Guru wrote:Did anyone see the John Hollinger piece about why DErozan was a terrible signing?
Yeah , I think it's stupid.
The alternative was distributing that money on lesser talented guys, or just saving Reinsdorf's coin on a team with one less established starter.
For god's sake, we flipped Thad and Aminu cap-space for him. Thad had a great year when he came off the bench for a 20 mpg spark, but he was exposed after the deadline, especially when we needed him to take on a more defensive/complimentary role. And Aminu is an unknown, but at the moment looks like somebody with too many injuries to contribute to the NBA at this point.
There is nobody I would have rather signed on the market with the $25m those two occupied. I'm not sure I'd even bother with the Kawhi ACL sweepstakes (though you'd need to clear another $15m).
Hollinger's big point about how we overpaid in a dead market is also irrelevant to me. DeRozan would've taken the Spurs' bird right offer if his market was nearing $20m. A few million on a team already over the cap is simply building good-will towards future star FA/trade pursuits, which is something sorely missing from the previous regime, where they made it very obvious they were more willing to offer you a $5m discount and turn you away than just ponying up the Arci/Kornet cash (uh $7m annually deadweights) for the star you're recruiting.
We obviously dodged a bullet with Carmelo, but I still find it funny that the Bulls refused to get the deal with the Knicks to pay him the most money possible, to pull him away. He really wanted to join the Bulls, and it was the big difference in dollar that sealed the deal, not a small amount.
Now if DeRozan's market value dropped to $14m... Lol, 30 teams would be dialing the Spurs to send whatever the hell asset they want to lock that up in a S&T. Ridiculous.












