The Houston Rockets and GM Daryl Morey have a unique opportunity to expand Tuesday night’s huge trade involving Clint Capela and Robert Covington, which was agreed to in principle but not finalized.
The NBA’s salary cap rules allow teams to take back 125% of their outgoing salary in a trade. In the Covington deal, Gerald Green (to Denver) and Jordan Bell (to Houston) aren’t counting toward that figure, since they’re each being acquired with minimum salary exceptions.
From Houston’s perspective as an above-the-cap team, Capela at $16.5 million, Covington at $11.3 million, and Nene at $2.6 million are the three salaries of significance, since they were all acquired using non-minimum resources. Capela and Nene are both being sent to Atlanta.
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Because Covington makes nearly $8 million less than Capela and Nene combined, the Rockets have the ability to bring in additional salary through an expanded version of the trade.
The trade leaves the Rockets with a brief window until Thursday's trade deadline to expand this four-team trade to include up to $12M in salary on another player. They could add a player who helps now, take on a player for assets and use those to further upgrade the team, etc.
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) February 5, 2020
HOU sent out a total of $19.1M in salary. Salary-matching rules allow HOU to take back as much as $23.9M (not counting Bell, who is being acquired via the Minimum Salary Exception). Subtract Covington's $11.3M. Boom. Roughly $12-13M more that could come in via this overall trade. https://t.co/rZwRL0gNTq
— David Weiner (@BimaThug) February 5, 2020
Based on salaries in the current agreement, the Rockets can add salary up to $5.8 million while still staying below the league’s luxury tax line. If they are willing to pay the tax, they could take back closer to $12 million.
While Tilman Fertitta has reportedly not put any financial restrictions on Morey at this year’s deadline, the Rockets haven’t paid the tax in any of Fertitta’s three seasons to date as owner. Thus, it remains to be seen if they would actually go through with such a move. But even if they do not, $5.8 million is still very much a salary slot of significance.
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Finances toward the cap/tax:
đATL- $3.8M below cap
đDEN- $1.5M below tax (was $957K)
đHOU- $5.8M below tax (was $321K over)
đ MIN- $1.6M below tax (was $9.5M below)
— Bobby Marks (@BobbyMarks42) February 5, 2020
Reports prior to the agreement indicated that Morey was aiming to acquire both a wing player (Covington) by Thursday’s trade deadline and a replacement center for Capela. In the deal’s current construction, they have the former but not the latter.
It’s also possible that Houston could turn to the buyout market after the deadline to fill the center need, but it’s unclear at the moment who the available players will be and whether they would choose Houston.
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Thus, as opposed to waiting for the uncertainty of buyouts, Morey and the Rockets might prefer to make another addition via trade. While the Rockets are limited with regards to tradable assets, since Houston’s 2020 first-round pick went to Denver in the Capela trade, other teams could still have incentive to participate in an expanded version because the Rockets are now able to take salary off another team’s books.
As ESPN‘s Wojnarowski indicated, there are two primary paths that Morey could pursue. The first would be searching for a good player (likely a center) that helps now. For one example, acquiring big man Kevon Looney â who the Rockets targeted in last summer’s free agency â would allow the Warriors to avoid the tax, all while not pushing the Rockets over it.
There are lots of possibilities, but in theory, Kevin Looney is a perfect salary fit. Enough to get the Warriors beneath the luxury tax, not enough to put the #Rockets into the tax.https://t.co/SuBSzQtodr
— Ben DuBose (@BenDuBose) February 5, 2020
With @wojespn citing potential to expand Rockets-Hawks-Wolves talks, was told that with Rockets need in deal to get a replacement center to keep an eye on Kevon Looney (rather than Minn-Atl options). They'd like him in that role if land the 3-and-D wing upgrade they are seeking. https://t.co/AiFu5pzDfv
— Jonathan Feigen (@Jonathan_Feigen) February 4, 2020
The other possibility, as Wojnarowski notes, is taking on a bad contract for assets. For example, if the Rockets are confident in their ability to lure a rotation center in the buyout market, they could use this salary matching window and their second open roster spot to take on a negatively valued contract. It could be to help a team avoid the luxury tax, or to possibly give them additional cap room for 2020 free agency.
In doing so, the other team could give Houston a future draft pick to help Morey and the Rockets replenish their stockpile of assets, which has been significantly drained in recent months. Between the Covington deal and last offseason’s trade for Russell Westbrook, the Rockets have surrendered three future first-round picks (2020, 2024, 2026).
They’ve also dealt away many of their future second-round picks. This route could allow the Rockets to recoup some of those lost assets.
To get a first-round pick, the salary taken in by Houston would probably need to be higher than $5.8 million â which would push the Rockets into tax territory. But with Fertitta reportedly giving the green light with regards to spending at this year’s trade deadline, it can’t be ruled out.
Tilman Fertitta reportedly signs off on Rockets' deadline spending https://t.co/cc24s00R7D
— The Rockets Wire (@TheRocketsWire) February 4, 2020
One potential downside to not immediately finalizing the trade is that Covington won’t be able to play for his new team until the league officially approves the deal, and until all players involved report to their new destinations and pass physicals.
That means it’s very unlikely that Covington will be available for Houston’s upcoming back-to-back, on Thursday in Los Angeles and Friday in Phoenix. But considering the deal’s size and the historically high amount of players involved, that may have been the case no matter what.
ESPN story with @espn_macmahon on the late-night, four-team deal that became the NBAâs most expansive trade in 20 years. https://t.co/e14r9jPVE3
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) February 5, 2020
Even so, there’s certainly still a path for the Rockets (32-18) to compete without any new players at all, considering they’ve now won six of their last eight games overall â including the last four without Capela. And at the moment, Capela is the only rotation player to depart.
In the meantime, they have until the 2019-20 trade deadline at 2 p.m. Central on Thursday to canvass the league and consider all scenarios. Hours later, the Rockets will tip off against the Lakers (38-11) at 9:30 p.m. Central time from Staples Center.
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