No, that's a stupid answer. Those are the questions and cir stances asked and assessed before making that kind of move.
Maybe you're just much smarter than the Spurs' front office and have more insight as to what their options really were?
Because what they do financially has bearing on what they can and are willing to do moving forward, Ace.
After the contract's restructuring, the Spurs will only be paying $13,492,000- $14,492,000 for RJ's final 3 years after the savings. They won't have the huge contract of Duncan (gone or paycut) and possibly Parker (could bolt), so his contract won't be all that bersome should he play it out.
Doing what they did allowed them to field a more talented team while remaining under the tax - something that allows an owner that isn't among the richest in the league to do more for his team down the road when any or all of the Big 3 are gone.
It's what smart front offices do - they can't all be Buss, Cuban, Allen or Prokhorov