Dan Z wrote:MikeDC wrote:Dan Z wrote:
You think Lonzo wants that? What team will sign him after that? Teams will want to see him on the court before giving him another chance. He can't just post social media rehab videos and expect another NBA contract.
How is that different in the scenario where he stays with the Bulls?
If the Bulls keep him, he's going to have an arduous recovery from an unknown surgery, and then he'll have to try to get on the court and show the Bulls he can still play and be healthy. Then he'll have to go get a new contract with those questions and that history still hanging over his head.
If the Bulls waive him, he's going to have an arduous recovery from an unknown surgery, and then he'll have to try to get on the court and show the some other team he can still play and be healthy. He'll probably be doing this on a 1 year deal where he's making money on top of what the Bulls were paying out to him. If he makes it through a season healthy, Then he'll have to go get a new contract with those questions and that history still hanging over his head.
The difference is for the Bulls. It's not in their interest to spend another year in limbo, hoping that a somewhat experimental and nebulous non-FDA approved medical treatment is going to miraculously cure him.Axl Rose wrote:But wasn't the argument whether he had a choice or not? I don't think they'll do it either and if a third surgery is considered a potential fix i don't think the NBA doctors will grant it anyway.
I guess the issue is whether the third surgery is considered likely to succeed. If it's the Kobe Bryant Germany-based thing, though, it seems pretty unlikely that it's anything but an extreme long shot. From a legal perspective, I don't even know that the NBA doctors could say it's a valid treatment option since it's not FDA approved.
What team is going to give him a one year deal to rehab and prove himself? I don't see anyone doing that.
Charlotte.
They sign lilangelo just to play g league