Most teams these days carry on the payroll a salary cap expert -- a "capologist," if you will -- to battle through the dense swampland that is the NBA's Collective Bargaining Agreement. Usually this role is played by an assistant general manager or someone else affiliated with a team's basketball operations staff.In Orlando, the role has been filled by Scott Herring, a senior vice president of basketball administration who had been with the club since before it existed. (No small feat!) Brian Schmitz of the Orlando Sentinel reported Monday that the Magic have eliminated the position and Herring's job, however.
Just one more victim in Rashard Lewis's expensive reign, it seems -- why pay to tell your cap figure is screwed when you know perfectly well that your cap figure is screwed? In all seriousness, the Magic are basically capped out until 2011. Even then, with $36 million devoted to Lewis and Dwight Howard, there will be little real maneuverability. But that's when knowing the cap becomes really important -- when you have restricted means to add talent and need to add talent.
On one hand, someone in Orlando completely botched the team's cap flexibility last summer by doing things all out of order. On the other, this valuable slice of Herring's job -- obviously difficult and nuanced -- now gets handed over to the franchise's CFO. Way to go, Orlando.
[Via Matt from Blog-a-Bull.]
The Magic improved by 12 games this year to finish with 52 wins, their most since 1996 when Shaquille O'Neal and Penny Hardaway carried the team all the way to the NBA Finals. GM
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Orlando suffered a crushing blow to their hopes of moving on in the playoffs with a tough Game 4 loss at home to the Pistons. Detroit is the only team to win a road game in this round of the playoffs, and did so by just a single point and without their starting point guard,
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During the Pistons' Game 1 victory over Orlando, you may recall a play where 