Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Revision lowers expected Heat cap space to $35M

- By Ira Winderman Staff writer

MIAMI— In aminor adjustment that could have major implicatio­ns for the Miami Heat, NBA teams have been informed through a league memo that the2017-18 salary cap is expected to be adjusted to $99million fromthe anticipate­d $101million.

For the Heat, one of 10 teams with major salarycap space this summer, the revised projection, lowers their expected cap space from $37 million to about $35 million.

While that number still remains flexible for the Heat, based on the team’s approach with player options and other machinatio­ns, it effectivel­y minimizes any remaining cap space should the team pursue a max-scale free agent.

Under such a scenario with a $30 million contract starting point for a free agent such as GordonHayw­ard, Blake Griffin or Paul Millsap, it would leave the Heat with little more than the type of mid-level exception space possessed by every team in the league.

Among the complicati­ons for the Heat could be an inability to pick up the $6.3 million guarantee on the 2017-18 contract of 3-point specialist Wayne Ellington, a decision that has to be made by July 7, one day after theNBAsign­ing period begins.

Free-agency negotiatio­ns begin July 1, with the Heat facing contract decisions with James Johnson, Dion Waiters and Willie Reed, among other free agents on their roster.

By merely re-signing Johnson and Waiters, it could leave the Heat with less than $10 million of remaining cap space.

Because of the lowered cap, it could increase the possibilit­y of the Heat invoking the “stretch provision” with forward Josh McRoberts, who has opted into his $6 million salary for 2017-18 but could be waived at a cap savings of $4 million, with the Heat instead making $2 million payments over each of the next three cap years.

The salary-cap dip is a product of a short NBA postseason with the limited number of games, including the Golden State Warriors’ five-game romp over the Cleveland Cavaliers in theNBA Finals.

The $99 million cap nonetheles­s represents a $5 million increase over the 2016-17 cap.

In addition to the lower cap, the luxury-tax threshold is nowproject­ed at $119 million instead of the anticipate­d $121 million, an adjustment that does not figure to impact theHeat.

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