Allan Houston Retires

lockymac

Graded Mint 10 by GEM!!!
Feedback - 100%
59   0   0
What The?
Why didnt the Knicks waive Houston under the Amnesty 'Allan Houston' rule?
This just doesn't make sense.

NEW YORK -- Knicks sweet-shooting guard Allan Houston, whose knee problems and long-term contract created a league rule named after him, retired Monday.


Houston


Houston, 34, had played in just 70 games over the last two seasons as a result of an arthritic left knee that did not respond to surgery and treatment. After playing just 20 games last season, he vowed to return to action this season but could not.

"My career as an NBA player and member of the New York Knicks must unfortunately come to an end," Houston said in a statement. "Over the last two years, I have done everything I could possibly do to get back on the court, but injuries to my knee would not allow me to do it."

As the face of the franchise at the time, Houston was signed to a six-year, $100 million contract in August 2001. He is still owed nearly $40 million through 2007, including $19.125 million this season.

As part of the new collective bargaining agreement, teams were allowed this summer to waive one player whose salary would not count against luxury tax computations. It was called the "Amnesty Rule" but became known as the "Allan Houston Rule."

However, the Knicks were hopeful that Houston could return and instead waived forward Jerome Williams, saving approximately $20 million in luxury tax payments over the next three years.

The team must still pay Houston, whose contract reportedly is insured and whose salary comes off the salary cap next year.

Houston wanted to test his knee in training camp this year before deciding whether to retire. The shooting guard wasn't participating in the full workload of two-a-days his teammates were running, but had been encouraged by early results.

Houston, considered the Knicks' best player a few years back, hasn't consistently displayed the smooth shooting stroke that earned him more than $150 million worth of contracts over a 12-year NBA career.

Chronic knee soreness ended Houston's season Jan. 19, causing him to miss New York's final 44 games, and he averaged only 11.9 points while shooting 41 percent from the field -- his lowest numbers since his rookie season of 1993-94.

Houston's last good year came in 2002-03 when he averaged a career-high 22.5 points.

Houston, 34, played the last nine of his 12 seasons in the NBA with the Knicks. He posted a career average of 17.3 points per game, and a career-playoff average of 19.3 points in 63 postseason appearances.

He was to earn $40 million over the final two years of his contract. Houston was the last player remaining from the Knicks' team that reached the NBA Finals in 1999.
 
They were sure he was going to play and the knicks front office is the joke of the league. They are making the clippers of the last decades look good :lol:

Houston talked himself up earlier and pretty much refused to bought out or retire. I hope he takes a cut and doesn't screw them over for the next year too? That would be the right thing to do.

IF they had of waived him with the ruling locky it would of still counted against the cap. They would have simply saved the money counting against the luxary tax. So they save 20 million now in tax and hopefully some of Houstons contract too.

The Knicks paid both Longleys and LJ's big contracts out for years after they retired too. Poor bastards...NAh fuck NY! :P
 
The Knicks don't pay all of Houston's salary for the next 2 years,
thats why contracts are insured (see the Bulls & Curry this offseason)
& I'm pretty sure both Longley's & Johnson's would have been insured too.

"Allan Houston's decision to retire with two years left on his contract could save the Knicks as much as $72 million, although it will not provide any salary cap flexibility. Houston retired for medical reasons - a chronic knee injury - so the N.B.A.'s insurance carrier will pay 80 percent of his remaining salary, or $32 million over the next two seasons. The Knicks will pay the other $8 million." New York Times

In a bonus for the Knicks, they can apply for a $5 mill medical exception to sign a player to fill his roster spot.

Even without Houston's salary, however, the Knicks' payroll would exceed $100 million this season and $80 million in 2006-7. The current salary cap is $49.5 million. Houston's departure opens a roster spot, but the Knicks almost certainly will not be given a new salary slot - known as a disabled-player exception - to sign a free agent. That exception, if granted, would be worth about $5 million." New York Times
 
Like you said the contracts were insured but they still count agains the cap. That hurts the team more than big payouts.
 
Back
Top Bottom