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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Charles Curtis

How the Warriors saved an ungodly amount of money by trading James Wiseman for basically nothing

You may be wondering something about the trade that sent former No. 2 overall pick James Wiseman from the Golden State Warriors to the Detroit Pistons and the Dubs getting … a bunch of second-round picks back.

Why would the Warriors deal a future asset for basically nothing? How could they let Wiseman go for so little even though he hasn’t lived up to the hype?

There’s actually a good answer for that, and proof that the Warriors aren’t made of money (even though they’ve spent a ton of it to put together a contender in recent years).

The answer comes from John Hollinger at The Athletic:

As a result, even small bits of window dressing could save eye-popping amounts of money after accounting for the tax penalty and the Warriors’ repeater status. That, in turn, focuses attention on James Wiseman. He’s owed $9.6 million this year and $12.2 million next year, meaning that San Antonio, Detroit, Utah or Indiana could trade for him without sending anything back. Such a transaction would save the Warriors about $51 million in salary and tax this year and an estimated $85 million in salary and tax next year; a total of $131 million in savings to dump a guy who rarely plays.

Did you read that?

Again: That could save a total of $131 million in savings to dump a guy who rarely plays.

That explains it.

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