A DeMarcus Cousins
extension isn't even signed yet, and we're already past the point at which
Boogie in Sacramento is interesting. The Kings exacerbate his worst tendencies
on and off the court, and that's been clear for several years. Cousins takes a
lot of criticism now, but he'd probably take even more if mainstream fans
actually watched Kings games. And obviously, the team has failed year after
year to build a coherent roster around him.
We should be honest
about this if it's going to happen this summer.
All
an extension ensures is that we're all going to be stuck spending an extra few
years feigning interest in this third world relationship. The other night's
postgame scene was a perfect example. After the extension news broke, we got
classic Kings Boogie, which is to say: kinda funny, but kinda mean, and all
coda to a game that nobody watched.
I want Boogie to succeed for a
number of reasons. He's got a preternatural gift for unnerving some of my least
favorite people in sports, and I don't want them to be proven right. He's also
got John Calipari on his side, and I don't want John Calipari to be
wrong. He's one of the six or seven most gifted players in the
league. If he maxes out his potential, it makes the whole sport more
entertaining. When he chooses to play along in interviews, he can be funny and
thoughtful, but still allergic to bulls**t, which is refreshing. In general,
basketball is more interesting because of players like him.
But every season
now, the Kings plod forward toward eighth or ninth place, and at least a
handful of times each year, Boogie's given to public eruptions of frustration and/or hot sculpting. Then the
front office will scramble to make a shortsighted move that will cost them
flexibility without yielding many benefits, and then everyone watches them do
it again the following year.
The Kings could deal
Cousins next month, or next June, and they'd likely bring back at least one
lottery pick. Couple that with a top 10 pick of their own, plus a 2018 first,
and there are at least three lottery picks as a foundation, along with Dave
Joerger coaching. That's a start. It's not a flawless blueprint—especially not with
Kings management in place—but it seems like a healthier option than chasing the
eighth seed year after year, all to appease a superstar who's angrily asking
reporters if they're happy to have him around. For Cousins, a move would give
him a fresh start, and ideally, a winning team that could hold him more
accountable. Likewise, playing with another star could give all basketball fans
an additional contender—which is why there's been so much trade buzz over the
past few years. An extension presses pause on all of that.
Since the rumors
surfaced—thanks to this report from James Ham at CSN
California—there have been several reactions explaining why this
deal could happen. A good one explained:DeMarcus Cousins re-signing with
Kings isn’t just the best choice, it’s the only choice. Basically,
the collective bargaining agreement's new "designated player
exception" allows the Kings to pay him more than any team in the league—at
least $30 million more over four years, and an $80 million difference if you
compare the five-year deal in Sacramento to the four-year deals he'd sign
elsewhere. So that's the rationale from Boogie's side. Likewise, the Kings are
able to secure their most valuable asset to help make money in the short term,
and the added years on the end of the deal will probably mean they can bring
back more value if they trade Cousins a few years from now. That's Sacramento's
incentive.
Strictly from a
basketball perspective, though: why should either side want to continue this
experiment? If Cousins decides to stay in Sacramento this July, who does that
actually benefit? Is a slightly better trade in two years really worth it if it
means two more years of tension and mediocrity?
The questions are
interesting enough as a continuation of the same Cousins/Kings take purgatory
we've been occupying for years. But the answers are most interesting in the
context of the NBA's latest CBA, and what it means for the league. Any
CBA has unintended consequences. The NBA's last deal, in 2011, was designed to
protect small markets, but wound up hurting the Thunder more than any team in
the league. It's too early to say how the new CBA will shape player movement
over the next few years. But the most meaningful reform was obviously the
designated player exception, designed to give teams an advantage keeping their
stars. And as we try to imagine the consequences of that rule, Boogie's
situation could be telling.
This is a case where the smartest business decision
under the new CBA—for both the Kings and Cousins—probably prolongs a doomed era
for the team, probably limits the growth of a star who needs a new environment,
and makes the rest of the league less entertaining in the meantime. It's
financial sanity at the expense of actual sanity for everyone involved. And if
Boogie's extension is the first example of what the NBA's designated player
exception looks like in the real world, let's be clear: it's not looking all
that great.
Source: si.com
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