Doesn't work. Not with an $11 mill price tag. The only team that wants him at that price tag is NO. If they signed him for $8.5 mill that's an entirely different story.
sure it does. even if tyreke evans doesn't produce an ounce above his per 36 numbers for 2012-2013, $11 million per
is the going rate for that kind of production in the contemporary nba, particularly given his age and offensive efficiency. just because
you don't value evans at $11 million per doesn't mean that he couldn't be moved at $11 million per. i'm also sick and tired of hearing the argument that the only team that wanted tyreke evans at that price tag was new orleans. that is a truly disingenuous appraisal of the 2013 free agent market, and is completely devoid of context or critical thinking. there were only a handful of teams with cap space this offseason, the majority of which were all bidding for dwight howard's services. as with any offseason in which a major free agent hits the market, the dominoes don't start falling until
after that free agent has signed...
dallas, for instance, was reportedly interested in tyreke evans as a backup plan to dwight howard, but failed to make an offer
because they were waiting first on an answer from dwight. by the time they received it, evans had already signed with new orleans. we simply do not know what mark cuban might have offered, or what any other team might have offered, for that matter. we
especially don't know which among the 23 teams
without the cap space necessary to sign evans outright might value him at $11 million per. considering what indiana pays danny granger to sit injured on their bench, and considering they're a hard-nosed team that values paint scoring, perhaps they'd bite on an evans trade in the future.
you do not know, therefore you cannot unequivocally assert this claim you love to make so often...