jterrell
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close and that's the common sense number with the guys they value.The Lakers will have about 29 mill right now. That's it, until something changes.
numbers can easily change but that's the number you are working off of.
good resources:
https://www.basketball-reference.com/contracts/LAL.html
https://www.spotrac.com/nba/los-angeles-lakers/cap/
https://hoopshype.com/salaries/los_angeles_lakers/
A Lakers fan-centric take on it:
https://www.lakersnation.com/how-la...nard-in-nba-free-agency-next-year/2018/07/06/
As presently constructed, assuming the Lakers renounce Stephenson, McGee, Caldwell-Pope, and Rondo when their contracts expire and don’t sign any other players to deals longer than one season this summer, they will be around $6 million short of having the room to give Leonard his max, which would be $32,400,000 next summer (part of the appeal of trading for him now is he only makes $20 million this season).
After renouncing Julius Randle and signing Rondo, the problem now stems from Luol Deng’s bloated contract, which will pay him $18.8 million in 2019-2020. That’s valuable cap space being tied up in a player who appeared in just one game last season.
So what can the Lakers do to finally rid themselves of Deng’s deal?
They may find that the cost of trading him this summer with two years and $37 million left on his deal is simply too great. Teams will want a fortune in assets to absorb that much salary.
It’s possible that next summer when Deng has only a year left on his deal and more cap room is available league-wide, the price may be more palatable. If the Lakers convince a team to take him on without sending back salary then they would have enough cap space to toss a max offer at Leonard and still have a sizeable chunk left over to use on ring-chasing free agents.
If a trade doesn’t materialize, the Lakers could use the stretch provision, which allows a team to waive a player and spread his salary out over several seasons. The number of years the deal is spread out over is calculated by doubling the length of the contract plus one year.
With two years and $37 million on his deal currently, to stretch Deng now would mean that the Lakers would have $7.3 million on their books for the next five seasons, and that would be “dead” money that can’t be moved.
That pill may be too big to swallow.
If they wait one more season and stretch the remaining one year and $18.8 million, the Lakers would instead pay $6.3 million over the following three seasons. This would free up a little over $12 million in cap room, plenty to cover the about $6 million they are short on a Leonard max.