More talk about an amnesty clause, for every team after the lockout, which only hurts the Kings, and allows other teams to compete in free agency, depending on where the new cap will be.
Allowing every team to dump a contract provides a lot more flexibility for the teams who have spent large sums, and had no previous desire to try to get far under the cap, such as ourselves.
From the yahoo story
As CBS Sports reported, the proposed amnesty clause that will allow teams to cut loose one problematic contract per team at the conclusion of the lockout will allow for teams to have 75 percent of the money taken off the salary cap over the length of the deal. The player will become a free agent, and the team will have only 25 percent of his annual salary on the books going forward. Players will still receive the full amount of money they’re owed under the contract.
[Related: NBA city mayors sign plea to end lockout]
The biggest hurdle left in discussions for the new amnesty clause, sources told Y! Sports, is how long teams will have to pay the player the money owed him. Will it be over two years, five years, seven years? The teams want the bought-out player to be paid over a longer period of time, while the union wants the money paid in shorter order. This is an area where a compromise will easily be found, sources said.
Allowing every team to dump a contract provides a lot more flexibility for the teams who have spent large sums, and had no previous desire to try to get far under the cap, such as ourselves.
From the yahoo story
As CBS Sports reported, the proposed amnesty clause that will allow teams to cut loose one problematic contract per team at the conclusion of the lockout will allow for teams to have 75 percent of the money taken off the salary cap over the length of the deal. The player will become a free agent, and the team will have only 25 percent of his annual salary on the books going forward. Players will still receive the full amount of money they’re owed under the contract.
[Related: NBA city mayors sign plea to end lockout]
The biggest hurdle left in discussions for the new amnesty clause, sources told Y! Sports, is how long teams will have to pay the player the money owed him. Will it be over two years, five years, seven years? The teams want the bought-out player to be paid over a longer period of time, while the union wants the money paid in shorter order. This is an area where a compromise will easily be found, sources said.