In 2008, the New
York Knicks rid
themselves of an uninspired Zach Randolph(notes), sending
him to the Los
Angeles Clippers in a
trade package that brought back shooting guard Cuttino
Mobley(notes).Soon after, Mobley was encouraged to
retire by Knicks general manager Donnie Walsh after a heart specialist was left
unnerved following Mobley's physical exam -- the doctor was worried about
Mobley's hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy.
The
retirement did little to affect New
York 's cap space or eventual lottery standing, and
even in the midst of a rebuilding process it seemed as if the Knicks were hurt
more by Mobley's absence than Mobley (who
was paid in full following his retirement) was hurt by missing a year playing
on a terrible Knicks team.
Three years later, Mobley is suing the Knicks and
their owner James Dolan, arguing that the team forced Cuttino to retire in
order to save nearly $19 million in combined
insurance and luxury tax savings. Also, this makes absolutely no sense, and
it's more than a little sad.
James
Dolan, owner of the New York Knicks, is a terrible basketball team owner. His
squad makes quite a bit of money; but even though the Knicks did earn a playoff
berth last spring for the first time in seven years Dolan still ranks as one of
the worst professional team owners in all of American sport. The laundry list
of reasons why is too long to go over,
especially in polite company, so you'll just have to fall back on Dolan's giant
payrolls and massive crush on Isiah Thomas to work as trenchant evidence.
So for Mobley to claim that Dolan was only out to save $19 million in combined luxury tax and insurance-aided
payroll relief by asking Cuttino to retire, well, you'll have to possibly side
with Dolan on this matter if you have any working knowledge of the NBA. After
all, this is the man that signed off on handingJerome
James(notes) and Eddy
Curry(notes) a
combined $89 million in a three month span
back in 2005.
Marc
Berman of the New York Post takes it from here:
"[…] the suit's other claim that Mobley's retirement helped Walsh
in his 2010 quest to get under the salary cap to sign "marquee'' free
agents does not hold up. Mobley's contract expired after the 2009 season, which
means he did not affect the Knicks' 2010 cap space whether he played or retired.
Sources
said Walsh was "devastated'' by the loss of Mobley and coach Mike D'Antoni
blamed part of that season's collapse on the vacuum created by Mobley's
retirement. However, Walsh once said he'd do the trade again.
The
lawsuit calls into question whether the Garden
sacrificed wins during a rebuilding season to save money, since Dolan had
been burdened for years with one of the league's highest payrolls and
luxury-tax payments.
In a
statement, the Knicks strongly denied allegations they purposely orchestrated
Mobley's retirement to save money.
The Knicks did save quite a bit of money by
encouraging Mobley to retire, but as Berman discussed
you might recall that coach Mike D'Antoni spent most of 2008-09 kvetching about
his terrible team, and its inability to compete in spite of what was obviously
a rebuilding season. D'Antoni wanted Mobley,
and Mobley could have played, in spite of his diagnosis.
Walsh probably wanted Mobley around too, considering that the 2009 draft
lottery only brought New York Jordan
Hill(notes) as
a reward for their shoddy season.
Then
there's this quote, as recalled by the New York Times' Howard Beck, from Mobley in 2008:
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