JujitsuFlip wrote:Butter wrote:JujitsuFlip wrote:Me personally, no thanks.
I'd rather have Strus than Thybulle if we're plugging in a 6'5" guy to SF. Thybulle is also essentially expiring.
Simons doesn't fix the back court either, so I'm good there. You lose Garland's play making and still have a tiny bad defender next to Mitch.
If Garland is ever traded off this team, while Mitch is still around it needs to be for a 6'8" wing or a dude who can play stretch 4 so Mobley can finally slide to his natural position at the 5. Just taking back a worse version of Garland does nothing for us.
Well, it does save the Cavs $12M that could build out another position, and Tice sound likely be wing depth behind Strus, but I got you.
The $12 million isn't enough to really make a dent, it would have to be like freeing up $30 million and under the new CBA, idk if that is even possible.
The Blazers have some pieces the Cavs could use just not sure it would be Garland being sent out. Thus far the Cavs f.o. has not been willing to trade any of their top 13 guys.
The FO has been unwilling to trade their core four players (or at least unwilling to trade Garland and Allen for less than equal win-now talent coming back). They like Strus and Wade, but everyone else, save maybe Tyson, is very, very available. Those just aren't the guys other teams call on in the offseason.
The reality is that the Cavs have had trade discussions involving Okoro and LeVert. If the offers were solid, they would've pulled the trigger. Instead they got the Mavs trying to dump THJ's contract on us the last time LeVert was expiring. We couldn't get a guy like DFS or PJ Washington for Okoro in the past, and may not even be able to get an effectively expiring DFS now.
Merrill could probably return a couple seconds. I'd be surprised if CPJ could return one. Niang probably costs a couple seconds to dump. Maybe a single second to turn him into a guy like Reed.
None of our two-way guys are worth anything, and if they can get a decent big on a two-way for Bates, they should take it.
Now include the fact that if you're going to put yourself into the tax a year early, the player has to be worth it. You're not going into the tax for a marginal improvement over D. Jones or Pete Nance.
Altman's not being stubborn. He's being patient out of necessity.