Yes. There is, but it might not be worth it. I posted this in another thread, but I thought some who don't enjoy sifting through page after page on overused threads might enjoy looking at this brain-teaser.
1) Three-way trade with Denver, Sacramento, and Boston
Boston receives: Isaiah Thomas, future Denver 2nd
Denver receives: Randolph, Bogdonavic, Yabu
Sacramento receives: Denver's trade exemptions, Hayward, Bird
This one hurts for us. We take the loss. Unless we could wrangle a first from Denver or a prospect with a small salary from Sacramento, the loss is probably too much to even consider. The benefit is that it puts us 10 million under the salary cap.
However, I think you could definitely argue the Kings make this deal. Hayward would already be better than Randolph and Bogdonavic, and they would be banking on him returning to all-star form on the wing for Hield and Fox.
Denver would have to consider this as well. Getting Bogdonavic on the wing would be really nice for them. He's a smart ball-player that compliments their other guys well. Randolph could be a useful big with experience in the playoffs.
2) Teams can only restructure a contract if they have room under the salary cap. The Celtics restructure Kyrie's contract, able to add up to 10 million more (10 million in cap space after the trade) to his contract and extra years to his contract, depending on what the rules are.
If we were commited to Kyrie as our veteran designated, his new contract would start at 32.4 million in 2019-2020.
We could give him a raise in this idea of up to 30 million this year. With the allowed 8% raise for 2019-2020, that would be 32.4 million next year.
In other words, without the renegotiation, he would make 52.5 million this year and next (if he signed the veteran designated extension). With the renegotiation, he would make 62.4 million this year and next.
He'd actually make 10 million more with the renegotiation.
At that point, we'd just need to negotiate the length (probably through 2021-2022 season) with the 8% raises each year.
This also makes Kyrie's contract no longer a rose rule contract, enabling us to trade for Davis.
3. Celtic trades for Davis
Trade 1: Baynes, Brown, Morris, Rozier, and Williams plus picks. We are left with Irving-Smart-Tatum-Horford-Davis and Thomas-Ojeleye-Theis-Wanamaker-buyouts on the bench.
Trade 2: Smart, Brown, Baynes, Williams, and picks for Davis. We are left with Irving-Rozier-Tatum-Horford-Davis and Morris-Baynes-Theis-Thomas-Wannamaker-Ojeleye off the bench
Trade 3: Horford, Rozier, Williams, draft picks for Davis and Moore. We are left with Irving-Smart-Tatum-Horford-Davis with Brown-Thomas-Moore-Theis-Baynes-Wanamaker-Ojeleye off the bench.
It is possible. With as much assets as we have, we could afford to lose some to gain Davis.
I still wouldn't do it. I like our team. But there are always ways to solve a problem.