In an interesting story for ESPN.com, Bobby Marks evaluates whether statements like “the second apron has ruined free agency” and “the current CBA penalizes teams that draft well” are fact and fiction. While Marks acknowledges that changes to the NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement have created new some new problems for teams and have hurt players in some ways, he rejects the idea that the middle class of free agents have been squeezed out of the market.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver argued during a Summer League media session that the “middle class” is doing better than in the last few years of the previous CBA, and former NBPA president CJ McCollum agreed with Silver’s sentiment during a recent podcast appearance, as Front Office Sports relays.
“I think there’s a misconception that players aren’t being compensated the same ways they have in the past,” McCollum said. “That’s not true. Guys are making more money than they ever have. The middle class is making more money than they ever have before.”
To illustrate this point, Marks runs through 31 veterans who signed free agent contracts this summer worth between $4MM and $20MM per year, noting that 19 of them changes teams during free agency. That list also doesn’t include several players who have signed veteran extensions in that salary range since the season ended, including Steven Adams, Daniel Gafford, and Jaylin Williams.
Here are more odds and ends from around the basketball world:
- Eric Koreen and Tony Jones of The Athletic discuss whether the NBA ought to make changes to its restricted free agency process, with Koreen contending that qualifying offers should be worth more. A higher price point for a QO, Koreen writes, would make a team think harder about whether or not to make a player restricted and would make accepting that one-year contract more appealing from the player’s perspective.
- Five years after the NBA set up a “bubble” at Disney World in Orlando to finish its 2019/20 season amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Joe Vardon of The Athletic shares an oral history of that unique summer, with players, coaches, broadcasters, reporters, and league officials alike weighing in on the experience.
- Perhaps the most notable remark from Vardon’s in-depth story came from Daryl Morey, who was still working in Houston at the time. While Morey acknowledged he would’ve viewed a Rockets title that summer as “legitimate,” he gave credence to the notion that the Lakers‘ 2020 championship deserves an asterisk. “Everyone I speak to around the league privately agrees that it doesn’t truly hold up as a genuine championship,” Morey said. “Perhaps the lasting legacy of the NBA bubble is that the NBA should be proud of its leadership at both the beginning and end of the pandemic, even though the champion will forever be marked by an asterisk.” Morey’s comment warranted a separate article from The Athletic, in which a panel of writers strongly disagreed with the take.
- Keith Smith of Spotrac checks in on some of the remaining NBA offseason storylines to watch. Besides the top four restricted free agents who remain unsigned, Smith highlights several of the best unrestricted free agents available and takes a look at the teams who need to either fill spots on their 15-man rosters or make cuts to get down to 15 players on standard contracts by the start of the season.
Watched that CJ interview/pod couple days ago
He’s not the guy Id want Rep’N me if I was 95% of the league, I’ll just leave it at that
Pure company man, almost robotic
What a stupid take, right?
If you don’t believe in the 20 championship by the Lakers you can’t believe neither in the 99 Spurs, 12 Heat or 21 Bucks!!!
As I said worst take ever in sports, everybody had the same chance and the showtime were clearly the best team, enough said!
20 championships, OK. Anyways….Marks is just another ESPN puppet in damage control.
Middle class is $4-$20m, lols. The BS never ends. Guys soon getting $70m and $60m. Might want to rethink your criteria for middle class.
This is just like real life. Your salaries increase slightly every year, isn’t that good? While the Billionaires are raking everything in hand over fist. The max salary slot goes up like $6-7 mil every year while the MLE goes up maybe $1 mil every year and is already over $50 mil less than the yearly maxes some of these guys are getting. And the fact that Quickley got that contract without a thought, while similarly talented players in RFA are getting offered at least $10 mil AAV less only a year later PROVES that the middle class in the NBA is getting paid less. CJ doesn’t care cuz his middle class @ss got paid $33 mil/year when he’d be making maybe $20 today