Benjammin wrote:And now they're stuck with Beal so it's all good.
Yep, with one move we took a team out of the running when we will be relevant in '29. Awesome contract (given how it turned out). If we could just do that 28 more times
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Benjammin wrote:And now they're stuck with Beal so it's all good.
You will have to pry this tin foil hat of my cold dead corps cuz I will never not believe they **** us.payitforward wrote:gambitx777 wrote:...and beal the agents and the suns **** us one more time lol.
Just one more once...
a. Beal didn't do anything wrong to us. This is a business. It was his JOB to get himself the best contract he was able to get.
b. Beal's agent didn't do anything wrong to us. This is a business. They represent Brad's interests. It's their job to max out his benefit.
c. The Suns didn't do anything wrong to us. They made an offer. No doubt there was some back & forth, & in the end we took the best offer we could get for Bradley Beal, because -- after all -- this is a business.
We gave Brad an absolutely idiotic contract -- that's where the problem was. There & nowhere else.
payitforward wrote:tontoz wrote:pcbothwel wrote:...Im still pissed about Tyus Jones. Guy is a near 60 TS PG with 7:1 AST:TOV ratio, and we got NOTHING for him.
Tyus signed a 1 year deal for $3 million with the Suns. There was no trade market for him.
Thank you for making this point. I wonder how long we'll have to read these kinds of comments about Jones.
No one wanted Tyus Jones. No one. He signed for the vet minimum.
Why was that? I don't know, & it makes no sense to me. But that's the way it was. Hence, there's nothing whatever to "still" -- or EVER be pissed about.
In any other year, Jones would've been paid handsomely as the top point guard on the free agent market with a reputation as a mature leader. And indeed, Jones did weigh more lucrative interest from the Wizards, Detroit Pistons, San Antonio Spurs and Brooklyn Nets, league sources said, with offers ranging from $8 million to $12 million annually.
His first four years, he missed 81 games, the equivalent of a full regular season. (20 a season). His last four Wizards seasons, Beal missed 25, 22, 42, and 32 games. (Almost 32 a game) Then he hit 30 years of age.Benjammin wrote:And now they're stuck with Beal so it's all good.
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AFM wrote:I feel like I haven’t watched Schroeder play in years. He basically got 2 extra seconds? How much better is he than Kuzma?
Hidden Eye wrote:Kuzma has to get traded
His body language has been bad, came in to training camp not in shape. As a LEADER you have to set the standard.
He isn't playing like he has motivation to do anything on court except shoot airballs and play soft. He added nothing new to this game except huff and puff and get tired playing for 3 minutes.
I'd keep the 3 vets for sure.
You can't overturn 8-10 players for the next 3-4 years and think its gonna pan out. That's a very hard task to do.
Doesn't matter if you did/didn't draft the player all matter is where they fit with the 3-4 year window and a lot of players on roster today fit it.
2nd apron teams:
Those four squads aren’t allowed to execute trades where they take in more money than they give out. They can’t “aggregate” players in deals, pairing more than one player together in the same trade. They can’t use trade exceptions and can’t send out cash. They can’t sign players who previously made more than the midlevel exception on the buyout market.
1st apron teams:
Fifteen more teams are hard-capped at the first apron, a $178.1 million threshold for this season, with fewer but still constricting restrictions. Teams above the first apron cannot take in more money than they send out in trades and cannot use the full midlevel exception ($12.8 million).
On the edge:
On the other side are teams that won’t want to take on money because they are too close to the tax and under no circumstances could justify going into it. The Brooklyn Nets, Atlanta Hawks, Indiana Pacers and Memphis Grizzlies are all within $2 million of the tax. That’s less than a veteran’s minimum contract. The Sacramento Kings are $2.1 million short of the tax line. The Portland Trail Blazers are $3.7 million away, and the Chicago Bulls are $4.5 million away. Technically, those teams are allowed to add money. But realistically, it’s not happening, which will affect the rest of the league.
AFM wrote:Just trade him for whatever. If he's not a real asset then to quote the incoming president, it is what it is. Management gambled that his trade value would be higher this year than last. Then he came in out of shape and has played worse than usual. His value is now lower, even with the descending contract. To me its obvious the young guys look better when Kuz isn't playing. I don't mind them playing with Poole, by all accounts he's a hell of a hard worker. But Kuzma apparently didn't work at all this offseason. Time to cut ties.
The Wizards might end up regretting not trading Kuzma at last year's deadline or in the offseason. His numbers are down across the board. Last year, he averaged 22.2 points per game. This year, he's at just 15.8. His rebounding is down, and his assists have been cut in half. Defensively, there hasn't been much worth getting excited about. And he's shooting just 42 percent from the field and 28 percent from 3 on much lower 3-point volume. There may not be a player in the league who has seen such a substantial downgrade in his performance this season.
Could another team potentially sell itself on Kuzma returning to form once he gets out of the Wizards' situation? Maybe. Kuzma's contract was seen as a bargain for his production this time last year. He makes $23.5 million this year on a descending deal that will only see him make $19.4 million in 2026-27 after the salary cap has jumped multiple times. He's dealt with a rib injury throughout the early portion of the season, so the first goal should be to recover from that. I think he'd have to start playing better, though, for him to become a real trade target.
AFM wrote:https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5967281/2024/12/17/nba-trade-board-jimmy-butler-zach-lavine-cam-johnson/
Athletic has an article on all the top trade candidates and their projected value
Val and Brogdon both expected to get second(s) but here’s their take on kuzma:The Wizards might end up regretting not trading Kuzma at last year's deadline or in the offseason. His numbers are down across the board. Last year, he averaged 22.2 points per game. This year, he's at just 15.8. His rebounding is down, and his assists have been cut in half. Defensively, there hasn't been much worth getting excited about. And he's shooting just 42 percent from the field and 28 percent from 3 on much lower 3-point volume. There may not be a player in the league who has seen such a substantial downgrade in his performance this season.
Could another team potentially sell itself on Kuzma returning to form once he gets out of the Wizards' situation? Maybe. Kuzma's contract was seen as a bargain for his production this time last year. He makes $23.5 million this year on a descending deal that will only see him make $19.4 million in 2026-27 after the salary cap has jumped multiple times. He's dealt with a rib injury throughout the early portion of the season, so the first goal should be to recover from that. I think he'd have to start playing better, though, for him to become a real trade target.
pcbothwel wrote:AFM wrote:https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5967281/2024/12/17/nba-trade-board-jimmy-butler-zach-lavine-cam-johnson/
Athletic has an article on all the top trade candidates and their projected value
Val and Brogdon both expected to get second(s) but here’s their take on kuzma:The Wizards might end up regretting not trading Kuzma at last year's deadline or in the offseason. His numbers are down across the board. Last year, he averaged 22.2 points per game. This year, he's at just 15.8. His rebounding is down, and his assists have been cut in half. Defensively, there hasn't been much worth getting excited about. And he's shooting just 42 percent from the field and 28 percent from 3 on much lower 3-point volume. There may not be a player in the league who has seen such a substantial downgrade in his performance this season.
Could another team potentially sell itself on Kuzma returning to form once he gets out of the Wizards' situation? Maybe. Kuzma's contract was seen as a bargain for his production this time last year. He makes $23.5 million this year on a descending deal that will only see him make $19.4 million in 2026-27 after the salary cap has jumped multiple times. He's dealt with a rib injury throughout the early portion of the season, so the first goal should be to recover from that. I think he'd have to start playing better, though, for him to become a real trade target.
Could not care less about their take on Kuz this season... For god sake, he has played in 12 games this season. Extrapolating that into him being "Up" or "Down" compared to other seasons is nonsensical.
Lets talk through this.
- Kuz came into the year and clearly not in great shape.
- He played poorly the 1st 2 games of the year and then he put up 25/11/7 as part of a win over ATL.
- Then, he hurt his groin in practice and missed 5 games.
- He came back chucking for a few games and clearly not in shape/healthy...obviously.
- He then seemed to settle back into his rough career norms for a few games
- Then he hurt his ribs and has been out for the last 3 weeks.
Point being, whatever skillset/value was put on Kuzma before this year should not be changed because a small sample size of games, being in & out of the lineup.
"Oh look, a player in his prime is shooting 28% on 58 3PA this year...this is definitely concerning and hurts his value. Nevermind the consistent 34% on nearly 1,700 3PA's in his previous 4 years"
payitforward wrote:gambitx777 wrote:...and beal the agents and the suns **** us one more time lol.
Just one more once...
a. Beal didn't do anything wrong to us. This is a business. It was his JOB to get himself the best contract he was able to get.
b. Beal's agent didn't do anything wrong to us. This is a business. They represent Brad's interests. It's their job to max out his benefit.
c. The Suns didn't do anything wrong to us. They made an offer. No doubt there was some back & forth, & in the end we took the best offer we could get for Bradley Beal, because -- after all -- this is a business.
We gave Brad an absolutely idiotic contract -- that's where the problem was. There & nowhere else.
AFM wrote:That works both ways. What about when fans say we should play Kuz or whoever minutes to showcase him?
pcbothwel wrote:Could not care less about their take on Kuz this season... For god sake, he has played in 12 games this season. Extrapolating that into him being "Up" or "Down" compared to other seasons is nonsensical.
Lets talk through this.
- Kuz came into the year and clearly not in great shape.
- He played poorly the 1st 2 games of the year and then he put up 25/11/7 as part of a win over ATL.
- Then, he hurt his groin in practice and missed 5 games.
- He came back chucking for a few games and clearly not in shape/healthy...obviously.
- He then seemed to settle back into his rough career norms for a few games
- Then he hurt his ribs and has been out for the last 3 weeks.
Point being, whatever skillset/value was put on Kuzma before this year should not be changed because a small sample size of games, being in & out of the lineup.