3M a year, if consider the potential can be 4M
more than that he can go
Why does he need to go? Why not just keep him this year, see how he progresses. And then you can just sign him to the qualifying offer next year, if you still aren't ready to pay him.
To me, Bradley has shown that he's someone with an extremely narrow comfort zone, who experiences a precipitous drop in production once he steps out of it. I don't see this as the foundation of a solid NBA player.
Depends on your definition of solid NBA player. He has shown enough to know that he can be a very solid NBA role player. Because the definition of a good role player is someone who stays in their comfort zone.
My definition of a solid NBA player is someone who can contribute. And by that, I mean someone who can contribute at all times, and not someone whose whole game will fall apart if you're unable to stash him in the corner for the entire duration of a half-court possession, and only target him for wide open shots or layups.
Well, this would mean that about 60% (and that might be really low) of rotation players in the NBA are not "solid NBA players".
The whole idea of a role player, is that you have a flawed player, who does at least one thing really good, and when you are on a good team, you find ways to hide his weaknesses. That is exactly what Bradley is right now. It's the same as Tony Allen, Bruce Bowen, Jason Terry (in his prime), James Posey, and many other role players who have had long careers as very valuable players.
It's not the same at all. Tony Allen is clearly not a PG, yet he was never as thoroughly embarrassing and painful to watch when asked to man the position. He clearly wasn't a multidimensional scorer, yet he has never had the sustained run of sub-40% shooting that Bradley has displayed.
You can pretty much say exactly the same for House (and Terry) -- while they were lights-out shooters, they never appeared completely incompetent when asked to play defense or handle the ball. It may have clearly been a sub-optimal option, but that's a different story.
Posey, likewise, was clearly a defense-first player that thrived on the corner shot, but he'd run pick and roll and rebound when matched with a bigger guy.
The case in point is that Bradley look like a JV guy unless he's doing his thing, and his thing really isn't much. And it's really the combination of these two issues that's the crux of the problem.