to their roster and split it among their current players. So basically this is a passive aggressive way of them telling the entire roster, "We would rather give this complete scrub $3m than let you guys have it."
They just have to be at the salary floor by the end of the season.
Two thirds of the season are already gone, so they only have to pay $1M to Scott, instead of distributing $3M to the other players.The CBA is so darn weird.
This rule was actually changed in the new CBA.
So now it's based on total salary paid over the year?
Then how does this move profit the Suns? We actually sent cash to Atl in the deal.
“Are you crazy?! You think I’m going to go for seven years and try to get there? You enjoy the 2030 draft picks that we have holding? I want to try to see the game today.” — Ish 3/13/25
Hmm, I'm trying to figure out how the Suns saved money on this deal. And, they would rather give Atl money along with paying for Mike Scott's salary instead of dividing up the money with the roster?
"There are 3 rules I live by: never get less than 12 hours sleep, never play cards with a guy with the same first name as a city & never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body. Everything else is cream cheese."
In2ition wrote:Hmm, I'm trying to figure out how the Suns saved money on this deal. And, they would rather give Atl money along with paying for Mike Scott's salary instead of dividing up the money with the roster?
From Kevin Pelton
This trade brought the Suns almost up to the team salary minimum, saving Phoenix about $2.4 million because Scott's entire salary counts against the minimum but only the remaining portion (a little less than a million dollars) will be paid by the team. Add in the cash the Suns received and they came out well ahead financially.
My suspicion is Phoenix will waive Scott and use his roster spot to re-sign veteran guard Ronnie Price for the remainder of the season now that he's reached the maximum two possible 10-day contracts.
He's wrong about the Suns receiving Cash, but even if they sent Atlanta $200K, they pocket the remaining savings.
If the Suns would have gone the money distribution route, they would have had to distribute the full amount.
In2ition wrote:Hmm, I'm trying to figure out how the Suns saved money on this deal. And, they would rather give Atl money along with paying for Mike Scott's salary instead of dividing up the money with the roster?
They'll probably assign him to run their Scranton branch.
Author of The Basketball Draft Fact Book: A History of Professional Basketball's College Drafts
Available from Scarecrow Press at - https://rowman.com/ISBN/9780810890695
Author of The Basketball Draft Fact Book: A History of Professional Basketball's College Drafts
Available from Scarecrow Press at - https://rowman.com/ISBN/9780810890695
carey wrote:https://twitter.com/TheMattPetersen/status/834918310680608768
How strange.
Isn't he on the Young Turks?
"There are 3 rules I live by: never get less than 12 hours sleep, never play cards with a guy with the same first name as a city & never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body. Everything else is cream cheese."
carey wrote:https://twitter.com/TheMattPetersen/status/834918310680608768
How strange.
Yeah, but sometimes stuff like this happens. Like those ultraprotected seconds, it is at least something to trade. For instance, the rights to Albert Miralles (drafted in 2004) were sent in 2016 by the Bucks to Cleveland for Delly.