A: First, Goran is on the books at $15.9 million for next season, and based on where the salary cap is going, I'm not sure you could land Mike Conley at much less than $20 million, if even that. So it's not as if moving Goran would necessarily open sufficient cap space for Conley or any other top-tier free agent this summer. Almost every team should be able to clear cap space for a max-level free agent (in the $22 million range) and perhaps even more than one. Again, if you move Goran, while you could create cap space, you're also getting no return on the two first-round picks you've shipped to the Suns. Goran was very good over the second half of the season and for half of the postseason. So what it comes down to is deciding whether you can stay with a game that plays to Goran's strengths, or whether the offense again will look decidedly different going forward. It's almost as if Goran himself comes in third in the Dragic equation, behind what extra cap space might do for the overall roster, and then behind the style of play that the Heat decide upon going forward. But if your reasoning for wanting to move him is a bloated contract, well, you haven't seen anything yet.