I've been pretty consistent that I don't think Boston pays IT a max contract because it will be a bad contract that will likely cause Boston to lose a young player for a team that isn't a real contender. Now if Boston acquires another player this summer or at the deadline that vaults Boston into true contender status, then signing Thomas makes a lot of sense as it keeps the team at that high level.
What young player are you most concerned about? Jaylen hits restricted free agency during the year that Horford's contract ends. That immediately removes the strain of 1 max contract. Tatum would hit restricted free agency the year that Haywards contract ends. The only dilemma might be regarding the luxury tax and resigning Gordon Hayward. We don't know what the cap will be but I suppose an IT max could cost us Hayward. If Tatum reaches his potential then there is no way Hayward stands in the way of bringing him back. At the end of the day our franchise is fine if Jaylen, Tatum, and future draft picks turn into Stars.
I think you guys are vastly underestimating the cap and more importantly tax implications.
Boston has under contract for the 2018/19 season right now
Hayward - 31 million
Horford - 29 million
Crowder - 7 million
Tatum - 7 million
Morris - 5 million
Brown - 5 million
Rozier - 3 million
Zizic - 2 million
Yabu - 3 million
BKN - 6-7 million
LAL - 5-6 million
BOS - 2 million
So those 12 contracts are 105-7 million, which is already over the cap. That doesn't include Thomas or Smart. Assuming Thomas gets a max at 30 million. That puts the team at 135 million which is well into luxury tax range and doesn't have Smart. So Smart is likely gone next summer because I can't see Boston paying him 15-20 million in salary, when every single penny of that is luxury tax.
So then Boston enters the 19-20 season with 94 million tied up in Thomas, Horford, and Hayward. Brown, Tatum, and Crowder are another 22 million. The 3 18 rookies add another 19 million. So that is 134 million, which will again be over the luxury tax and that is just 9 players and doesn't count Zizic or Yabu (6 million or so) or Boston's 19 pick (3 million). So that puts the roster at 143 million with 12 players. Rozier will be a free agent. No way he is kept. Boston also loses Morris, who presumably is the starting PF. Maybe Tatum or one of the 18 rookies is ready to be a starting NBA PF, but maybe not. So what do you do with that position.
So entering the summer of 2020 when Horford comes off the books, Boston will be a two time luxury tax player on a team that realistically hasn't won a title. Brown will be due for his raise that summer and likely replaces much of Horford's salary. Crowder also comes off the books and Hayward has a player option (which he likely opts out of and then will look for a 10 year vet max contract). Now maybe a team of Thomas, Hayward, Brown, Tatum, Zizic, Yabu, and the 3 18 rookies is ready to compete for a title, but I think the odds of that are low. Boston may be able to avoid the tax that summer, but it means Horford and Crowder are gone and Boston isn't bring any high paid vets and if Boston can't avoid the tax (because of Hayward's raise and Brown's new contract) that puts Boston into repeater tax range and the team still hasn't realistically competed for a title to that point (though might finally have that team as a result of all the young players).
The repeater tax is nasty. It is unlikely that Boston will want to pay the repeater tax, but then that means Hayward is gone and it will be hard to keep all of Brown, Tatum, BKN, LAL, Zizic, Bos 18, Bos 19, etc. going forward.
Maxing Thomas next summer just doesn't make financial sense unless Boston is a realistic contender. I don't see Boston as a realistic contender without acquiring another top level player (which will require some of the prime assets). So if Boston doesn't trade for that player, I don't expect them to keep Thomas if Thomas really wants a max. Even a 3 year max won't fix the luxury tax problems the team will have.
I think they fully expect to contend for the title as soon as this season but definitely next season.
No they don't. There is a reason Wyc said they were 2 players away, because they were 2 players away. They added Hayward, meaning they are still 1 player away. That player isn't on the roster for this season and probably next (maybe Brown or Tatum gets there, maybe not).
And let's think about this logically, there is no way Thomas, Hayward, and Horford with really young players and guys like Crowder and Morris are a team that is going to win a title with that core group. Even if the Cavs implode next summer, Boston isn't better than any number of western teams and who knows maybe the Sixers or Bucks take a big leap this season and enter the 19 season as the best team in the East.
Boston isn't winning a title with Thomas, Hayward, and Horford as the core of the team. Sadly that team just isn't good enough. And you can't keep all 3 and expect the young players to really develop into a contender for the tax reasons I outlined. It would be great if those guys could all be around and be bench players on a team led by Brown, Tatum, Porter, Bamba, etc. but financially it just isn't going to work.
Well, we were clearly the 4th best team last season (GSW, SAS, CLE). We undoubtedly got better. I love AB, but Hayward is a better player. We got bigger and more talented. We added Tatum, who by all accounts is an NBA-ready scorer. We added Morris, who is a solid player in his own right. We can expect Brown to be improved.
So the question remains how much better? Nobody knows yet. But I'm sure the other top teams are certainly watching us. They know we have the current roster and future assets to make a move to the very top.
As for the salaries, I wouldn't worry too much about them, especially 2-3'years down the road. We see how teams can dump bad contracts if they add a little sweetener to the deal. We can give any GM in the league a mouthful of cavities if we really had to. Ainge and Wyc seem to be very cohesive in the deals being made. You're not signing Horford, then Hayward, only to let IT walk. Who thought he would only be asking for $15M a season? The guy is the best bargain off a rookie deal in the entire NBA. He deserves to get paid now. We will do it, and Ainge will continue adding talent to this team until we raise our next banner.