A player who signs an offer sheet and has that offer matched by his previous team also has the ability to veto a trade for a full calendar year.ThunderUP! ha scritto: 08/02/2024, 16:01 Intanto pare che il Bridges cattivo (quello di Charlotte per intenderci) abbia appena fatto sapere tramite il suo agente che metterà il veto a qualsiasi trade e resterà a Charlotte fino a fine stagione quando poi scadrà..
la roba più allucinante è che quindi gli avessero pure permesso un no-trade clause nel contratto a questo
With those criteria in mind, here are the players who must give their consent if their teams want to trade them during the ’23/24 league year:
Players with a no-trade clause:
- Bradley Beal (Suns)
- Paul Reed (Sixers)
- Matisse Thybulle (Trail Blazers)
- Thanasis Antetokounmpo (Bucks)
- Miles Bridges (Hornets)
- Jae Crowder (Bucks)
- DeAndre Jordan (Nuggets)
- Damion Lee (Suns)
- Kevin Love (Heat)
- Markieff Morris (Mavericks)
- Josh Okogie (Suns)
- Mason Plumlee (Clippers)
- Russell Westbrook (Clippers)
A handful of players with veto rights consented to trades during the 2022/23 season, including Mike Muscala, Serge Ibaka, Ryan Arcidiacono, and Kessler Edwards. Muscala and Edwards eventually had their team options for ’23/24 picked up, so their Bird rights – only lack thereof – didn’t come into play this summer. Ibaka and Arcidiacono, meanwhile, were waived before season’s end, meaning they didn’t enter the offseason with any form of Bird rights anyway.
Any player who approves a trade will retain his veto ability on his new team, and would have to consent to any subsequent deal during the 2023/24 season.
non è una notrade clause in sé; aldilà di tutto Miles Bridges deve estinguersi il più rapidamente possibile...