The Cavaliers’ offseason puzzle has a lot of moving parts, but the loudest name in the mix is still LeBron James.
After James Harden declined his player option, Cleveland also lost Dean Wade and Keon Ellis. The team did bring back Thomas Bryant in the meantime, but the conversation around the roster has quickly shifted to the possibility of James returning. The buzz has only grown because reports suggest he could sign for the veteran minimum.
That idea sounds simple on the surface. The cap sheet does not.
Cleveland has about $25 million in space before the first apron, which means any path to adding James has to be mapped out carefully. If Harden is coming back, that likely happens late in the offseason, and the expectation is that he would land on a two-year deal worth around $20-25 million, with most of it guaranteed.
That would fall short of the $30 million number Harden may have been hoping for, but the Cavaliers could soften the blow with the security of guaranteed money. At this stage of his career, he also looks like a regular buyout candidate, and the chance to chase what could be his last real shot at a title alongside LeBron James would help sell the move.
Even then, Cleveland would be left with only about $5 million in room. From there, the front office would have to choose between going over the first apron or using the non-taxpayer mid-level exception and getting hard capped at the first apron.
The cleanest route would be to open up more space, stay below the first apron, and create an MLE to spend on a free agent. The simplest way to do that would be moving Dennis Schroder and either Sam Merrill or Max Strus for cap relief.
If the Cavaliers can send Schroder out in a multi-team deal that brings back Bronny James and draft picks, they would clear roughly $12.5 million. Then, depending on Harden’s number, Strus or Merrill - more likely Merrill - would also need to be moved for a minimum-salary player or additional picks.
With Harden back in the fold, Cleveland could still have three or four roster spots open. One would be earmarked for LeBron on a veteran minimum contract. Another would be available for a player willing to take the MLE, which is worth about $15 million.
That MLE target could come from anywhere, either through free agency or via trade. Among Cavaliers fans, one popular idea is Draymond Green, the longtime Golden State Warrior, possibly being tempted by that kind of deal.
The final roster spots could be filled with veteran minimum signings, and LeBron’s presence could help draw names such as DeMar DeRozan. Cleveland would still have its bi-annual exception too, sitting at around $5.5 million.
The smarter move, though, would be to hold onto that bi-annual exception and any leftover cap room for in-season changes before the trade deadline.
There is also another layer of flexibility if the Cavaliers choose to sign Summer League standout Meleek Thomas to a roster spot instead of a two-way contract. His rookie deal would cost a little less than a veteran minimum player, giving Cleveland a bit more breathing room.
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