Warriors $2.1 Million Trade Exception Expires Tomorrow
Tomorrow is not only the 1 year anniversary of the Indiana pillage, but also the deadline for the Warriors to use their trade exception obtained from the trade. A little bit more after the jump!

GSoM friend Marcus Thompson has got you covered with the details [Bay Area News Group]:
The $2.1 million trade exception the Warriors got in exchange for forward Ike Diogu expires Thursday.
Diogu was part of that eight-played trade with Indiana on Jan. 17, 2007, which landed the Warriors forwards Jackson and Al Harrington . But Diogu's part of the trade was officially a separate transaction, allowing the Warriors to get the exception.
This trade exception is pretty small, but with a lot of teams like the Bucks, Bulls, Heat, Nuggets, Cavaliers, Kings, SuperSonics, Trail Blazers, Rockets, Lakers, Hornets, and Knicks possibly looking to deal [Trade Talk: Ten Teams to Watch - TrueHoop] maybe it'll come in handy.
Do you see any creative ways the Warriors can use their $2.1 million trade exception before it expires tomorrow?
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what happens...
by slipnslide on
Jan 16, 2008 10:28 AM PST
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I'm
A guy that intrigued me coming out of college was Leon Powe. He hasn't really gotten a chance to play in Boston this year and lord knows they could use salary cap relief, however small it is.
His per/40 numbers are pretty good and I think he'd make a serviceable backup at the 4 spot. He's not a terrific shooter and does have a rather high amount of turnovers, but he is good at what we would need him to do. Lots of rebounds and respectable free throw percentage. He is also very athletic and runs the floor well. He was a beast at Cal and is from the Bay (Oakland, I think). He was injury prone coming out of college but seems like he's been pretty well preserved riding the pine for Boston.
I could see him playing more than Brandan Wright since he is physically much more mature than Brandan. I also think he'd be a good player for Wright to go up against in practice and it would teach him how to muscle up.
This is a guy that fits into our plans for NOW, as well as the future. Beans, BWright and Powe have the potential to be a very explosive front court.
by BALLINelli on
Jan 16, 2008 10:31 AM PST
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It goes away
That said, and looking at Kawakami's thoughts on who the Warriors can grab, I'm not convinced that a big blockbuster trade is necessarily good. Looking ahead, the Warriors have some tough decisions to make after this year. Barnes and Pietrus are Unrestricted FA's, and you'd havta think they'll be gone. Baron and Monta are due some big money, and the flexibility the W's have with the cap right now is the envy of a lot of teams in the league. Instead of trying to grab a top level big and eating a lot of salary, I think the three man rotation of Beans Al and Croshere in the front court might work well enough. Croshere was the only W who had any real effect on O'Neal the other night, and is strong enough, hopefully maybe, to provide more stout D in the low post. Offensively, no one is going to argue the W's don't score enough, and it's really not worth breaking the bank or giving up a great young player like Monta to earn a little bit more D, when offensively the Warriors can't gain much more. Maybe this should've been a diary, but I'm afraid Mullin will make a panic trade because the deadline is coming, and will give up more than they could possibly get back given the type of talent that'll be available. I'd rather see them unload some expiring contracts for some draft picks, and to focus on re-signing baron and monta after this season.
by sfwarriorcvg on
Jan 16, 2008 10:37 AM PST
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value
that said, it'll likely evaporate now ...
by hardcore on
Jan 16, 2008 11:46 AM PST
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Doesn't work
by SilkySmooth on
Jan 16, 2008 1:59 PM PST
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guaranteed contracts
by Psion on
Jan 16, 2008 2:20 PM PST
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TPE
by Psion on
Jan 16, 2008 2:08 PM PST
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defer to JAE on this, but
moot with the $2m TPE that evaporated, but relevant to the Richardson-trade $9.9m
for reference only, a recent post from JAE on another thread is instructive here:
The 'can't be combined' references only trying to combine it to bring on a player making more than the exception. It does not mean we cannot use the TPE in a trade involving a player on our end. It just means that the player's salary essentially means nothing to us.
The team on the other end has to make whatever we send out fit. If it's just picks, it's never a problem. They can also absorb players up to the value of whatever we receive because they won't be gaining salary. If we took an $8million player from someone, they'd instantly have an $8million TPE of their own to receive anything from us. They could take any part of that back instantly.
Effectively, we could trade a 2nd rounder to a team for their up-to $10mil player, giving them an exception of that size. They can turn around and take player(s) making up to that amount (but potentially less and never more) from us for that same 2nd rounder. We could take on A $7mil Maggette for a $600k Azubuike (I am not saying this is a good trade, just a legal one). Effectively, it's a single trade, even if the cap mechanics to make it kosher regard it as two trades.
The ESPN trade machine is not close to 100% accurate. It has problems with some of the issues surrounding exceptions. It's very good at calculating 125%+100k, not that this is particularly difficult, but not so good at anything else. It's not so good at figuring out if a single trade can be broken into multiple simultaneous trades that are legal using existing exceptions. It appears to fail in anything using the TPE from Richardson currently. It's a good start if your math ain't so hot, and many proposals that fail are failures, but that's not a given. There are ways around the limitations it imposes though.
by hardcore on
Jan 20, 2008 11:20 AM PST
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