Could someone please clarify the use of the Rondo TPE vis-a-vis our cap space? As I understand it, the Cs can't really use it before using their cap space, or that space is reduced by $13mil.
So, let's say they want to attract a FA by using the TPE to acquire a good veteran. If they we're going to do so using the TPE for a trade, they'd want to agree to the trade in principle; inform the max player they may want to sign about such trade to entice him to come to Boston; sign that deal with said FA; THEN make the trade for the player with the TPE so it allows them to exceed the cap -- correct?
Thanks.
I guess? I'm a little unclear as to the specifics of your question. Based on the salary committed to next summer, the Celtics are currently under the cap by an amount larger than their trade exceptions, after including cap holds for their draft picks, but before including cap holds for players with expiring contracts currently on the roster. So if the Celtics want to sign a free agent for $13 million or less, they can either a) renounce some players' Bird rights and sign said free agent directly, or b) keep the Bird rights to their expirings and work out a sign-and-trade with the player's original team without sending back any salary (which makes a trade a heck of a lot easier). So, for example, if we want to keep Jeff Green and agree with Greg Monroe to a deal starting at $13 mil next summer, we can do that using the trade exception, and get one step closer to having a team represented entireley by David Falk.
There's no real reason to preserve the trade exception, since cap space is better (more versatile and doesn't expire next December 19th). The trade exception's primary value next summer, based on our current roster, is allowing us to pursue a major, but below max, free agent while keeping some of our own free agents.
I'm saying: this summer, if the Cs wanted to trade for a highly paid player using the Rondo TPE, AND sign a player to a max contract, I believe they'd have to do so in the manner i suggested, because acquiring the traded player would eat cap space, but the Cs could use the TPE to go over the cap.
Make-believe example: let's say Derick Favors and Goran Dragic are best friends (they're not -- it doesn't matter, neither do the players specifically). Ainge goes to Utah and convinces them to trade Favors for 3 1sts (or 1, or 2 -- doesn't matter) with an eye towards that being an attraction to Dragic, who he wants to sign. He then goes and tells GD: "we have a trade in place to acquire your pal Favors. will you sign a max deal with us now?" (or for 10mil a year, 14 mill a year, doesn't matter). Dragic says: "Sure, now I will." Ainge then signs Dragic officially with the cap space, before completing the deal with Favors, which takes them over the cap.... and at the end of the day, gets both.
Seems to me this is the only way to make meaningful use of the TPE, considering the cap space would allow the Cs to acquire that same player anyway (say, Favors) without taking back salary. Agreed?