By TERRY LYONS
BOSTON – The precision of the NBA’s annual Salary Cap communique comes in like and announcement from the man who’s Gotta Make the Donuts! NBA teams, players and their agents await the new guiding numbers like an investor awaiting advice from E.F. Hutton.
The National Basketball Association announced that the Salary Cap has been set at $123.655 million for the 2022-23 season. The tax level for the 2022-23 season is $150.267 million.
The Salary Cap and tax level go into effect at 12:01am (ET) on Friday, July 1. Teams were permitted to begin negotiating with free agents today at 6:00pm (ET) — six hours prior to the start of the league’s “moratorium period.” The moratorium period ends at 12 noon (ET) on Wednesday, July 6.
The minimum team salary, which is set at 90% of the Salary Cap, is $111.290 million for the 2022-23 season.
The Collective Bargaining Agreement provides for three different mid-level exceptions depending on a team’s salary level. The non-taxpayer mid-level for the 2022-23 season is $10.490 million, the taxpayer mid-level is $6.479 million, and the mid-level for a team with room under the Salary Cap is $5.401 million.
“Damn the global pandemic, full speed ahead,” one could read between the lines of a communique sent to teams and media as the NBA geared-up for its summer season of Free Agent signings, trades, Summer League and zero rest for the weary. Summer is when the rosters of champions are molded or disassembled, depending on which way the club execs believe their fortune is destined.
College coaches across the land are just beginning to feel the same pain. The NCAA Transfer Portal is just a hint, an inkling of what pro General Managers and Player Personnel Directors experience every July 1st.
The most frequent comment, “It’s the Wild, Wild West.”
The news of BIG negotiations and hand-shake on deals began to flow, mostly reported by annual free agent news Woj 💣 by the hand of ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski and his merry band of newsmakers.
The biggest? Certainly the Minnesota Timberwolves mortgaging their future by trading four unprotected No. 1 picks from the Wolves in 2023, 2025 and 2027, and a Top-5 protected pick in 2029. (The NBA CBA forbids teams from trading consecutive No. 1 picks, thus the odd numbered year picks being conveyed to Utah). The deal also calls for the Timberwolves to send Malik Beasley, Patrick Beverley, Walker Kessler, Jarred Vanderbilt and Leandro Bolmaro to the Jazz for center Rudy Gobert.
For Boston, the reports have the Indiana Pacers shipping guard Malcolm Brogdon to the Boston Celtics for veteran center Daniel Theis, prospect Aaron Nesmith and a 2023 first-round pick. The Celtics will include Nik Stauskas, Malik Fitts and Juwan Morgan in the deal thus Boston securing their playmaker and No. 1 point guard.
That move will allow Boston to slide Defensive Player of the Year Marcus Smart to the two-guard slot, play superstars Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown upfront with a combo of Robert Williams III and Al Horford at center. If Boston wants to “go big” with both Williams and Horford in the lineup together, Brogdon will be the Sixth Man and change of pace off the bench. Regardless, the move helps Boston better manage the minutes played for the oft-injured Williams and the aging Horford, although reserve Theis will be missed.
The Celtics have reportedly lined-up Italy’s Danilo Gallinari for a two-year deal to improve their long-range shooting and open the floor up for Tatum and Brown. Gallinari has a long resume in the NBA dating back to 2008.
While trades and player movement are the highlight of early July in the NBA, players re-signing with their own teams provides significant headlines, especially in the smaller market teams who retain their players. That seems to be the case with reports of the following players staying put at “megadeals” or “supermax” contracts and/or extensions:
- Ja Morant staying with Memphis
- Devin Booker with a supermax in Phoenix
- Zion Williamson signing a five-year extension at $193m in New Orleans
- Karl-Anthony Towns with a four-year, $224m deal to stay in Minnesota
- MVP Nikola Jokic re-signing in Denver
The offense-defense combo of Towns and Gobert in Minnesota will be interesting and the need for strong rim protection in the NBA being the object of the game for the Timberwolves.
Of course free agency is often defined by the act of a player declining his option and putting his talents out for any team (with cap space) to acquire. That was the case as the New York Knicks targeted and reportedly have a deal for former Dallas guard Jalen Brunson, son of Rick.
And, Washington’s Bradley Beal opted-out of his last contract year but then resigned a max deal with the Wizards while Philadelphia’s James Hardenwill reportedly take a cut from the $47.4m he had on the books for his final year and sign a longer-term deal with the 76ers, allowing more cap space freedom for the team to sign others.
While reigning NBA champion Golden State retained the services of Kevon Looney, they’ve reportedly lost free agents Gary Payton II to Portland and Nemanja Bjelica who will return to play in Europe.
Phoenix free agent center Deandre Ayton still on the market with no reported deal in place.
There are dozens of other players signing, re-signing and calling the moving vans. More player news is on the horizon with some deals to be officially announced on July 6th when the moratorium ends.
HERE NOW, THE NOTES: While you might see some of the prominent reporters and TV anchors grabbing a vacation day or two around the USA summer holiday of 4th of July, that’s not the case here at While We’re Young (Ideas). At CBS News, Major Garrett stepped in for Norah O’Donnell on Friday night while Bill Ritter and Liz Cho took time off (along with most local No. 1 TV anchors across the country), and Sade Baderinwa filled in nicely at the anchor chair for WABC-TV 7 New York. … By the way, did you know that Liz Cho is married to former ESPN, GMA reporter Josh Elliott? … The point being, we’re on the job here with a bevy full of notes to keep you occupied and provoke some thoughts on the 4th of July weekend. … Starting-off the thought-provoking vibes of this week’s holiday camp column, you must watch with amazement the way Nathan’s Famous Hot Dogs just RULES the 4th of July holiday, in a way the NFL dominates every Thanksgiving Day! Yes, Joey Chestnut has become a household name because of his competitive eating skills. The 6-foot, 230-pound Chestnut was not always a hot dog man and did not always win when he chowed down. In 2005, the San Jose State product began his rookie season on the Deep Fried Asparagus tour, winning his first contest by consuming 6.3 lbs. of asparagus in 11 minutes, 30 seconds. That same year, he entered the Nathan’s Hot Dog fray only to finish third behind the formidable Takeru Kobayashi with Sonya Thomas getting the silver. Chestnut is a 14-time Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest Champion (2007–2014, 2016–2021) but has dabbled in a number of other eating contests, one more disgusting than the next. Here are a few:
- 2005: Chestnut ate 32.5 grilled cheese sandwiches in ten minutes at the Arizona State Fair.
- 2006: Chestnut ate 45 bratwurst sausages in ten minutes in Sheboygan, Wisconsin.
- 2007: Chestnut ate 182 chicken wings in 30 minutes, becoming a Wing Bowl champion in Philadelphia.
- 2008: Chestnut ate 241 wings in 30 minutes at the Wing Bowl XVI in Philadelphia, but was bested by rival Kobayashi (337 in 2011).
- 2008: He ate 78 matzo balls during Kenny & Ziggy’s World Matzoh Ball Eating Championship in Houston, Texas.
- 2008: Chestnut went psuedo-international and devoured 231 gyoza, setting a new world record at the Gyoza Eating Championship in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles.
- 2009: Chestnut ate Iguana’s Burritozilla, a five lb (2.3 kg), 17-inch burrito in three minutes, ten seconds.
- 2010: Chestnut, really going worldwide, won the Shrimp Wontons eating contest in Singapore. Chestnut ate 380 wontons in eight minutes.
- 2010: Close to home for Bostonians, the local Boston syndicated TV show, Phantom Gourmet, stepped up and hosted a Pizza-eating contest. Chestnut won the Upper Crust Pizza Eating competition by eating 37 slices in ten minutes.
- 2011-12: Saw some small bits of controversy but Chestnut ate on and also graduated from San Jose State.
- 2012: Chestnut won the Third Annual Smoke’s Poutinerie World Poutine Eating Championships in Toronto, Ontario by consuming 19 boxes (9.5 lb [4.3 kg]) of poutine in ten minutes (Poutine is a combo of French Fries and Cheese Curds, topped with brown gravy which originated in Quebec City.
- 2012: All the while, Chestnut was hard at work chowing down his mainstay hot dogs and buns (HDB for those in the industry).
- 2013: Chestnut successfully defended his title at Nathan’s 98th Annual Hot Dog Eating Contest at Coney Island in Brooklyn, New York. He beat his own world record of 68 by consuming 69 HDB in ten minutes.
- 2014-2020: Chestnut had his ups and downs, winning, losing, redeeming himself with super-human performances.
- 2021: Chestnut won his 14th title at Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest, eating 76 hot dogs and buns in 10 minutes, a new record.
While records show competitive food eating contests involving everything from Pulled Pork to hard-boiled eggs to Fish Tacos to Glazed Donuts to Boysenberry pie, the one contest West End Johnnie’s of Boston is ready to host is the World Meatball Contest.
Said contest would never be a disgusting, jam meat balls in your mouth display of gluttony. Instead, it would be done in a much more classy style with knife and fork and white napkins adorning the contestants. The judgements would NOT be on the number of meatballs consumed, but rather the taste and excellence of the meatballs themselves. Respectable restaurants and delis from Brooklyn, Little Italy, the North End of Boston, Chicago, Philly and Baltimore (a great Little Italy there) might come to Boston in October for the festivities. There would be singles, doubles and mixed doubles tastings, paired with the perfect white wine for warm-ups and red wine during the competitions. Interested sponsors, CLICK HERE.
TENNIS ANYONE? – Gordon Ernst, the former head tennis coach at Georgetown University was sentenced Friday to more than two years in prison for taking over $3 million in bribes to help wealthy families game admissions for their applicants to the school. Ernst received the harshest punishment yet administered in the national college-admissions scandal that exposed the access mechanisms to elite colleges and universities, noting how vulnerable the system is to corruption. The scandal which went on from 2011-1018 and which Federal prosecutors described a scheme in which a college consultant in California, William “Rick” Singer, offered wealthy parents, including many celebrity families, access to schools that might decline most applicants, thus assisting would-be students to cheat on admissions tests while bribing coaches and others to label applicants as coveted recruits, even though they might not have even played the sports. This week, U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani sentenced Ernst to 30 months in prison and two years of supervised release, with the first six months to be served at home. He was ordered to forfeit $3,435,053.
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