Kerrsed wrote:Lebron is in Brazil to watch the game tomorrow, so the only moves that will be made are by teams that cant get Lebron.
Source??
Moderators: bwgood77, lilfishi22, Qwigglez
Kerrsed wrote:Lebron is in Brazil to watch the game tomorrow, so the only moves that will be made are by teams that cant get Lebron.
DarkHawk wrote:Not sure if this was posted but I found it via a BSOTS article.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
gary washburn @GwashburnGlobe · 48m
Among those teams set to meet with Paul: #suns, #rockets and #mavericks
-----------------------------------------------------------------
SF88 wrote:Kerrsed wrote:Lebron is in Brazil to watch the game tomorrow, so the only moves that will be made are by teams that cant get Lebron.
Source??
SF88 wrote:DarkHawk wrote:Not sure if this was posted but I found it via a BSOTS article.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
gary washburn @GwashburnGlobe · 48m
Among those teams set to meet with Paul: #suns, #rockets and #mavericks
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Which Paul?
Saberestar wrote:Report: LeBron James' agent to meet with Suns, Rockets, Mavs
http://www.cbssports.com/nba/eye-on-bas ... ckets-mavs
gaspar wrote:SF88 wrote:DarkHawk wrote:Not sure if this was posted but I found it via a BSOTS article.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
gary washburn @GwashburnGlobe · 48m
Among those teams set to meet with Paul: #suns, #rockets and #mavericks
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Which Paul?
LeBron's agent.
SF88 wrote:gaspar wrote:SF88 wrote:Which Paul?
LeBron's agent.
That's weird cause Arizona Sports used that tweet to show that the Suns are interested in Pau Gasol.
http://arizonasports.com/41/1746531/Rep ... -Pau-Gasol
ginobiliflops wrote:SF88 wrote:gaspar wrote:LeBron's agent.
That's weird cause Arizona Sports used that tweet to show that the Suns are interested in Pau Gasol.
http://arizonasports.com/41/1746531/Rep ... -Pau-Gasol
Washburn's tweet refers to Rich Paul aka LeBron's & Bledsoe's agent, not a misspelling of Pau.
gaspar wrote:For Spencer Hawes fans:
[tweet]https://twitter.com/BA_Turner/status/483844216015966209[/tweet]
matt131 wrote:sunsfan1313 wrote:NaturalBuns wrote:Didn't someone say lebron is in Brazil?
McD said 24-48hr wait period.
Forget it lebron is staying in Miami
Where did that whole wait period thing come from?
McD just doesn't want to lose out on some other key FA moves if LeBron takes a million years to get back to us. Pretty much, if he doesn't give us at least a 'maybe,' McD will move on and improve our team in other ways. It's been mentioned in articles and radio shows (sorry, no links at the moment).
SF88 wrote:NaturalBuns wrote:SF88 wrote:He really isn't that good. Plus he's not the greatest teammate either apparently.
He's like 20
For a 20-21 year old he puts up monster numbers his potential can be amazing.
Idk I hate giving that much money to potential. That's just me. I understand that's probably a terrible business strategy in sports.
Irving's attitude rubs me the wrong way too. Then there's his reliability with injury issues.
It is an incredible and unlikely plan for the Suns to get megastars LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony to leave their teams.
Once it does not happen, then what?
Eric Bledsoe becomes their most important and perplexing free-agent pursuit.
Anthony already has laid out a free-agency circuit that does not include Phoenix. James is leaving initial meetings to his agent, Rich Paul, which at least gives the Suns a chance to have the discussion as they talk about his other major free-agency client, Bledsoe.
Bledsoe is the best free-agent point guard in a market full of spenders — and lean on point guards. The list of Bledsoe's competition starts with Kyle Lowry and then drops to the likes of Isaiah Thomas, Shaun Livingston and Greivis Vasquez.
Bledsoe will get an offer for eight-figure averages, but his value is uncertain when it gets too far north of that. Regardless, Bledsoe is a 24-year-old asset for the Suns' future who they can control, rather than losing him.
Bledsoe could leave for nothing as a restricted free agent if they did not match an offer, or would bring the Suns below-value returns if the team executed a sign-and-trade.
The decisions to match offer sheets or negotiate contracts first on Bledsoe and P.J. Tucker, also a restricted free agent, are also to the Suns' advantage in sequencing the free-agent process. They can go over the salary cap to keep the players if they have used their space on others, like the James-Anthony or James-Chris Bosh dream scenarios.
It would be well worth it to teeter into the luxury tax for players and a franchise step of that magnitude. What the Suns have to weigh is how steep a price makes sense for older veteran free agents such as Pau Gasol or Luol Deng to join a younger team.
Gasol already is linked to four teams not named Phoenix. The Suns' interest in Deng could be tied to how high Tucker's price tag gets — but the Suns also have to worry about Deng's recent health history and whether a system player could thrive in the Suns' open style.
Utah restricted free agent Gordon Hayward is tied to Phoenix and Boston because the coaches both used to have him — Hornacek as a Jazz assistant and Brad Stevens in college at Butler. Players are unable to sign an offer sheet until July 10, and then their original team has three days to match the offer, as Utah plans to do with Hayward.
Such a move could tie up the Suns' money and flexibility while other players commit or sign, especially with most top players picking destinations during the signing moratorium.
The Suns had a tricky decision on Bledsoe in October when he was eligible for an extension. They would have sacrificed some of this summer's salary-cap space had they signed him before his first season as a starter, but they also might have secured him at a more affordable price. Golden State did that when it signed Stephen Curry to a four-year, $44 million deal before he became an All-NBA second-team guard.
Dallas, after trading Jose Calderon, could be a Bledsoe suitor, but owner Mark Cuban has stated the Mavericks will not offer a maximum deal. The Los Angeles Lakers have two ex-Suns point guards with vastly different questions (Steve Nash for age, Kendall Marshall for ability) and could be a Bledsoe player, but they will explore James and Anthony, too.
There is no shortage of teams with significant cap space, but few beyond those three teams would sign a high-priced point guard, except maybe Milwaukee or Detroit to play with (or instead of) their Brandons (Knight and Jennings).
The Suns' stated priority is to keep Bledsoe, Tucker and Channing Frye, although the latter looks more difficult with all the connections in Golden State and Damian Lillard stating Frye as his preference in Portland, Frye's adopted hometown.
The Suns' last major free-agent signing was Nash. The next one might not happen this offseason. After stirring the masses with the James idea, trying to bring the old gang back for another try might bring a tepid response.
It would make them huge players to trade for Kevin Love or another available star in February — or sign a major free agent next summer.
DarkHawk wrote:Is it true that LeBron will be waiting to meet with teams until this weekend? That's quite some time to wait.