Holy ****.You can use a single TPE on multiple players, actually (if Larry Coon's FAQ is to be believed).
This seems new. Maybably not.
Holy ****.You can use a single TPE on multiple players, actually (if Larry Coon's FAQ is to be believed).
This is how the old CBA operated and I really doubt it has changed.
In some cases, teams have up to one year to acquire the replacement player(s) to complete a trade. These trades are considered non-simultaneous trades. In a non-simultaneous trade, a team can only acquire up to 100% plus $100,000 of the salary it gives up (as opposed to 125% plus $100,000 in a simultaneous trade). A trade in which more than one player is traded away can only be simultaneous; non-simultaneous trades are allowed only when a single player is traded away (although teams can sometimes find ways to configure multi-player trades as multiple single-player trades which are non-simultaneous).
Probably the most interesting name on the list you provided was Hedo. Not because I would want him or his contract anywhere near this team, but we all know whoever wants Dwight has to take back Hedo. And for all you who will no doubt clamor that why would we want Dwight for a 1 yr rental, well I'd rent him for a year and give up Al, CJ + GS pick to do it. I'd even throw in a Burks or a Hayward as well.
crazy talk
You can use a single TPE on multiple players, actually (if Larry Coon's FAQ is to be believed).
Holy ****.
This seems new. Maybably not.
You cannot combine the salary from one TPE to any other salary. That includes other players and other TPEs.
Here is a more complicated example of a legal non-simultaneous trade: a team has a $4 million Traded Player exception from an earlier trade, and a $10 million player it currently wants to trade. Another team has three players making $4 million, $5 million and $7 million, and the teams want to do a three-for-one trade with these players. This is legal -- the $5 million and $7 million players together make less than the 125% plus $100,000 allowed for the $10 million player ($12,600,000), and the $4 million player exactly fits within the $4 million Traded Player exception. So the $4 million player actually completes the previous trade, leaving the two teams trading a $10 million player for a $5 million and a $7 million player. From the other team's perspective it's all just one big simultaneous trade: their $4 million, $5 million and $7 million players for the $10 million player.
In actuality, TWO trades are being made.
That would make sense, but you would sure think he'd explain it that way, rather than imply that an exception was being combined with a player. It would be easy enough to just say that teams get around it by seperating it into more than one trade, but he doesn't do that.
No way to know what has changed and what hasn't unless you try to read up on it. I accidently deleted the link I posted, but here it is again. Rather than speculate on what might or might not be true, I try to read up on CBA stuff. I know GVC does the same, which is why I wanted to know if he knew something I had missed.
https://webfiles.uci.edu/lcoon/cbafaq/salarycap.htm#Q72
This FAQ is for members of the media and fans of the NBA who want to know more about the salary cap, trade rules, and other aspects of the NBA's 2005 Collective Bargaining Agreement.
You're sounding pretty condescending there for a guy posting a link to an explanation of the 2005 era CBA.
Yes, I have read that and is one reason why I DOUBT anything has changed.
It was described on the radio, from a conversation with KOC, and yes it can be used on multiple players.
It can be used in quite a few ways.
KOC called it the equivalent of a gift card, or something like that.
If it's like that, it could prove very useful.
Ok so if it's a gift card does it have an experation date? Do we have to use it this year or within the next 3? This thing is a legal document and more than I care to truly dissect. I'm interested just not that interested.