Photograph by Al Bello/Getty Images.
Sports fans love surprises. Brian Baker coming back from several lifetimesâ worth of injuries to make a run at Wimbledon. The small-time Butler Bulldogs crashing the Final Four, then doing it again. Jeremy Lin going from an undrafted, unknown point guard to the sports worldâs biggest name in two weeks. But the latest twist in Linâs storyâ"his departure from New York after the Knicks decided not to match the Houston Rocketsâ $25.1 million offer sheetâ"shows that, in pro sports, the best narratives are no
match for mind-blowing managerial incompetence.
The NBAâs rules are designed to protect stupid teams like the Knicks from their own stupidity. The draft lottery rewards the worst franchises with the best picks. The maximum salary ensures that teams wonât spend too much on star players, who are drastically underpaid as compared to their value on an open market. And David Sternâs move to ban players from turning pro out of high school was designed to bring more certainty to player evaluationâ"to save scouts and general managers the embarrassment of taking a bust like Kwame Brown with the No. 1 pick.
The Knicks prove that no matter how much the league tries to help its least-competent franchises, stupidity always finds a way. New York was smart to pull Lin off the scrap heap, but it took James Dolan's franchise just a few steps to transform good fortune into the morale-killing eviction of the player who'd revitalized a long-moribund team. With the exception of the cagy Rockets, nobody who cared about the fate of Jeremy Linâs careerâ"Lin ("Honestly, I preferred New York,â he told SI.com), pitchfork-wielding Knicks fans, and the Knicks themselvesâ"got what they wanted this week. And the reason Linâs offseason has been such a bizarre failure is the same reason his 2012 season was so uplifting: Six months ago, when nobody thought he could play, he landed in exactly the wrong place.
After four years at Harvard, Lin didnât get picked in the 2010 NBA Draft. When he eventually signed with the Golden State Warriors, the Taiwanese-American point guard took a deal that paid him around $500,000 in his first year. After getting cut by the Warriors and the Rockets the following season, he got an annual salary of $762,195 from the Knicks in 2011-12.
Itâs that six-figure deal, not the new one paying $8 million annually, that most misrepresented Linâs value. Even as he gained a tenured position on the cover of Sports Illustrated, Lin was the best bargain in basketball. The Knicks were getting a franchise point guard for the price of end-of-the-bench, towel-waving roster fillerâ"Chris Paul at Alonzo Geeâs salary.
If Lin had been a coveted college player, he wouldâve gotten a longer-term, guaranteed deal instead of a short-term, low-salary contract. But once he started to play like Walt Frazier, Lin had the benefit of becoming a free agent at 23, an age when other players were still locked in to their rookie deals. The Knicks, then, got Lin for cheap at the cost of having to turn around immediately and pay him something closer to market price.
Perhaps it was bad luck for the Knicks to blunder into a rare situation where the NBAâs overprotective rules couldnât save them. As this New York Times primer explains, the league created the Gilbert Arenas rule in the mid-2000s to make it easier for teams to resign players like Arenas and Lin whoâd outplayed their rookie deals. Even though theyâre over the salary cap, Linâs status as a restricted free agent meant the Knicks could match any other teamâs contract offer. NBA contract law, though, did not foresee that a team like the Rockets could sign Lin to a booby-trapped offer sheet designed to exploit the Knicksâ comically mismanaged payroll, which allocates more than $62 million to just three players (Carmelo Anthony, Amare Stoudemire, and Tyson Chandler) in 2014-15. As a consequence, the Knicks would have had to pay Lin something like $43 million in the 2014-15 seasonâ"his salary plus exorbitant luxury tax penaltiesâ"if theyâd matched the Rocketsâ offer. It was that $43 million figure that finally led the NBAâs drunken sailors to sober up.
In allowing Lin to leave, the Knicks front office decided that its bad past decisions will doom the franchise in perpetuity. The team was dumb to sign a series of big-money deals in previous years that would allow a competitor to devise a âpoison pillâ that capitalized on its fiscal stupidity. But given Linâs youth, his obvious skills, and the fact that Madison Square Garden ceased for once to be a hulking pile of sadness when he took the floor, it was much, much dumber not to swallow that poison pill anyway. After all, as Matt Yglesias explained earlier this week, the Rocketsâ poison pill deal pays Lin roughly $5 million in each of its first two yearsâ"a more-than-reasonable rate. If the Knicks didnât like what they were getting by 2014, they couldâve traded him to an NBA team that wanted to acquire expiring contracts. (Expiring, big-money contracts are strangely valuable in the NBA.)
A business school could design a whole yearâs curriculum around the Knicksâ cascade of self-harm. Itâs as if the team bought a valuable antique rifle for $1 at a flea market, shot themselves in the foot while fooling around with it, then chose to shoot themselves in the head rather than get the foot amputated. Last year, Jeremy Lin showed how joyous it can be to watch someone prove game after game that every team made a mistake. This July, the Knicks have shown that itâs a lot less fun when itâs just one team that keeps on screwing up.
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