(R) - Restricted
(P) - Player Option
(T) - Team Option
Kevin Garnett
Ray Allen
Brandon Bass (P)
Jeff Green
Ryan Anderson (R)
Ramon Sessions (P)
Mehmet Okur
Raymond Felton
Jamal Crawford (P)
Greg Oden
JR Smith (P)
Jeremy Lin (R)
Landry Fields (R)
Steve Novak
Baron Davis
Jason Terry
Lamar Odom (T)
Jason Kidd
Vince Carter (T)
Delonte West
Tim Duncan
Gary Neal (R)
Boris Diaw
OJ Mayo (R)
Marreese Speights (R)
Darrell Arthur
Kirk Hinrich
Tracy McGrady
Ivan Johnson (R?)
Omer Asik (R)
Spencer Hawes
Lou Williams (P)
Jodie Meeks
Antawn Jamison
Carl Landry
Marco Bellinelli
Steve Nash
Grant Hill
Randy Foye
Nick Young
Chauncey Billups
Kenyon Martin
Brandon Rush
Deron Williams (P)
Gerald Wallace (P)
Brook Lopez (R)
Kris Humphries
Kwame Brown
Carlos Delfino
Ersan Ilyasova
Roy Hibbert (R)
Dahntay Jones
Leandrinho Barbosa
Geogre Hill (R)
Samuel Dalembert (T)
Marcus Camby
Goran Dragic
Courtney Lee (R)
DJ Augustin (R)
CJ Miles
Josh Howard
Michael Beasley (R)
Martell Webster (T)
Anthony Randolph (R)
Andre Miller
Javale McGee (R)
Rudy Fernandez (R)
Jerryd Bayless (R)
Aaron Gray
Are the Bulls going to hold on to Asik? I like this guy. He could be the Heat's starting center.
If Asik got an offer sheet from the Heat then the Bulls would likely match just so the Heat couldn't sign him. Heat would only have taxpayers MLE anyway, wouldn't they? Get the feeling someone would throw $5m per at Asik...
If the Celts decide not to keep Allen/Garnett, they should go for OJ Mayo and Kris Humphries imo. I suppose a Centre would be nice, but I don't really like the look of them considering the price that you'd have to pay, except for maybe Hawes (is he a centre? I forget).
Brandon Bass has a $4m player option, so might be worth putting him on there the way he's been playing recently.
If Asik got an offer sheet from the Heat then the Bulls would likely match just so the Heat couldn't sign him. Heat would only have taxpayers MLE anyway, wouldn't they? Get the feeling someone would throw $5m per at Asik...
he can only earn MLE per Gilbert Arenas rule over the next 2 years, beyond that is fair game.
Teams are limited from offering anything more than the average salary to a restricted free agent with two years or less experience.[9] A player's original team can use the Early Bird exception or their Mid-Level exception to re-sign the player.[4] This is named the "Gilbert Arenas Rule". In 2003, Gilbert Arenas signed a six-year, $60 million contract with the Washington Wizards after his original team, the Golden State Warriors, were unable to match the offer since they were over the salary cap.[10]