No bird rights so Cleveland couldn't keep him (They'll have zero cap space) and no potential sign and trade options for him.
I don't think Monroe will consent to a trade.
Almost makes me think this is partially a power move from David Falk. Just to prove it can happen.
I think it makes the most sense for Monroe from a money standpoint depending on what the Pistons were offering and what Monroe was getting from offers from other teams.
For instance, let's say the 5 year $60 million offer was the best Detroit would go. By taking the $5.6 million QO, playing the year in Detroit putting up 16-17 PPG and 11 RPG then he might get a max contract of about what 4 years and $70 something million. It makes complete sense then since obviously $75-80 million is way above $60 million and he would also get to pick where he plays.
I doubt any agent advises his client to take the QO to prove anything other than he will make more money by doing so.
See though, I think this is the perfect place for a power play (say that 3 times fast).
1) Allegedly, the Pistons have not made an official offer of anything at all, let alone a guaranteed 5 yrs $60 million
2) David Falk, his agent, has a bit of a reputation as a ball buster when it comes to teams trying to strong arm players through RFA.
3) With a relatively low-risk prospect like Monroe (the odds of him getting a $12 million per contract in the open market are relatively high next year), Falk can make it clear to future teams that he will take the nuclear option.
4) Falk needs to do this now, because
his client list isn't exactly booming with potential. He needs to show that he's a power player, because A) Sullinger and Porter's RFA years are not far away, and B) he needs to show future prospective clients that if you need someone to push back against a heavy-handed team, Falk can do it.
When you look at how poorly Rich Paul has handled Eric Bledsoe's RFA, and how deftly Dan Fegan (Parsons) and Mark Bartelstein (G Hayward) handled their own RFA challenges, it might be the case that David Falk feels like he needs to make a statement here, and a max offer doesn't seem to be on the table.