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[Clutch Points] How NBA’s New CBA Could Prevent Nets From Building Another Superteam



[Clutch Points] How NBA’s New CBA Could Prevent Nets From Building Another Superteam

by shadow_spinner0

2 Comments

  1. shadow_spinner0

    The [Brooklyn Nets](https://clutchpoints.com/nba/brooklyn-nets) quickly became the title favorite when they acquired James Harden to star alongside Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving in 2020-21. While those championship aspirations never came to fruition, a new quirk in the NBA’s collective bargaining agreement would have prevented that deal from happening.

    Bookmark the term “second apron” because you’ll be hearing it for years to come as teams look to build championship rosters. The new CBA set a second apron at $17.5 million above the luxury tax line (the first apron is $7 million above). With the salary cap at $134 million and the luxury tax at $162 million for 2023-24, that second apron will be $179.5 million. Teams above that number, which Brooklyn would have been for each of the last three seasons, will be subject to harsh penalties.

    Those restrictions include:

    * Starting in the summer of 2024, teams above the second apron cannot aggregate multiple salaries to trade for a single player making more money. This would have prevented the Nets from making the trade for Harden.
    * They will lose the taxpayer mid-level exception. This would have prevented the Nets from signing Patty Mills during the 2021 offseason.
    * They cannot sign a player waived during the regular season if that player’s pre-waiver salary was larger than the non-taxpayer midlevel exception. This would have prevented the Nets from signing Blake Griffin in 2021 and Goran Dragic in 2022.
    * They cannot trade their first-round pick seven years out. For example, teams this coming season will not be able to trade their first-rounder in 2030.
    * If a team exceeds the second apron and remains there in two of the four subsequent years, its first-rounder seven years out will be moved to the end of the first round, regardless of record that season.

    Starting in 2025-26, there will also be harsher tax penalties for teams who are over $10 million into the luxury tax. All of this makes it far more difficult to build out rosters with multiple star players, which could significantly impact teams such as the Warriors, Clippers, Bucks, and Suns. This makes the Nets having Mikal Bridges, who emerged as a potential star after his trade from Phoenix, under contract at $23.3 million for the next three seasons a significant advantage.

    Having a player of Bridges’ caliber for a lower number could allow Brooklyn to form another big three. However, doing so with their current core, which includes Cam Johnson and Nic Claxton, would still be very difficult. Johnson is expected to receive a contract over $20 million this summer and Nic Claxton is expected to receive a similar deal after this coming season. Both contracts could significantly impact the team’s ability to acquire multiple stars. For example, say Brooklyn was able to trade for Damian Lillard this summer, the star everyone has been linking to them, the Nets’ obligations to those four players in 2024-25 would look something like this:

    ​

    Lillard: $48.8 million

    Bridges: $23.3 million

    Johnson: $20 million

    Claxton: $20 million

    Brooklyn would owe $112 million to those four players. Then say they attempted to use Ben Simmons’ $40.3 million expiring contract as a salary filler with their remaining draft picks in a trade for a second star. Assuming that second star makes similar money to Lillard, the Nets would be nearing $160 million in salary for their starting five alone, leaving just $19.5 million below the second apron to fill out 10 spots on their roster.

    ​

    In reality, Brooklyn would need to move off Johnson or Claxton, if not both, in return for an assortment of cheaper role players to make a new big three possible. It’s a reality that the teams mentioned earlier will also be facing with their $20-$30 million players in the coming seasons.

  2. Stock-Astronomer2709

    I don’t know how many people have read the new CBA, but it’s absolutely ridiculous. There are so many new provisions that it makes dynasties almost impossible now.

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