wow. that's pretty high.
via Stein on TwitterOfficially salary cap number is $58,044,000, up from $57.7 million last season. Tax line rises to $70.3 million, up from $69.9 million
make your predictions/fittings/etc
Last edited by Creation88; 07-07-2010 at 06:50 PM.
Spurs currently committed to: $52,606,328
Almost $2 mil more than expected. Spurs shouldn't have too much trouble staying clear of the lux tax either.
yeah seems spurs have some wiggle room now
so we are under 6mil under the cap?
we still get the MLE correct?I thought i read somewhere that you only get the MLE if you're over the cap or under the cap by less than what the MLE is.
wtf happened to the cap going down this year?
wondering same thing
should be under with all the cap holds and especially with 's salary slot still out there.
Is that with the salary-holds for our free agents and lack of full roster spots, or are you just adding up the current contracts?
current contracts only.
outside the Spurs this will reportedly help Lebron join the Heat a bit easier.
Pretty sure you don't need the MLE if you aren't over the cap/it won't put you over the cap.
Yes. The Spurs will use their exceptions, not the cap space.
Guess the league did pretty good last season... gonna be a hard sell to the union in the upcoming CBA that the league is leaking money...
K thanks.
MLE is $5.7 million, according to Stein.
Good question about the holds.
http://www.shamsports.com/content/pa...ries/spurs.jsp
Robert freaking Horry still has a $7.2M cap hold!! This means that, for the purposes of trades, exception calculations, etc, the Spurs are over the cap.
If teams are under the cap by less than the MLE, they are given the MLE to use instead of their cap space. This rule is put in place to prevent teams that are over the cap having more money to spend than teams that are under the cap.
I think this is generally good news for the Spurs. It means they can use the full MLE and/or spend more on a potential SF with less worry about the luxury tax.
I was thinking the same thing. S&T's for a trade exception suddenly become much more intriguing.
Exact numbers:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=5362260
NBA teams found out Wednesday that the salary cap for next season will be nearly $2 million higher than anticipated, providing additional unforeseen cap space to several teams.
The NBA announced a cap of $58 million for the 2010-11 season, when most teams had budgeted a cap of $56.1 million.
The exact salary cap figure, according to league sources, is $58,044,000, up from $57.7 million in the 2009-10 season.
That means teams such as Miami, New York, New Jersey, Chicago and the Los Angeles Clippers have more spending room than anticipated to accommodate free-agent signings.
The luxury-tax line for the coming season will be $70,307,000, up from $69.9 million.
The midlevel exception for next season is $5.765 million.
The cap goes into effect at 12:01 a.m. Thursday, ending the league's moratorium period and allowing free-agent contracts to be signed.
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