Ben was part of NBA leading defensive unit, while being an effective role player offensively 4 months AGO. Sure there might have been 20 0ther SGs, who would've been more or just as effective, but that doesn't mean Ben isn't ready. Another summer of working on his handles with on-court work in Summer League, and he'll be better equipped for the same role, at least.
Dudley is as big part of success of Milwaukee as Middleton is. In fact many Bucks fans name his minor injury and drop-off in production, rather than the trade as a reason for up and down level of play of their team recently. It means expecting him to excercise ETO for $4.25 million and then sign for $2 million is kinda unrealistic. Same with Casspi 2year $7million contract. Why? I like Omri a lot, but the only contract I'm welcoming him back on is minimum, since Kings need all the cap space money for starting PF.
Relying on rookie combo-guard to lead you to PO in the West? That's just illusion. Just as expecting Philly to swap Noel for Stauskas, while eating Landry's contract.
I'm no Captain, but here's cap eating numbers for next season:
Boogie $15.85 million
Rudy $12.4 million (assume $40 million over 3 year with 7.5% raises)
Landry $6.5 million
JT $6.43 million
DC $5 million
Ben $3.16 million
Nik $2.87 million
7th pick cap hold $2.85 million
Ray $0.95 million
Moreland $0.85 million
Ellington $0.93 million (stretch provision after waiving)
cap hold of $0.5 million for 11th roster spot
This adds up to $58.3 million, so if Coon is right with his speculation of $67.7 million, Kings may offer about $9.4 million in starting salary with 4.5% raises for up to 4 years ($40 million over 4 years), then fill the rest of the roster with Room Exception and minimum contracts. Previously speculated $66.5 million leads to $8.2 starting salary and $35 million over 4 years.
As for Room MLE I speculated, that it should be used on a guard to beef up back court rotation, and one realistic option is Stuckey, who is earning minimum of $915,000 for Indiana, so $2.8 million and potential to become a 6th man should look very attractive. After entering the League as a poor man's Tyreke (even though he was drafted before Evans
), Stuckey for years hovered around .800 in FT%, which is a solid indication of the ability to hit outside shot, and this year he finally expanded the range to become an effective 3pt shooter both off the dribble and on the catch. While he struggles with straight on shot, he's money from anywhere else, including elbows extended, so he can naturally fill as emergency back up PG with his solid handles and ability to drive, though he lost some of his speed over the years. He's still 26.