Aaron Brooks wrote:whats this im hearing about OKC wanting parsons in the deal originally? i read through that whole 83 page thread in general forums and there was nothing on it
LOL
Aaron Brooks wrote:whats this im hearing about OKC wanting parsons in the deal originally? i read through that whole 83 page thread in general forums and there was nothing on it
Aaron Brooks wrote:whats this im hearing about OKC wanting parsons in the deal originally? i read through that whole 83 page thread in general forums and there was nothing on it
MaxRider wrote:no point on arguing back and forth
you guys get the point that i don't like this trade
let's wait 3-4 years and come visit this again
hopefully realgm is still around and mod would actually let us talk about old stuff
no more from me on this topic
Aaron Brooks wrote:whats this im hearing about OKC wanting parsons in the deal originally? i read through that whole 83 page thread in general forums and there was nothing on it
Before sitting down a final time with Pelinka, Presti became more serious in his discussions with Morey. Houston wanted Harden badly, believed he would evolve into a transcendent franchise star for a championship-caliber team and planned to award him a five-year maximum contract worth nearly $80 million. So, Presti laid out what he wanted for Harden and the original price was steep: Kevin Martin, Chandler Parsons, Jeremy Lamb and three first-round picks, including Houston's own in 2013.
Across 72 hours and culminating on Friday night, the deal became this: Martin, Lamb and two first-round picks, including a guaranteed plumb lottery pick via Toronto. Before Presti sat down with Pelinka on Saturday morning to make his final offer of $54 million over four years, the Rockets were made to understand: If Harden turns it down, your long-awaited star is on his way to Texas.
OKC winds up most likely getting two lottery picks (Toronto’s and Dallas’) in next years draft. With Presti’s track record, we don’t know how he’ll do. He’s done well with Harden and Ibaka and lucked into Durant. However, he drafted Westbrook over Kevin Love and he drafted Jeff Green over Joakim Noah. Had he drafted Noah instead of Green, there never would have been the need to trade Green for Perkins and of course, the Thunder would have preferred a front court of Love and Noah with Ibaka as their backup. Because they maxed out Westbrook, they couldn’t afford to keep Harden. There was no need to max out Westbrook. Trading arguably the best shooting guard in today’s game will later come back to haunt Presti. In crunch time, Scott Brooks often put the play making into Harden’s hands and took it away from Westbrook as Westbrook would first look for his shot, whereas Harden would first look for Durant and the other players. OKC is putting a lot of hope in Eric Maynor being able to bail out Westbrook when he becomes trigger happy and refuses to pass to the open men.
000001 wrote:my first reaction was this is a bad trade
why not wait until free agency and save our assets just tank high pick and then sign harden
but now im ok with the trade the problem is everything morey did before this trade lin asik delfino scola lowry all that trash is hard to fix with one trade
if you guys look at our roster we still have a very bad team the bad news is that there are like other 7 teams worst than us /some because injuries
i like the harden comparison to ginobilli hes at the same level i think. franchise player like morey said no way, harden is good player for sure but not a franchise player
moofs wrote:MaxRider wrote:no point on arguing back and forth
you guys get the point that i don't like this trade
let's wait 3-4 years and come visit this again
hopefully realgm is still around and mod would actually let us talk about old stuff
no more from me on this topic
Max, I was waiting to hammer you on it yesterday for that exact reason - because you NEVER like any of our trades!
inquisitive wrote:these guys should be set for our future Harden, Lin, Asik, Parsons....all the other guys could be traded.