CoolBreeze44 wrote:Camden wrote:CoolBreeze44 wrote:It's seems really backward to me that this franchise should even be flirting with the luxury tax. We all know the reasons why, but if I'm the owner and you deliver me 34 wins, I better not see you even close to the tax line. You go over the tax when you're in a big market, or you're planning on having 10-12 extra home games during the playoffs. You don't do it to simply fill out your roster when you are a mediocre team at best. We should be looking to reduce salary before we add any 37 year old has-beens who won't be able to play every night.
For what it's worth, Paul Millsap has played over 50 regular season games the last three years -- including the shortened 2019-2020 and 2020-2021 seasons -- and has been a positive player at a position the Wolves sorely need help at. I would be thrilled with 50 games of Millsap next to Karl-Anthony Towns.
As for the luxury tax, what are you supposed to expect as an owner? Talent has a price. This front office inherited two max contracts. Were they supposed to let Malik Beasley walk in free agency? Should they have traded the number one pick because its salary slot exceeds 10-million annually? All of these things add up. How on earth does this team get better if they're operating under the circumstances of "don't even flirt with the luxury tax" when they were way above the soft cap to start with? As an owner, you'd have two options -- tell your front office to get better and start winning, or blow it up and shed payroll regardless of what it costs. What do you want them to do?
As an owner when I hire Rosas, I ask him whether he can win with what he has. If he says yes, he better not deliver 34 wins. If he says no, I give him some rope to shape things the way he would like them, but he would be directed to shed salary. I feel like I'm repeating myself here, but he would not be allowed to spend near the tax line and deliver mediocrity. That's just business 101. Paul Milsap is not going to get us into the top 4 of the West. He may not mean anything in terms of wins and losses. I have nothing against Milsap as a player, but we should stay away and he should chase a ring. Now if ownership decides they can't live without him, as a fan I say go for it, it's not my money. But I was speaking from an owner's perspective.
The roster that Rosas inherited had already proven to be incapable of winning. I hope you can acknowledge that. If you're an owner, you make the hire knowing that Rosas is going to make moves because keeping the roster the same doesn't lead to anything. It only kicks the can further down the road with no chance of improvements. And then Rosas is out of a job.
And if you give him some rope to shape the roster, which is what ownership essentially did, then don't you have to see it through? How do you shed salary AND get better in the wins column? Frankly, that just doesn't happen. Talent has a price. To get that talent you have to be willing to pay. Like I said, the Wolves could have let Beasley walk. They could have traded the top pick in order to pay a smaller annual salary of a lower pick. They could have traded Karl-Anthony Towns and rebuilt the entire team. All of those moves lead to shedding salary, but none of them contribute to winning more games.
The roster has significantly upgraded in talent, especially considering where it was just a couple years ago. To get there, money had to be spent. That's just inevitable.