AggieEP said:
To me, it's always been a question of the other owners opinions on this in regards to whether we see real penalties or not. Silver works for them. The Raptors have to be pissed. Kawhi cares about money, and the Raptors could offer the most money. Kawhi signs with the clippers because the clippers funnel him the difference. You'd think the Spurs would be pissed too, just to pee in Kawhi's cheerios a bit for forcing his way out. OKC would be in favor of anything that makes the clippers suck. So then you wonder, are the rest of the owners willing to go down this path? Do they all do similar things (Dirk example above)? Maybe they are worried Ballmer would throw them under the bus if the NBA hits him too hard with penalties? Do they really want those OKC picks to become more valuable if Kawhi is booted off the Clips?
I think the ownership knows that because of this, all the teams are soon going to be required to regulate or monitor the sponsorship deals their players get. I think I'd be annoyed if this situation meant more oversight to what the players are doing.
Also with the ownership, how many owners are in tech and having a good relationship with Ballmer is beneficial or essential for their other business. I don't know if there are any, but a good relationship with Ballmer is better than antagonistic if you are in tech. And yet, he's been gone long enough from Microsoft, that maybe it doesn't matter one bit.
I think there are two options with the NBA: Either a report of not enough evidence, with no punishment to the Clippers, or an incredibly stiff sentence. I don't think they can go halfway on this (i.e. Two 1st round picks and a fine).
They can't say "we found evidence" and go light, and then warn teams. The deterrent has been there. The punishment needs to be there.
Whatever the max is for Kawhi, including a possible ban, should be given. (I know GSoup gave the CBA punishment earlier but I couldn't find it)
I don't know what is a great punishment for the Clippers, but maybe they should have to operate at 85% of the salary cap (and aprons) until they have their own first-round pick again. And then lose a couple after that.