millslapper wrote:i hope, that some talent will stay in the east. so the two trades i like would be
Irving
for
Melo and 2 picks
and
Dragic, Ellington
for
Love
Makes sense and all three teams included get better, and that's the goal, isn't it?

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millslapper wrote:i hope, that some talent will stay in the east. so the two trades i like would be
Irving
for
Melo and 2 picks
and
Dragic, Ellington
for
Love
Makes sense and all three teams included get better, and that's the goal, isn't it?

Mr Anonymous wrote:Not only do I have a hard time understanding why Irving to the Bucks is barely being mentioned nationally, I'm having a hard time figuring why the deal isn't already done. Middleton and Brogdon, plus a pick for Kyrie. At the very least some writer should be speaking of the logic this deal makes. Instead crickets
Neeva wrote:Mr Anonymous wrote:Not only do I have a hard time understanding why Irving to the Bucks is barely being mentioned nationally, I'm having a hard time figuring why the deal isn't already done. Middleton and Brogdon, plus a pick for Kyrie. At the very least some writer should be speaking of the logic this deal makes. Instead crickets
Probably because no one outside of Wisconsin cares about the Bucks

Nuggets_Talk wrote:bwgood77 wrote:Nuggets_Talk wrote:
uh...just because suns fans are hyped for them, doesnt mean they are necessarily worth very much. whats also important is how the other team views them.
chriss may become the next mcdyess, but odds say he wont. you almost sound like used car salesman in this post.
I REALLY hope the Cavs view those guys like you do. I would hate to trade one of them for Kyrie.
you clearly view the suns players through a homers eyes and dont think highly of irving.
how can your evaluation of any potential suns-cavs trades be taken seriously?

Mr Anonymous wrote:Neeva wrote:Mr Anonymous wrote:Not only do I have a hard time understanding why Irving to the Bucks is barely being mentioned nationally, I'm having a hard time figuring why the deal isn't already done. Middleton and Brogdon, plus a pick for Kyrie. At the very least some writer should be speaking of the logic this deal makes. Instead crickets
Probably because no one outside of Wisconsin cares about the Bucks
Oh and people outside of Colorado care about the Nuggets? People outside Minnesota care about the T-Wolves? Thanks for lowering the intelligence level of the conversation though
bwgood77 wrote:
Neeva, don't bash teams, bait fan bases and derail the thread. Mr Anonymous, there is no need to respond to such drivel and like you said, participate in reducing the intelligence level of the conversation. People could claim no one outside of Phoenix cares about the Suns, being one of the worst teams in the league, but they'd be wrong, because polls on our forum show there are fans across the country and almost as many fans spread around the globe and outside of the united states on our forum. If that's the case for the Suns, I imagine it is for all the other teams as well.

Mr Anonymous wrote:bwgood77 wrote:
Neeva, don't bash teams, bait fan bases and derail the thread. Mr Anonymous, there is no need to respond to such drivel and like you said, participate in reducing the intelligence level of the conversation. People could claim no one outside of Phoenix cares about the Suns, being one of the worst teams in the league, but they'd be wrong, because polls on our forum show there are fans across the country and almost as many fans spread around the globe and outside of the united states on our forum. If that's the case for the Suns, I imagine it is for all the other teams as well.
As a Green Bay Packer fan living in Nevada, you don't need to explain to me how a small market team can have a huge following throughout not only the nation but the world as well. Thus why I made the point about the lack of intelligence behind the comment made. There's no use for it
To add to the poster's naivete, Giannis Antetokounmpo of the so very dismiss-able Milwaukee Bucks is quickly becoming one of the most recognizable NBA stars globally. You probably could have stopped after your first sentence
Mr Anonymous wrote:Neeva wrote:Mr Anonymous wrote:Not only do I have a hard time understanding why Irving to the Bucks is barely being mentioned nationally, I'm having a hard time figuring why the deal isn't already done. Middleton and Brogdon, plus a pick for Kyrie. At the very least some writer should be speaking of the logic this deal makes. Instead crickets
Probably because no one outside of Wisconsin cares about the Bucks
Oh and people outside of Colorado care about the Nuggets? People outside Minnesota care about the T-Wolves? Thanks for lowering the intelligence level of the conversation though

ChrisInAZ wrote:The_Hater wrote:BasketballFan7 wrote:What does Marquiss Chriss project to?
I know he was very bad defensively as a rookie. His box score production was decent for his age.
I personally think he's projects to be another Wesley Johnson.
What?! Not sure you watch the same Chriss I did-
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/carmelo/marquese-chriss/
AthensBucks wrote:Lowry is done.
Nurse is below average at best.
Masai is overrated.
I dont get how so many people believe in the raptors,they have zero to chance to win it all.
OsuCavsfan103 wrote:Cavs should simply scoff at any low offers for Kyrie right now, and keep him til the trade deadline and re-evaluate then. We don't have to trade him.
He is a 25 year old scoring machine, with over 25ppg on 5.8 assists, a 23PER, 47% FG 40% from 3, 90% FT shooter, multiple all-star, NBA finals experienced, and still has 2 guaranteed years on his contract. All our angst against him aside, he is still a ridiculously good player who probably hasn't peaked yet.
If teams want to keep offering weak deals, screw it. There is no reason we have to trade him.
OsuCavsfan103 wrote:Cavs should simply scoff at any low offers for Kyrie right now, and keep him til the trade deadline and re-evaluate then. We don't have to trade him.
He is a 25 year old scoring machine, with over 25ppg on 5.8 assists, a 23PER, 47% FG 40% from 3, 90% FT shooter, multiple all-star, NBA finals experienced, and still has 2 guaranteed years on his contract. All our angst against him aside, he is still a ridiculously good player who probably hasn't peaked yet.
If teams want to keep offering weak deals, screw it. There is no reason we have to trade him.
BasketballFan7 wrote:OsuCavsfan103 wrote:Cavs should simply scoff at any low offers for Kyrie right now, and keep him til the trade deadline and re-evaluate then. We don't have to trade him.
He is a 25 year old scoring machine, with over 25ppg on 5.8 assists, a 23PER, 47% FG 40% from 3, 90% FT shooter, multiple all-star, NBA finals experienced, and still has 2 guaranteed years on his contract. All our angst against him aside, he is still a ridiculously good player who probably hasn't peaked yet.
If teams want to keep offering weak deals, screw it. There is no reason we have to trade him.
Except, these are people. They aren't robots. The entire season is very potentially sacrificed if the players are unhappy. Now, if the Cavaliers want to punt this year and try and convince Irving to stay if LeBron departs, then sure.
OsuCavsfan103 wrote:Cavs should simply scoff at any low offers for Kyrie right now, and keep him til the trade deadline and re-evaluate then. We don't have to trade him.
He is a 25 year old scoring machine, with over 25ppg on 5.8 assists, a 23PER, 47% FG 40% from 3, 90% FT shooter, multiple all-star, NBA finals experienced, and still has 2 guaranteed years on his contract. All our angst against him aside, he is still a ridiculously good player who probably hasn't peaked yet.
If teams want to keep offering weak deals, screw it. There is no reason we have to trade him.
OsuCavsfan103 wrote:BasketballFan7 wrote:OsuCavsfan103 wrote:Cavs should simply scoff at any low offers for Kyrie right now, and keep him til the trade deadline and re-evaluate then. We don't have to trade him.
He is a 25 year old scoring machine, with over 25ppg on 5.8 assists, a 23PER, 47% FG 40% from 3, 90% FT shooter, multiple all-star, NBA finals experienced, and still has 2 guaranteed years on his contract. All our angst against him aside, he is still a ridiculously good player who probably hasn't peaked yet.
If teams want to keep offering weak deals, screw it. There is no reason we have to trade him.
Except, these are people. They aren't robots. The entire season is very potentially sacrificed if the players are unhappy. Now, if the Cavaliers want to punt this year and try and convince Irving to stay if LeBron departs, then sure.
So what is Kyrie going to do, refuse to play? Intentionally play poorly? He as to still showcase himself, especially if he wants to be the man. He has to convince teams that he can be the alpha somewhere, but he also should know if teams aren't going to pony up, Cavs aren't just about to sell him off for scraps. Look at the attitude by Gilbert on Indy, he basically was mocking how dumb it was to make such a poor deal, and Indy had nowhere near the leverage CLE has right now.
LeBron and Kyrie don't have to be buddies, they simply have to co-exist, and Kyrie is going to have to keep giving it was 100% or else he is going to only hurt himself by having teams bring in meager offers. Also, if Cavs feel LeBron is definitely gone, they could say screw it and decide they want to hold onto Kyrie for the rest of his deal since hey don't forget, he wants to the man.
Amare_1_Knicks wrote:OsuCavsfan103 wrote:Cavs should simply scoff at any low offers for Kyrie right now, and keep him til the trade deadline and re-evaluate then. We don't have to trade him.
He is a 25 year old scoring machine, with over 25ppg on 5.8 assists, a 23PER, 47% FG 40% from 3, 90% FT shooter, multiple all-star, NBA finals experienced, and still has 2 guaranteed years on his contract. All our angst against him aside, he is still a ridiculously good player who probably hasn't peaked yet.
If teams want to keep offering weak deals, screw it. There is no reason we have to trade him.
If the reports of him cutting off contact with the entire Cavaliers franchise are true, as well the reports of him being supremely unhappy there, then that's plainly not an option. It wouldn't be good for morale for him, nor for James, nor the rest of the roster; what's more is if you want Lebron to stay long term - which is seeming increasingly unlikely - then a move needs to be made to appease him at this point.
BasketballFan7 wrote:OsuCavsfan103 wrote:BasketballFan7 wrote:Except, these are people. They aren't robots. The entire season is very potentially sacrificed if the players are unhappy. Now, if the Cavaliers want to punt this year and try and convince Irving to stay if LeBron departs, then sure.
So what is Kyrie going to do, refuse to play? Intentionally play poorly? He as to still showcase himself, especially if he wants to be the man. He has to convince teams that he can be the alpha somewhere, but he also should know if teams aren't going to pony up, Cavs aren't just about to sell him off for scraps. Look at the attitude by Gilbert on Indy, he basically was mocking how dumb it was to make such a poor deal, and Indy had nowhere near the leverage CLE has right now.
LeBron and Kyrie don't have to be buddies, they simply have to co-exist, and Kyrie is going to have to keep giving it was 100% or else he is going to only hurt himself by having teams bring in meager offers. Also, if Cavs feel LeBron is definitely gone, they could say screw it and decide they want to hold onto Kyrie for the rest of his deal since hey don't forget, he wants to the man.
Unhappy workers are worse at their jobs. This is true for all occupations. The reports don't sound promising, and it would be an easy way to truly ensure LeBron's exit.
OsuCavsfan103 wrote:Cavs should simply scoff at any low offers for Kyrie right now, and keep him til the trade deadline and re-evaluate then. We don't have to trade him.
He is a 25 year old scoring machine, with over 25ppg on 5.8 assists, a 23PER, 47% FG 40% from 3, 90% FT shooter, multiple all-star, NBA finals experienced, and still has 2 guaranteed years on his contract. All our angst against him aside, he is still a ridiculously good player who probably hasn't peaked yet.
If teams want to keep offering weak deals, screw it. There is no reason we have to trade him.
AthensBucks wrote:Lowry is done.
Nurse is below average at best.
Masai is overrated.
I dont get how so many people believe in the raptors,they have zero to chance to win it all.