Executives around the NBA don’t love the idea of having teams forfeit second-round picks as a result of tampering investigations, like the Bucks did a year ago, writes ESPN’s Jonathan Givony (Insider link). As Givony explains, the thinking is that late second-rounders don’t have a ton of value to begin with, so taking away those picks hurts would-be draftees as much as it hurts teams.
“Why are we punishing players by reducing the number of picks that are made in the NBA draft?” one executive said to Givony. “Players work their entire careers to get to the point that they can hear their names called on draft night. It’s completely unfair to them to have fewer bestowed that honor because of backroom shenanigans that are entirely out of their control.”
Givony suggests some execs would like to see the NBA find a way to avoid having fewer than 60 picks in future drafts by redistributing any forfeited picks. For instance, a team that wins a midseason tournament could earn an extra second-round pick, or a forfeited pick could be awarded to the team that employs the winner of the league’s new Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Social Justice Champion award.
“How cool would it have been if (inaugural winner) Carmelo Anthony went up to the podium at the 60th pick and announced that the Portland Trail Blazers have drafted someone?” one Eastern Conference executive said to Givony. “That would have been a great moment at Barclays Center, shedding light on the work he’s done, and tying it to the start of a young player’s NBA career, who could maybe follow in his footsteps.”
Here are a few more odds and ends from around the basketball world:
- Speaking to Doug Feinberg of The Associated Press, Spurs assistant Becky Hammon said she can’t wait for a time when it’s considered normal for NBA teams to interview and hire women for head coaching jobs. Hammon, one of the few women to receive head coaching consideration, added that she wants to be hired for the right reasons. “Please don’t hire me to check a box. That’s the worst thing you can do for me,” she said. “Hire me because of my skill sets and coaching, who am I as a person, hire me for those.”
- Bobby Marks of ESPN (Twitter link) provides a breakdown of the projected tax penalties for the eight teams currently above the tax line. While some clubs may shed salary over the course of the season to reduce those bills, the current numbers are staggering, especially for the Warriors ($184MM), Nets ($131MM), and Clippers ($125MM).
- Five-star prospect Jazian Gortman, a guard based in South Carolina whom ESPN ranks fifth in the 2022 recruiting class, has signed with Overtime Elite, the league announced on Wednesday in a press release.
- RealGM has the details on the draft picks involved in a pair of Spurs trades – with the Pacers (Doug McDermott) and Bulls (DeMar DeRozan) – this week. Most notably, the first-round pick Chicago is sending San Antonio will be top-10 protected in 2025 and top-eight protected in two subsequent years. That pick would be pushed back by a year if the Bulls’ 2023 first-rounder falls within in its top-four protection and isn’t conveyed until 2024.
$184M is a drop in the bucket for Joe Lacob, he makes almost $10B a year. Right?
Pre-Covid I read an article that said part of the financing model he used to but in billions of dollars to self finance the arena and all the hotel/entertainment/restaurant development was based on certain attendance levels of the Warriors being successful and that it included paying a step luxury tax to field a highly competitive team. He needs the crowd to pay for his other developments. Thus, he needs the Warriors to be successful.
The Warriors haven’t been successful for the last two seasons, and there’s no reason to believe that will change anytime soon. The team is headed for disaster, just like what happened recently with OKC.
All their fans here call me a hater for pointing out the truth, but they will soon realize that I’m right and their team will be remain in the lottery where it was before their mini-dynasty. Sorry Warriors fans.
Luxury tax
Bucks $47 million
Jazz $36 million
Lakers $33 million
76ers $11 million
Lakers are cheap? Small towns pay more tax than Lakers?
Cavs paid about $179 million luxury tax in 4 years with LeBron?
For Lakers, LeBron is powerless in determining to pay tax?
Lakers can easily resign Caruso and trade him later
Unnamed EC exec: how about hearing your name called.