TheNetsFan wrote:YayBasketball wrote:toooskies wrote:I don't see Brooklyn trading for Ingram unless they can get off some long-term money in the process. Could be DFS + Cam Johnson?Jody Smokz wrote:Maybe they could move Cam Johnson to a 3rd team for a big maybe? Trey Murphy is in the role that Cam would fill and this trade doesn't address their hole at C
Yea important to remember, Pels will want to clear some salary, too, in an Ingram trade. With Murphy's extension kicking in next year (30m/yr?) they will be capped up with Zion, Murray, McCullom and Murphy in the fold. McCullom will be more tradeable next offseason, but it's better to have the leverage with teams to not be forced to move him.
So what tram would want CamJ/DFS and be willing to give their good Center for them? Cavs come to mind, but cavs fans will say "no, we would need picks in the deal." Which neither Pels nor BKN would want to give in that deal. My trade with CamJ to ORL with WCJ to NOP didn't hit well with posters here. I thought CamJ was more valuable than others apparently.
I think the Pels are more interested in controlling than clearing salary. If they can get 2-3 players locked in for multiple years equivalent to Ingram's current contract, or 1 player for less than his current contract, that's their ideal scenario. They're clearly uninterested in paying $40+mil for one player in that role, be it Ingram or someone else.
That being said, I can't see the Nets making a deal for a guy that might help them win games this year, especially one that will be an unrestricted, unlikely to be retained and likely to go to the highest bidder FA. At the trade deadline, where they can more easily load manage him & lose through the end of the season, it becomes a bit more within the realm of possibility.
I really think that the 2025 draft class is an underrated factor here. I definitely get the sense that most of the lottery teams are just fine *developing* this season. Add to that the reality that the Nets will be one of the few teams with the space to sign him outright, and it's just difficult to align the incentives.