PG - Baron Davis
Davis is one of those players that always finds a way to resurface just when his name is about to fade into oblivion, so don't count him out yet just because he's landed in NBA purgatory. However, Davis will be 30-years-old by the time this season ends, and with a deal that will see him making nearly $15 million when he's 34 it's unlikely he'll have much trade value on the open market. If he's going to prove that he can avoid the same fate as Brand did in LA (which is playing at an All-Star level with next to no notoriety) it's going to take some heretofore-unseen power acting in defiance of all things Clippers. For such a talented player, though, who has given us so much entertainment over the last two seasons one has to be rooting that he'll at least come close. That is, after all, about the most you can expect from any part of this franchise.
C - Marcus Camby
It's hard to imagine that anyone is happy when their phone rings and the voice on the other end says "you've been traded to the L.A. Clippers." At first said player has to think someone is playing a joke on them. That is how lamentable the perception of the Clippers is around the league - people are more inclined to think that someone is playing with them in such a scenario than to even take it seriously enough to get angry/sad/depressed about it. However, Camby has said and done all the right things for a player in his situation and no doubt he'll play his game anchoring the post defense and knocking down that awkward behind-the-head jumper he hits about 57% of the time. He may not have asked for the trade, he may not have wanted the trade, but he got the trade and now all he can do is live with it. It's not a joke, even if he wishes it was.
http://www.tsn.ca/nba/story/?id=251084&lid=headline&lpos=topStory_nba