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Hollinger zu Reed:
Setting aside the extent to which it offended me personally, Detroit waiving Paul Reed over the weekend had some serious cap nerd angles to it.
Reed was on the Pistons’ roster for a non-guaranteed $7.7 million, which would have become fully guaranteed on Jan. 10. However, the Pistons also went below the salary floor by $1.4 million when they waived him, requiring the Pistons to either immediately add a player who made at least that much or say goodbye to an eight-figure windfall from the league at year-end for teams below the tax line. This is a provision of the new CBA, and our first example of its usage.
Thus, the Pistons reacted on Sunday by signing guard Javante McCoy out of the G League; no salary figures have leaked yet, but it seems likely it’s for exactly $1.42 million.
The key here is that waiving Reed and signing a minimum contract on Sunday allowed the Pistons to slow their roll toward using too much of their $12 million in cap space before the trade deadline. Reed’s contract chewed up about $45,000 in cap room per day; the newly signed McCoy does so at just under $8,000 a day.
Sunday was also the first day that replacing Reed with a pro-rated veteran minimum deal would keep Detroit just above the salary floor. Detroit ended up $1.42 million below the floor after waiving Reed; the pro-rated veteran minimum is $1.44 million. (Note that it’s also possible Detroit could waive McCoy after two days and then re-sign Reed to a minimum deal once he clears waivers; the fact they signed one of their own G Leaguers rather than promoting a two-way player makes me think this is at least somewhat possible.)
By operating this way, Detroit heads into the trade deadline with $14 million in cap space rather than the $10 million it had with Reed on the books and still keeps itself above the salary floor.
Dennis Schröder trade, weird Paul Reed waiver and is Marquette’s Kam Jones a lottery pick?
The Pistons waiving Paul Reed has interesting cap implications, and the Thunder have a long road after the NBA Cup.
www.nytimes.com