According to what was just said on the Herd,
Lin contract would cost the Knick around 50 million in the third season.
I don't know how true those numbers are, but WOW.
No, it won't. It's $15m on paper. And why single out Lin's salary? What about bloated salaries of Amare $24m and Carmelo $24m.
If you're a crappy accountant, or a politician, then sure, you can pretend that all of Lin's salary and none of Melo's or A'mare's count against the luxury tax, which will be expensive in year three. But otherwise you're just twisting the facts.
If the Knicks were to have a $90 million payroll in year 3 of Lin, then 1/6 of their luxury tax bill could be assessed to his contract, but over 1/4 should be assessed to each of Anthony's and Stoudemire's deals. That could add on $7-10 to the cost of Lin's deal, which isn't insignificant. But he won't cost $50 mil.
You're talking about accounting allocations.
What we're talking about is marginal cost. The marginal cost of adding his $15 million dollar deal in year 3 is the cost that you must consider.
I mean, sure, it's marginal cost, in that the other two huge contracts came first. But if anyone in the Knicks was thinking at all (which, I grant, is questionable), then they knew that those contracts would necessitate them paying the luxury tax in the future. Accordingly, you should spread the luxury tax costs across the entire payroll.