In addition to the key contents of the new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA), ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski further detailed Saturday the introduction of the second tax apron that will strictly restrict the highest spending teams in the league.

Per Woj, teams that will slide into the second apron will be barred from sending cash consideration in deals, shipping away first-round picks seven years away, and picking up players who turned free agents upon entering the buyout market. The second apron will be placed $17.5 million above the luxury tax line, and those teams residing in that classification will also be ineligible for their mid-level exception in free agency.

As added by Wojnarowski, the new CBA focuses largely on increasing chances for the majority of teams that are above and below the salary cap. He further hinted that there will be new spending and trade opportunities for those who are around the middle and lower portion of the payroll spectrum, which includes larger trade exceptions and new and expanded exceptions to the salary cap.

Meanwhile, ESPN’s Tim Bontemps added another significant note about the second apron. He reported that this portion will also prohibit teams from taking back more money than what they’ve sent out in trades. Bontemps cited the Robert Covington and Norm Powell acquisition of the L.A. Clippers from the Portland Trail Blazers last season.

Bontemps highlighted with Bobby Marks of ESPN that the luxury tax bracket will elevate at the same rate as the salary cap. Given that the luxury tax system was implemented in 2011 CBA, both brackets had been put at $5 million in increments. But with the new agreement, both will increase as the cap will suggest.

In a separate tweet, Marks also provided that the non-max rookie scale extension will increase from four to five in the length of seasons. Under the current CBA, teams can only have players in five seasons for strictly max extensions.