Mamba4Goat wrote:Does anyone else feel like it’d be a slimy move to sign Shake presumably with a set role being his for the taking just to sign someone to take it from him before the season even begins? It’d be different if J-Mac, Moore, or one of the training camp guards earned it but signing Cam Payne feels like the team would be doing wrong by Milton to me.
I can understand this. We’ll never know what was promised, but it is a very interesting question.
To get a guy like Naz to sign here, I imagine promises needed to be made, particularly that he will get a certain amount of minutes. With two former All-NBA centers in front of him, our team has the best chance of anyone to damage his career. He appears to be good friends with Ant too, so I question whether the organization would do him wrong by limiting his minutes or simply trading him without his consent. I have read that if an organization screws over players and agents, this reputation spreads (usually not as loudly as James Harden current complaints!), and it makes it harder for the team to get deals done in the future.
Is Shake Milton the same caliber of player to warrant that? The Sixers chose to let him go, and he did choose to sign here (which I’m grateful for), but was he promised a role, or promised the opportunity to
compete for a role? The NBA is a competitive business, filled with competitive people, and they may all assume they’d win any competition for their role.
As an aside, I happened to watch the Twins-Reds baseball game last night. Last year, Kyle Farmer led the Reds in RBI’s by a wide margin, and the Twins traded for him to be their starting shortstop. However, when All-Star Carlos Correa became available, he obviously jumped in as shortstop, and Farmer lost his position. Shake Milton is no Farmer, but maybe he would be frustrated if he was asked to step aside for Cam Payne, who’s no Carlos Correa? Good question - teams can act like they are families, but they are businesses.