Posted by jvford on 10/25/2010 3:40:00 PM (view original):
Posted by deathinahole on 10/25/2010 2:20:00 PM (view original):
Et voila. Green hits it on the head.
Example;
We all start with a $185M cap.
Lets assume that the team receiving the cash or player has $100M in salary, $85M tied up in others (prospect, college scouting, etc etc).
Before the trade, that team has $98M in salary committed.
Scenario 1 - $98M + $7M - $5.384M = $99.614M in salary committed. Cap remains at $185M.
Scenario 2 - $98M + $7M - $.384M = $104.614M in salary committed. Cap is now $190M, because that $5M isn't really "cash"...it's cap space.
The reason for the exercise is that I see a LOT of owners (and that's was the consensus before green stepped in) that see cash, and think it's really cash. What you are really doing is giving someone a larger cap than the rest of the league.
That may not change someone's mind, but I get uptight because I don't think many know what they are approving.
But how is that relevant?
Scenario 1 - $98M + $7M - $5.38M = $99.614M in salary committed. Cap remains at $185M and cap room is $.386M
Scenario 2 - $98M + $7M - $.384M = $104.614M in salary committed. Cap is now $190M and cap room is $.386M
In both scenarios, owner #1 is reducing his available budget by $5M, while owner #2 is increasing his by $5M.
The $7M player you're getting is because of the $5M. Without that, you are not getting that $7M player.
Now, if you had budgeted properly on rollover, you could get that $7M player. But you didn't. So, I'm going to veto and teach you a lesson about fiscal management, or I'm going to make you move budget from Prospect or Coaching, or I'm going to make you give up another asset to make it work (see the $5M player in the other example)