If Lillard's agent is calling teams to warn against trading for him, as a way to force his way to Miami, can the commissioner step in and fine Lillard and his agent? Better yet, could the commissioner veto a trade of Lillard to Miami because of what is essentially is becoming collusion?
It is clearly collusion or in violation of the CBA. If the commish doesn't step in, it sets a bad precedent for the league.
Very interested to understand how an agent’s conversation on behalf of his client could be considered collusion or a violation of the CBA in the fashion you’re describing.
Is it any different from Kristaps‘s agent saying he wouldn’t work out for the Process Sixers?
I think both situations are potentially collusive. An agent/player conspires with a desired team by agreeing to avoid workouts with other teams so the desired team can select the player…. sounds like it creates an unfair competitive advantage for one team. An agent/player conspires with a desired team to have the player demand a trade exclusively to that team while the team creates a low-value trade - preserving team’s essential core - knowing the agent is eliminating competition from every other team by implying the player will be disengaged and a disruptive element if they trade for him. Yeah, that’s collusive and seems to creat a wrong/unfair competitive advantage for one team.
Potentially collusive, sure, but Collusion is a two-way street. If Lillard is saying "I want to go to Miami" and his agent is telling other teams "guys Dame really wants Miami" there's no collusion there - the agent is doing his job.
Remember, anything Woj writes, tweets, or shared is written, tweeted or shared with an eye towards forwarding his agenda, namely that teams and agents will continue to call him first when it comes to breaking news. When
we read Woj's paragraph here, we should be mindful of that:
As Cronin explores the broader landscape, Lillard's agent, Aaron Goodwin, has been calling prospective trade partners and warning against trading for his client, team executives told ESPN. Goodwin is telling organizations outside of Miami that trading for Lillard is trading for an unhappy player. As interference goes, this is a time-honored agent maneuver to depress offers and clear a path to a predetermined destination.
bolded emphasis mine, obviously.
Now, let's look at what the agent
had to say about it:
"I do what I should for my client. Some teams I did call. Other teams have called me. It's a respectful relationship with most teams. Truthfully, he wants to play in Miami. Period."
Now, the natural next question is whether we would be hearing about this at all if Aaron Goodwin was a CAA agent (the organisation that reps Woj), rather than the head of his own agency. I suspect not.