insight on sports & everyday life

Jul 28, 2010

The Toronto Raptors Offseason Roundup

The Raptors have had a pretty bad offseason.  Losing Bosh was bad enough, but that wasn't the only thing in Toronto that left us scratching our heads.  The whole Matt Barnes saga was jaw-dropping: It appears both Barnes' agent and the Raptors' front office leaked to the media that Barnes would sign a two-year, $9 million deal with the Raptors in a sign-and-trade.  In fact, every major outlet reported it.

Only one problem: The deal wasn't even remotely legal under the salary-cap rules, revealing a shocking ignorance of a very important piece of the business on the part of NBA professionals.

Look, this is pretty basic stuff.  I've seen stories suggesting this was some hard-to-make-out piece of salary-cap arcana, and it's just not true.  For starters, a sign-and-trade deal has to be at least three years.  Has to.  That's not a difficult rule to understand.  I'm pretty sure all of you got it immediately.  That's why every single sign-and-trade deal that any of these guys has ever done has been for at least three years.  You'd think they'd at least know from experience.  But right there, much energy was spent negotiating a deal that couldn't happen.

Second, Orlando couldn't sign-and-trade Barnes under those terms.  He had no "Bird rights" because he had played only one year on his current contract; the most he could be offered by the Magic this season was about $1.9 million.  Again, this isn't some obscure footnote; it comes up every single year because so much of the league's rank and file are on one-year deals.

Finally, Orlando could have re-signed Barnes using its midlevel exception, except that (A) the Magic had already used it, and (B) you can't do a sign-and-trade using the midlevel exception.  Toronto couldn't use its midlevel on Barnes either, since it had already been bestowed on Linas Kleiza.

In a nutshell, the deal had to be a sign-and-trade for at least three years, starting at no more than $1.9 million a year, or it couldn't happen.  This was obvious to anyone with any knowledge of the salary-cap rules.  That it wasn't to the two parties involved is pretty disturbing.

When the Raptors weren't trying to use imaginary exceptions to sign players they couldn't get, they were giving Amir Johnson a five-year, $34 million deal.  That's pretty much the gist of any positive news of Toronto's offseason.  And, they used their midlevel exception on Kleiza, adding another bad defender to the league's worst defensive team.

Toronto did salvage a Hedo Turkoglu-Leandro Barbosa trade that dumps last year's big mistake, albeit for another guy who can't guard anybody. Unfortunately, an offseason-saving steal of a deal with Charlotte fell through, and they're left with a star-less team that still is the worst defensive squad in basketball.