Hauser makes a lot of sense to move. Decent contract size, has good value, etc. Would open up more trade avenues.
If we were going to keep Simons, Hauser would be a logical piece to move.
If we expect to move on from Simons, I think we need Hauser's shooting off the bench. His value is probably at a low right now, but in general having a guy who has a .600+ eFG% and plays solid defense is a plus.
Would moving Hauser still keep the Celtics above the luxury tax threshold? I know his AAV is only around $10 million and I thought I read somewhere that the Celtics are $12 million over.
If we traded Hauser without taking anything back we'd still be slightly over the tax. We're $12,086,489 over. Hauser makes $10,044,644, and we'd also need to sign a 14th player.
I've heard you talk about the tax quite a bit, but from what I understand the tax and the 1st apron are two different things. There are no additional penalties if you are under the 1st apron, but over the tax, right?
In that case, I really can't see the Celtics shedding salary just to pay less in payroll, especially not when they are a top 2 team in the East without Tatum. I could see them resetting the 1st apron penalties by getting under that.
Being over the tax subjects the Celtics to repeater tax penalties, which can become severe. I think it adds an additional dollar-for-dollar penalty to the luxury tax payment of a team.
It depends how far over the tax Celtics plan to be. Next year, for example, the Celtics are unlikely to exceed the first apron because they should be capped, so the tax would probably be an extra $7 million. That is not cheap, of course, but it is also likely affordable if the Celtics feel it is worth it. To get out of the repeater, the Celtics would have to get below the tax this year and next. They can likely make more than the $18-20 million luxury tax paid at the first apron by going on two more deep playoff runs this year and next instead of further limiting the roster to reset the repeater.
If they were 12-23 instead of 23-12, that is a different discussion, of course. And certainly I can see the team trying to move Tillman and Boucher at the deadline to replace them with rest of season contracts, as doing so would save the team around $10 million in tax dollars this season. But getting out of the tax completely would require trading an actual contributor, and I don?t see a salary dump of that sort happening.