Wyc is cheap and doesn't spend like he should, but that doesn't mean the team should overpay and enter into bad contracts. There is nothing contradictory in that sentiment. The team should have kept Grant at that price and the team should trade Brown and not give him that huge contract.
So Wyc is cheap because he didn't overpay Grant and reckless because he is overpaying for Brown. Sounds like you disagree with their choices but you have not demonstrated that they are cheap, just the opposite really. How about trading for and extending Porzingis? Another reckless overpay by a cheap owner? (In case you missed it, that is kind of an oxymoron).
You, and some others, took one thing, primarily, that they didn't use the Fournier TPE, and went all in on the Wyc is cheap narrative. Based on that, I feel you have lost some objectivity regarding judging subsequent moves. As I have said many times, debating the choice to use or not use the TPE is fair enough. Continuously trying to prove that you were right that Wyc is cheap is a different thing.
As a fan, you can feel that way if you want. I don't. I look at all this and come to a different conclusion. You seem to only give them credit for spending when they spend in the way you want them to spend. Spending on Brown doesn't count somehow, they are still cheap owners. Not spending on Grant or the TPE proves they are cheap. I can't follow this.
Not at all. I don't want an owner that says there is no budget and then everything the team does says there is a budget. Last year, Boston let 3 tpe's expire without using them. That is just wasting assets and the team clearly had roster spots open and available. Boston, despite being a top 3 team all season, cut salary during the year and carried open roster spots for months.
Consistently wasting assets that you can't get back is the problem. It is one thing if someone were to wildly overpay Grant, but it sounds like Boston didn't even make him an offer and was fine letting him walk. He signed a contract for slightly above the mle, which is pretty reasonable for a player like him. Another wasted asset.
And Boston has to trade Brown or give him the supermax. There really isn't another option, but giving him the supermax is a mistake. He isn't worth that contract and a contract that big can devastate your franchise if you get it wrong. To this team, Brown isn't even worth the 30% max, let alone the 35%. He is going to be dramatically overpaid.
The Zinger actually took a rather large paycut on the extension. Paying him 30 million a year may be a slight overpay for the production, but if he can play in the 60+ game range it should be ok. I think there was too big a risk in letting him play out the final year, so while I would have liked a bit less from him on the contract, that was a risk worth taking.
And even with bringing in Zinger, the team has a nearly identical salary, which is actually a lot less when you factor in the normal percentage increase built into contracts and the nearly 50 million less in tax.