Ghost of Kleine wrote:
Any trades in here that you guys might do?
Don't like the idea of Grant without moving off some big long term salary (like DA). Just don't see how it could be sustainable even with an owner that is keen to spend.
Moderators: bwgood77, lilfishi22, Qwigglez

Ghost of Kleine wrote:
Any trades in here that you guys might do?

sunsfan1o1 wrote:Saban Lee signed to 2 way DWJ waived. I called this too. Looks like I’m on a roll. Must be my HOF credentials lilfishi was talking about.
No. The suns have had that open roster spot all year. Lee was in that spot on a 10 day contact but that ran out and they cut Washington from his 2way and gave it to Lee.shrink wrote:
This only opens a spot for a two-way player, right? Big trade coming for a two way? I doubt that.
More likely, the Suns decided they weren’t going to convert him, and they’d used up 42 games of his 50 eligible, so they are giving him a chance to catch on elsewhere before the deadline.
lilfishi22 wrote:Qwigglez wrote:Saberestar wrote:BOOM
Holy crap. As I wrote in the previous page, I felt James Jones was contemplating between DWJ and Lee, but I thought he would have opted for DWJ. However... as I was thinking back on it, I remember someone posting on Twitter how DWJ is only good in short bursts, and Monty had to sub him out in the 2nd half because he is prone to make many mistakes. And I feel when looking back at Lee's contribution, he was rather impressive with meaningful minutes. Additionally, he provided stability at the PG spot when the Suns were struggling to bring the ball up the court with no CP3 or Booker.
Solid move. DWJ if he can just stay consistent, continue working on his craft, I think he could be a role player in the league. He just isn't ready yet.
Yeah I like both guys but I liked DWJ a little more. Just an overall a more talented and has a higher ceiling than Lee imo. I also don't like Lee's shooting form. Every time someone points out a butt ugly jump shot, someone else will point to Shawn Marion but he's the exception, not the rule. How many good shooters has a shooting form like Saben's? Anyway, while I liked Saben's contribution, I kinda feel like he's a bit dime a dozen and that's not to say DWJr isn't but I just like his combination of good shooting form and handles a bit better.
shrink wrote:
This only opens a spot for a two-way player, right? Big trade coming for a two way? I doubt that.
More likely, the Suns decided they weren’t going to convert him, and they’d used up 42 games of his 50 eligible, so they are giving him a chance to catch on elsewhere before the deadline.
BobbieL wrote:shrink wrote:
This only opens a spot for a two-way player, right? Big trade coming for a two way? I doubt that.
More likely, the Suns decided they weren’t going to convert him, and they’d used up 42 games of his 50 eligible, so they are giving him a chance to catch on elsewhere before the deadline.
Suns only have 14 players on their roster. So they can do a two for one trade

Ghost of Kleine wrote:
cheaper developing Jerami Grant 2.0
TeamTragic wrote:Ghost of Kleine wrote:
cheaper developing Jerami Grant 2.0
Not worth a FRP. Maybe a few second rounders.
TeamTragic wrote:Ghost of Kleine wrote:
cheaper developing Jerami Grant 2.0
Not worth a FRP. Maybe a few second rounders.
TeamTragic wrote:Ghost of Kleine wrote:
cheaper developing Jerami Grant 2.0
Not worth a FRP. Maybe a few second rounders.
TeamTragic wrote:Ghost of Kleine wrote:
cheaper developing Jerami Grant 2.0
Not worth a FRP. Maybe a few second rounders.
He’s 6-foot-8 with a 7-foot-2 wingspan and had the biggest hands of anyone at last year’s Draft Combine. He currently ranks in the 90th percentile or better in steal percentage, deflection rate, and offensive rebounding percentage in the NBA. He’s also shooting 38% from three and 84% from the three-throw line while putting up 8.4 points in 18.6 minutes.
Most notably, the Rockets are more than 10 points per 100 possessions better when he is on the floor, In short, Eason was one of the best NBA prospects in the SEC last year, if not all of college basketball, but most people didn’t realize it until the season had come to an end.
According to FiveThirtyEight’s Raptor WAR, Eason has been by far the league’s best rookie. But the metrics don’t stop there. He’s second in box plus/minus, third in win shares per 48 minutes, and tied for second in Dunks&Threes estimated plus/minus.
His blazing metrics next to a mundane box score line may raise some suspicions, but it shouldn’t because his excellence is still being captured by it. Eason racks up offensive rebounds and steals in peerless fashion. For players who have played at least 300 minutes, his 3.5 steals per 100 possessions rank second, and his 5.6 offensive rebounds rank 11th and is the best rate for any non-center.

Ghost of Kleine wrote:TeamTragic wrote:Ghost of Kleine wrote:
cheaper developing Jerami Grant 2.0
Not worth a FRP. Maybe a few second rounders.
I had him being inclusive in an Ayton trade to Houston IF we were ever to trade Ayton there. I mean obviously in a straight trade you wouldn't be able to get him for anything less than the suggested ( Top 8) maybe Top 10 protected lotto pick, seeing as even though he was originally drafted 17th, he's significantly outplayed his rookie projection already.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/247sports.com/college/lsu/Article/nba-rookies-tari-eason-lsu-200493904/Amp/He’s 6-foot-8 with a 7-foot-2 wingspan and had the biggest hands of anyone at last year’s Draft Combine. He currently ranks in the 90th percentile or better in steal percentage, deflection rate, and offensive rebounding percentage in the NBA. He’s also shooting 38% from three and 84% from the three-throw line while putting up 8.4 points in 18.6 minutes.
Most notably, the Rockets are more than 10 points per 100 possessions better when he is on the floor, In short, Eason was one of the best NBA prospects in the SEC last year, if not all of college basketball, but most people didn’t realize it until the season had come to an end.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/spacecityscoop.com/posts/tari-eason-is-a-superstar-in-the-making-01gm4b6dpa7k/ampAccording to FiveThirtyEight’s Raptor WAR, Eason has been by far the league’s best rookie. But the metrics don’t stop there. He’s second in box plus/minus, third in win shares per 48 minutes, and tied for second in Dunks&Threes estimated plus/minus.
His blazing metrics next to a mundane box score line may raise some suspicions, but it shouldn’t because his excellence is still being captured by it. Eason racks up offensive rebounds and steals in peerless fashion. For players who have played at least 300 minutes, his 3.5 steals per 100 possessions rank second, and his 5.6 offensive rebounds rank 11th and is the best rate for any non-center.
The rest of this article and many others out there only further this conceptual value of him. He'd absolutely be worth a top 8 protected first. But Houston would have to be really dumb to consider trading him though?
lilfishi22 wrote:Ghost of Kleine wrote:
Any trades in here that you guys might do?
Don't like the idea of Grant without moving off some big long term salary (like DA). Just don't see how it could be sustainable even with an owner that is keen to spend.

sunsfan1o1 wrote:Ghost of Kleine wrote:TeamTragic wrote:
Not worth a FRP. Maybe a few second rounders.
I had him being inclusive in an Ayton trade to Houston IF we were ever to trade Ayton there. I mean obviously in a straight trade you wouldn't be able to get him for anything less than the suggested ( Top 8) maybe Top 10 protected lotto pick, seeing as even though he was originally drafted 17th, he's significantly outplayed his rookie projection already.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/247sports.com/college/lsu/Article/nba-rookies-tari-eason-lsu-200493904/Amp/He’s 6-foot-8 with a 7-foot-2 wingspan and had the biggest hands of anyone at last year’s Draft Combine. He currently ranks in the 90th percentile or better in steal percentage, deflection rate, and offensive rebounding percentage in the NBA. He’s also shooting 38% from three and 84% from the three-throw line while putting up 8.4 points in 18.6 minutes.
Most notably, the Rockets are more than 10 points per 100 possessions better when he is on the floor, In short, Eason was one of the best NBA prospects in the SEC last year, if not all of college basketball, but most people didn’t realize it until the season had come to an end.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/spacecityscoop.com/posts/tari-eason-is-a-superstar-in-the-making-01gm4b6dpa7k/ampAccording to FiveThirtyEight’s Raptor WAR, Eason has been by far the league’s best rookie. But the metrics don’t stop there. He’s second in box plus/minus, third in win shares per 48 minutes, and tied for second in Dunks&Threes estimated plus/minus.
His blazing metrics next to a mundane box score line may raise some suspicions, but it shouldn’t because his excellence is still being captured by it. Eason racks up offensive rebounds and steals in peerless fashion. For players who have played at least 300 minutes, his 3.5 steals per 100 possessions rank second, and his 5.6 offensive rebounds rank 11th and is the best rate for any non-center.
The rest of this article and many others out there only further this conceptual value of him. He'd absolutely be worth a top 8 protected first. But Houston would have to be really dumb to consider trading him though?
I liked him since I saw him in preseason. Thought he outplayed Jabari when he got time. But Jabari is their top pick so they have to play him more.
Jabari has improved though since then, but Eason is nice.
