Make a strong run at Dwight. If he can be recruited renounce everyone and sign him. If not, there's two different ways to go in my opinion:
1) Re-sign KG, Allen, Green and Bass. Money under doesn't matter as they all have bird-rights. Align KG and Allen to expire with Pierce so we are positioned to become major players in 2014.
DO we have bird rights on Jeff Green? Isn't he an unrestricted free agent right now?
How about Bass?
Yes, we have bird rights on both of them. My problem with signing Bass is that he is going to be looking for a longterm deal at big money. The starting point would be 4 years/20 million, and it would likely be closer to 4/25-30 million if he keeps up the pace he is at.
At his age and with his productivity, I think 4 years 28-30 million is a very fair deal for Brandon Bass.
Absolutely. On a team that already has their core set and in tact. On a team like the C's that needs to build a core, that is too rich.
Perhaps, but a couple of points:
a) we need to spend the money on somebody, so we might as well spend it on somebody already here, who we know can be productive in the system.
b) we know he is willing to play a bench role and can thrive in one, so him wanting to take more minutes over a younger big man we want to develop shouldn't be an issue, either.
c) because he's young and productive, it shouldn't be hard to move him if and when we want to do so.
To answer your responses:
1. Yes, we have to spend the money. However, we do not need to sign longterm deals. Given that we currently have one Core player going forward, I think we should be focussing our assets on adding to that Core, rather than paying a premium for bench players. If we cannot find a core player for that cap space this summer, then we are better off signing someone to a short term deal with that salary spot, so we can then try again to find a bigger impact player with that cap space in the future.
2. I could care less about this, and I am not even sure its true. He is willing to quietly take a bench role playing behind a hall of famer. That doesn't mean he would do the same thing for someone less proven. And again, I don't think it matters. You don't pay a guy $30 million because he doesn't complain about playing time.
3. He is productive because defenses don't focus on him that much. On a team without so many talented players, his production might drop a bit. There is a reason the Magic traded him and the Mavs let him go...and that was when he was on a much more team friendly contract.
I love Bass as a 1 year, 4 million player, but put him on a Big Babyesque contract, and I don't think he is an asset anymore.