help me out with the math here, is Peter May on to something or grasping?
http://sports.espn.go.com/boston/nba/columns/story?columnist=may_peter&id=4964861What makes the situation interesting is that if Pierce does nothing, he would be an unrestricted free agent in the summer of 2011. And that is when all signs point to a lockout, with the owners, once again seeking protection from themselves in the form of tighter salary controls and, perhaps, even a hard salary cap. There even has been talk of removing the mid-level exception.
So suppose Pierce plays next season and finishes out his contract. In July of 2011, he'd be 34, not exactly the ideal age for free agency. And with the prospect of a lockout, he could be out a season and then be looking to sign a new deal at the age of 35. He'd also likely be looking at a completely new set of rules as well, which conceivably could squeeze him even more.
Therefore, it might be a sound strategy to trade one year for three, even if one of those three years might result in nothing because of a lockout. Or Pierce might simply play out the season and then, like everyone else, get a year's vacation. Under that scenario, he loses nothing because he has no contract. And Kevin Garnett would also be eligible for free agency post-lockout, as his final contract year would be nixed by the work stoppage.
Ok, so worst case scenario if he doesn't opt out is this.
2011 - $21.5M
2012 - $0
2013 - Pierce decides to retire early and play poker with Antoine
total gross income = $21.5M
now, what scenario would make opting out better? What would he possibly be able to get from the Celtics as a free agent?
at this point, the Celtics would be highly overpaying if they went over something like $10M a year for him
so if the NBA still locks out for a full year and Pierce signs for around $10M a year for 3 years, one of those years is still wiped out and he walks away with about the same cash he'd be getting in one year.
in addition, the team would likely want to sign someone this summer with their extra cash - which might eat into the amount they could give him and I seriously doubt they'd want to sign up for more than 3 years unless the annual amounts trail off considerably
don't get me wrong, if we can swing something with Paul that makes sense and is legal, I'm all for it - but I just don't get how the math works