Klay Thompson 11-18 and 7-8 from 3 in the HALF
Damn son.
Moderators: LyricalRico, nate33, montestewart
Illuminaire wrote:dobrojim wrote:Jimmy Butler for Bulls seemed to do OK with that
Jimmy Butler was not the primary focus of an elite defense.
Curry’s desires to join the Wizards as the fifth pick in the 2009 are well known by now, just as the names Mike Miller and Randy Foye continue to haunt the franchise. The Wizards dealt the No. 5 pick to Minnesota the day before the NBA draft, balking on the chance to take either Curry or Ricky Rubio, the Timberwolves’ eventual choice.
The Wizards didn’t trade the sixth pick in 2011 but have received minimal, at best, production from Jan Vesely, who went five spots ahead of Thompson. At the time, the Wizards weren’t looking for a shooting guard because the team was still developing Jordan Crawford and Nick Young was about to become a restricted free agent. Crawford and Young are both already gone.

FAH1223 wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wizards-insider/wp/2013/05/09/golden-states-couldve-been-wizards-making-noise/Curry’s desires to join the Wizards as the fifth pick in the 2009 are well known by now, just as the names Mike Miller and Randy Foye continue to haunt the franchise. The Wizards dealt the No. 5 pick to Minnesota the day before the NBA draft, balking on the chance to take either Curry or Ricky Rubio, the Timberwolves’ eventual choice.
The Wizards didn’t trade the sixth pick in 2011 but have received minimal, at best, production from Jan Vesely, who went five spots ahead of Thompson. At the time, the Wizards weren’t looking for a shooting guard because the team was still developing Jordan Crawford and Nick Young was about to become a restricted free agent. Crawford and Young are both already gone.

jivelikenice wrote:Reading the article, its a combination of two errors. 1. Abe having marching orders to save money; which is evidenced by us also selling the 2nd round pick that year); and 2. Ernie finding a deal he undeniably liked that allowed him to save salary.
I hate to speak about Abe since he has now passed, but he had a history of short sighted decisions based on money that really set the franchise back (i.e. Juwan's rookie negotiations). But focusing on Ernie, his mistake was 1. thinking the offer was too good to pass up & wouldn't be there on draft day; 2. Assuming he knew how the lotttery would play out (there's no chance he thought Rubio would slide to 5); and 3. not waiting until they were on the clock to execute the deal. You had the Minnesota deal in your pocket; the Knicks would have started a bidding war once Rubio slipped. We could have gotten a better deal in terms of players and salary relief.
Just a fail all around, but I don't put the blame on Ernie solely. His blame lies in the execution of his marching orders.

jivelikenice wrote:I don't doubt your source and I do think Ernie probably wanted the deal when it presented itself, but I don't doubt that Abe wanted to cut costs. I mean this team did sell their 2nd round pick in '08 & '09. If Ernie was making the call wouldn't he have just taken a Eurostash with those picks? My GUESS is that Ernie was asked to cut costs; Ernie was still hung up on what this team could have been with a healthy Agent Zero, and Abe wanted immediate help to make one last run. Theoretically the pick was a means to make a run with immediate help while cutting costs....Makes too much sense not to think there's something to what Michael Lee's sources are saying.
jivelikenice wrote:Nivek, your Satoranksy analogy is not equivalent at all to selling the pick for $. The only way it compares is in both situations they did not think a 2nd rounder could contribute, but there's a difference between stashing a player and selling a pick. Why didn't he just sell it this past year then?

jivelikenice wrote:What Minnesota did with their pick to flip it is inconsequential to if the Wizards saved by making this deal. I read somewhere the deal netted us about $6MM in total savings. Not sure if that's true but that's what I read. That's before you take into account the $ made on selling the pick and like you said, the money saved by not paying the 5th pick. If orders were not to save money, why haven't we sold a pick since Ted took over?
nate33 wrote:We traded Etan, Songaila, Pecherov and the #5 pick for Mike Miller and Randy Foye
Etan was owed $7.35M and expired after that
Songaila was owed $4.5M that year and $4.8M the following year
Pecherov was owed $1.55M
That's $13.4M in Year 1 and $4.8M in Year 2
Foye was owed $3.58M for 1 year and expired after that
Miller was owed $9.75M for 1 year and expired after that
That's $13.33M in Year 1 and nothing in Year 2, though presumably the intent was to resign both guys.
The only cap savings was the fact that we didn't have to pay a draft pick. To add insult to injury, Minnesota was able to flip Etan that same summer for 2 smaller contracts, one of which wasn't guaranteed, effectively turning his $7.3M salary obligation into a $4M salary obligation.
Nivek wrote:jivelikenice wrote:Nivek, your Satoranksy analogy is not equivalent at all to selling the pick for $. The only way it compares is in both situations they did not think a 2nd rounder could contribute, but there's a difference between stashing a player and selling a pick. Why didn't he just sell it this past year then?
Don't know.
I do know, however, that they didn't sell the picks because Abe had told the front office to cut costs or because the team needed an infusion of money.