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There is no intended disrespect to either Morgan Tuck or Crystal Langhorne by combining their seasons into one post. The reason they arenโt receiving their own individual posts is their lack of playing time. Yet, they are still worth mentioning in the context of the team.
Drawing meaningful conclusions from Tuckโs 88 minutes or Langhorneโs 107 would likely be a mistake. Thatโs not enough time for any player to get the feel for a game or get in a rhythm. When either player did see the court, it was often in garbage time.
There is just too much qualifying needed to try and create an analysis for their seasons than is worthwhile.
The problem with getting a combined 195 minutes and 23 games from these two is that they are paid like regular contributors. Tuck and Langhorne are owed $220,000 combined next season, or 17 percent of the cap. This is a problem for a team with a number of key free agents to re-sign this offseason.
Tuck and Langhorne are more than just salary cap figures. Theyโre players, and more importantly, people. When we discuss players in these context we too often mention them as contracts rather than individuals. However, from the Storm perspective, itโs fair to question their salary cap utilization.
While Iโm not worried about their ownersโ cap flow, this is a salary cap league and how teams spend their money affects their team building. You can pay Tuck or Langhorne over $100,000 per season but you need more from them than they received. The team also didnโt ask much of them.
Hereโs the thing: they could get the same production for much less while making it easier to retain their championship core. These decisions arenโt easy. Tuck is a young forward while Langhorne has dedicated six years to the franchise and has now won two titles in Seattle.
Whatโs also difficult is losing a combination of Alysha Clark, Natasha Howard, and Sami Whitcomb for nothing. While it would be nice to re-sign Clark at her previous salary of $85,800, that may not happen. Tuck and Langhorneโs total salaries could pay for Clarkโs max contract. Alternatively, maybe the Storm keeps two of those three players.
In the failure of this, the Storm may just need to utilize Tuck and Langhorne better in 2021. More production from them and the arrival of Kitija Laksa could help the Storm resolve the cap gymnastics.
Langhorne and Tuck may not have seen much playing time, but their contracts have the potential to affect the Stormโs payroll for next season. Their contracts are consequential to the other roster moves the team needs to make. If they were on minimum contracts, this would be a different conversation.
Yet, in a salary cap league, itโs worth talking about how the Storm needs to get more from both players or figure out how to optimize their cap space.
