Ask for a commuter pass! (as well as doing some explanation and popularization)
Let's ask for a vote first.,It's been five shifts for two days in a row.,Five watches will continue tomorrow.,Such a sincere update.,Guys don't give some monthly tickets to encourage you to be too much, right?
Let's talk about popular science, I wrote a transfer period, all kinds of questions came, and it was said that Xiao Tie wrote the NBA according to his own imagination, so I had to open a single chapter to popularize science for everyone.
The first is the issue of salary reciprocity, if the salary space of both teams has exceeded the cap, then the salary must be equal, and if it is not equal, it cannot be traded.
But if a team's salary is much lower than the salary cap and can swallow a player's big contract, then the salary space can be unequal.
For example, the Pistons' salary space in the article can completely swallow the contracts of Steve Francis and James Posey, so the salary space can be unequal.
As for what "when trading, it is required that the salary gap between the two parties of the transaction cannot exceed 30%", Xiao Tie can only say that there is this regulation, but this regulation is aimed at teams above the salary cap.
To give a real-life example: the Lakers' Lamar Odom went to the Mavericks to trade for draft picks, a 9 million player for air, and the issue of salary parity does not exist, because the Mavericks had space at the time and could directly swallow Odom's contract.
Therefore, there is no restriction on teams with salary space. (It's really not good to play the 2k dynasty mode, a draft pick can even be exchanged for more than 20 million star players, only there is space)
The reason why the NBA's expiring junk contracts are valuable has nothing to do with this, because some teams have to fill in the poor line, and some teams have to deal with multi-year junk contracts, the expiring junk contract has value, but the value is not that high, and that's it.
In addition, the renewal of the Pistons in the article, this issue is actually not worth talking about, but Xiao Tie thought about it and took it out to explain it.
Big Ben is a blue-collar after all, no matter how good a blue-collar is, it can't compare to an offensive All-Star, after all, NBA teams have to sell tickets, defensive players can't sell tickets, and offensive ones can sell.
And Big Ben still has a three-year cheap contract, and Richard Hamilton has just renewed his contract, so there is no need for the Pistons to think about the renewal after three years, the time is too far away.
At this stage, getting an All-Star and hitting the O'Brien Cup is the first priority.
End of science and explanation!
In the end, Xiao Tie still asked for a ticket! Ask for votes! Ask for votes!
Please ask for a monthly pass in the hands of the big guys!