xAIRNESSx wrote:Masai's lost his touch.
Should've offered him no more than $60M/3 years.
So...pay him less than the Dillon Brooks contract?
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xAIRNESSx wrote:Masai's lost his touch.
Should've offered him no more than $60M/3 years.

Scase wrote:RoteSchroder wrote:Scase wrote:I have had to say this many times, so I'll say it again.
The purpose of the pick isn't just getting a high level player, it is getting a high level player that you have under strict contract control for the better part of a decade. It is having a high impact player on a contract making less than 15mil a year. That kind of contract gives you flexibility to add players like BI and get good teams built. But you don't go out and get the BI player before you have the other parts of the car as in the above analogy.
And so what if the opportunities don't appear when you want them to, whatever happened to Masai and his endless patience? You add a top 5 pick to the roster w/o BI and you still have a solid core to move forward with and grow. This is just another instance of putting the cart before the horse. I'm glad the cost for acquiring BI was low, but as I already stated, the issue is not the asset cost, or even the player, but rather the timing. The KD trade would've been bad cause we would have gutted our roster and not have enough players to field a competitive team. The BI trade is bad because we don't have a good enough team to add him to, adding BI is supposed to be the cherry on the sundae move, not the first 2 scoops of vanilla.
A lot of it seems circumstantial, we have contract control for almost a decade, but also a lot of players need to be developed for almost a decade. We could be just developing players for other teams. Powell, Siakam and Derozan all weren’t at their peaks in Toronto. RJ didn’t work out for the Knicks, Ingram didn’t work out for the Lakers.
Also, if BI gets healthy, he’s our best player. He’s a part of the sundae, not the cherry. The risk is essentially his health. This would be the equivalent of trading for Lowry.
Lowry was 26, not an established player and supposedly a headcase. Ingram is 27, an established player, but injury prone.
Both were traded for mid-level picks.
Yeah they weren't at their peaks on their respective teams because they were traded, that's a pretty weird argument to make. Norm was traded for us to get younger, Siakam was traded cause he wasn't good enough, Derozan was the same reason + for an upgrade, RJ was traded for a better player + asset consolidation, Ingram was traded for a better player. These are all really bad examples. They also prove my point, the fact that all of them were under salary control by their team is what allowed them to be traded and return what they did. They kept the players for years (only a couple with BI), they got better, then they were traded, this is literally what I'm advocating for. None of these players aside from BI were moved on their 1st contracts, they were drafted, improved, and moved for better or different situations. Guess what you can't do that with, yeah, I'll let you figure that one out.
And if your whole argument is based off "if" BI gets healthy, it has already failed. He hasn't been healthy for 8 years straight, this isn't just a "well maybe he won't" it's practically guaranteed. This isn't at all like the Lowry situation, a headcase can usually be remedied with a different situation/leadership, injuries don't just magically go away.SharoneWright wrote:Ingram making less than Siakam is a real bonus.
Siakam playing full seasons is also a real bonus.Potential wrote:
Lamelo - Injury prone and also being paid 9mil AAV
Luka - Has literally been doing this since his first year in the league and has earned every penny
Lebron - Do I really need to say anything?
Jokic - Best player in the league and barely misses 10 games a season
Giannis - FMVP/MVP/DPOY etc. and his lowest amount of games played in a season match Ingrams highest played in the last 8 years.
Almost like there is some context missing.
It basically is. Everyone on that list is either WAY better, isn't chronically injured (minus Lamelo) and justifies their salary, or in the case of Lamelo, makes a quarter of what Ingram does.

If that $40 million average annual value sounds familiar, that's likely because it's the precise price range we've previously written that New Orleans had established as its ceiling for Ingram last summer.
League sources tell the The Stein Line that Ingram, in fact, passed on a four-year, $160 million deal from the Pelicans that would have kept him in New Orleans, meaning there was some serious money left on the proverbial table in his quest for more.
We have since learned, for example, that the Raptors held talks with the Hawks about acquiring De'Andre Hunter, who wound up being traded to Cleveland. Toronto and Atlanta have discussed Hunter trades going as far back as the 2023 NBA Draft, sources said, when the Hawks were also among the teams most aggressively pursuing Siakam. Sources say that the Cavaliers viewed the Raptors as their foremost threat to landing Hunter while also being cognizant that the Pelicans and Hawks were discussing frameworks that could have sent Ingram to Atlanta and Hunter to New Orleans.
Pinpointing Barrett's standing is trickier. The Canadian has two more seasons left on his current contract after this one at $27.7 million in 2025-26 and then $29.6 million in 2026-27. And before that final year arrives, Toronto will almost certainly be holding contract extension talks with Gradey Dick, who the Raptors have held in as high regard as anyone in the building who doesn't have BARNES stitched into the back of his jersey. Don't forget that the Raptors also drafted Ja'Kobe Walter, another scoring guard, with the No. 19 pick last June.
All of that makes Barrett someone who has to be monitored as a potential trade candidate once the offseason arrives. The modern NBA is now dominated by contract extensions and players getting traded to the team that is willing to give them one ... with surrounding players occasionally rendered casualties along the way.
Appostis wrote:Shakril wrote:Appostis wrote:
Freak injuries aside..IQ is not super injured.
This season he received a fairly freak injury .. but has a played close to 72 games a season.
RBJ averaged 66
Barnes averages 70
Poeltl averaged 67
BI averaged 60.. which would be your first below average of the crew.
Average player misses 17 games a year(65 games played). Team is not a ironman team but oft injuries is a tad dramatic.
The only reason, why Poeltl, Barnes and RJ missed so many games the last 2 seasons is simply cause there was no need to rush them back. If we were in the Playoff right now, you bet Poeltl & RJ would be playing right now.
Was going to say as much but hard to control for it. Overall same could be said for the average NBA player.
Consequence wrote:From Fischer's email today about the extension/Raptors moves in general:If that $40 million average annual value sounds familiar, that's likely because it's the precise price range we've previously written that New Orleans had established as its ceiling for Ingram last summer.
League sources tell the The Stein Line that Ingram, in fact, passed on a four-year, $160 million deal from the Pelicans that would have kept him in New Orleans, meaning there was some serious money left on the proverbial table in his quest for more.We have since learned, for example, that the Raptors held talks with the Hawks about acquiring De'Andre Hunter, who wound up being traded to Cleveland. Toronto and Atlanta have discussed Hunter trades going as far back as the 2023 NBA Draft, sources said, when the Hawks were also among the teams most aggressively pursuing Siakam. Sources say that the Cavaliers viewed the Raptors as their foremost threat to landing Hunter while also being cognizant that the Pelicans and Hawks were discussing frameworks that could have sent Ingram to Atlanta and Hunter to New Orleans.Pinpointing Barrett's standing is trickier. The Canadian has two more seasons left on his current contract after this one at $27.7 million in 2025-26 and then $29.6 million in 2026-27. And before that final year arrives, Toronto will almost certainly be holding contract extension talks with Gradey Dick, who the Raptors have held in as high regard as anyone in the building who doesn't have BARNES stitched into the back of his jersey. Don't forget that the Raptors also drafted Ja'Kobe Walter, another scoring guard, with the No. 19 pick last June.
All of that makes Barrett someone who has to be monitored as a potential trade candidate once the offseason arrives. The modern NBA is now dominated by contract extensions and players getting traded to the team that is willing to give them one ... with surrounding players occasionally rendered casualties along the way.
- "Sources say that the Cavaliers viewed the Raptors as their foremost threat to landing Hunter while also being cognizant that the Pelicans and Hawks were discussing frameworks that could have sent Ingram to Atlanta and Hunter to New Orleans.
In any potential Ingram-to-Atlanta swap, Clint Capela would have headed to the Pelicans, sources said. Yet it was frequently stressed in the build-up to the deadline that the Hawks, unlike the Raptors, were not eager to sign Ingram to an immediate extension. Atlanta, you see, had been exploring Hunter trade possibilities for some time and seemingly regarded Ingram as an intriguing response to losing him that could have provided some interesting optionality this summer."
Scase wrote:Just because you disagree, doesn't make it negative. He has zero career accolades aside from making an all star game 6 years ago. No all nba selections, no playoff series wins, no mvp votes, no nothing. His biggest accomplishment is MIP/AS 6 seasons ago, that's not anything to celebrate. He's been in the league for 9 years, and has missed a full third of his games in the last 8 years. DD and Lowry had 50 win teams to their name, DD had multiple AS selections, all NBA 2nd and 3rd team, Siakam had multiple AS selections and all NBA, and duh a championship. Ingram is no more a first option than DD or Siakam were, 6 playoff games don't change that, I will trust the 495 regular season games instead.
Just because it doesn't mesh your opinion, it doesn't make it negative, reality doesn't care about how you feel, it exists regardless.
Dalek wrote:Consequence wrote:From Fischer's email today about the extension/Raptors moves in general:If that $40 million average annual value sounds familiar, that's likely because it's the precise price range we've previously written that New Orleans had established as its ceiling for Ingram last summer.
League sources tell the The Stein Line that Ingram, in fact, passed on a four-year, $160 million deal from the Pelicans that would have kept him in New Orleans, meaning there was some serious money left on the proverbial table in his quest for more.We have since learned, for example, that the Raptors held talks with the Hawks about acquiring De'Andre Hunter, who wound up being traded to Cleveland. Toronto and Atlanta have discussed Hunter trades going as far back as the 2023 NBA Draft, sources said, when the Hawks were also among the teams most aggressively pursuing Siakam. Sources say that the Cavaliers viewed the Raptors as their foremost threat to landing Hunter while also being cognizant that the Pelicans and Hawks were discussing frameworks that could have sent Ingram to Atlanta and Hunter to New Orleans.Pinpointing Barrett's standing is trickier. The Canadian has two more seasons left on his current contract after this one at $27.7 million in 2025-26 and then $29.6 million in 2026-27. And before that final year arrives, Toronto will almost certainly be holding contract extension talks with Gradey Dick, who the Raptors have held in as high regard as anyone in the building who doesn't have BARNES stitched into the back of his jersey. Don't forget that the Raptors also drafted Ja'Kobe Walter, another scoring guard, with the No. 19 pick last June.
All of that makes Barrett someone who has to be monitored as a potential trade candidate once the offseason arrives. The modern NBA is now dominated by contract extensions and players getting traded to the team that is willing to give them one ... with surrounding players occasionally rendered casualties along the way.
I was just going to post about the Hawks/Raps decisions, so this is good context about our previous pursuit of Hunter. The Hawks were only luke warm on BI which is interesting. It almost feels like we were the only true bidder for BI:
The Hawks decided not to make a big offer for BI according to Fischer and weren't even going to extend BI right away:- "Sources say that the Cavaliers viewed the Raptors as their foremost threat to landing Hunter while also being cognizant that the Pelicans and Hawks were discussing frameworks that could have sent Ingram to Atlanta and Hunter to New Orleans.
In any potential Ingram-to-Atlanta swap, Clint Capela would have headed to the Pelicans, sources said. Yet it was frequently stressed in the build-up to the deadline that the Hawks, unlike the Raptors, were not eager to sign Ingram to an immediate extension. Atlanta, you see, had been exploring Hunter trade possibilities for some time and seemingly regarded Ingram as an intriguing response to losing him that could have provided some interesting optionality this summer."
-Grabbed this from X
Our package was significantly better so no question why NOP took it. But, the Hawks ended up trading DeAndre Hunter for 3 seconds and 2 swaps and couple decent vets in LeVert and Niang.
This is the same Hunter we would have traded for in last year's Siakam deal. Who of course has been healthier and played well this season for the Hawks, but many here found him to be a negative asset two offseasons ago.
It feels like the Hawk playbook should have been ours. We should have been trading for future assets like what the Hawks got, but instead we took a huge swing for BI about one year after the Siakam trade. Hopefully, things work out well.
Consequence wrote:From Fischer's email today about the extension/Raptors moves in general:If that $40 million average annual value sounds familiar, that's likely because it's the precise price range we've previously written that New Orleans had established as its ceiling for Ingram last summer.
League sources tell the The Stein Line that Ingram, in fact, passed on a four-year, $160 million deal from the Pelicans that would have kept him in New Orleans, meaning there was some serious money left on the proverbial table in his quest for more.We have since learned, for example, that the Raptors held talks with the Hawks about acquiring De'Andre Hunter, who wound up being traded to Cleveland. Toronto and Atlanta have discussed Hunter trades going as far back as the 2023 NBA Draft, sources said, when the Hawks were also among the teams most aggressively pursuing Siakam. Sources say that the Cavaliers viewed the Raptors as their foremost threat to landing Hunter while also being cognizant that the Pelicans and Hawks were discussing frameworks that could have sent Ingram to Atlanta and Hunter to New Orleans.Pinpointing Barrett's standing is trickier. The Canadian has two more seasons left on his current contract after this one at $27.7 million in 2025-26 and then $29.6 million in 2026-27. And before that final year arrives, Toronto will almost certainly be holding contract extension talks with Gradey Dick, who the Raptors have held in as high regard as anyone in the building who doesn't have BARNES stitched into the back of his jersey. Don't forget that the Raptors also drafted Ja'Kobe Walter, another scoring guard, with the No. 19 pick last June.
All of that makes Barrett someone who has to be monitored as a potential trade candidate once the offseason arrives. The modern NBA is now dominated by contract extensions and players getting traded to the team that is willing to give them one ... with surrounding players occasionally rendered casualties along the way.
LoveMyRaps wrote:TheGeneral99 wrote:Wow - Ingram gets the Vanvleet contract.
Fred got more.
Shakril wrote:Appostis wrote:Shakril wrote:
The only reason, why Poeltl, Barnes and RJ missed so many games the last 2 seasons is simply cause there was no need to rush them back. If we were in the Playoff right now, you bet Poeltl & RJ would be playing right now.
Was going to say as much but hard to control for it. Overall same could be said for the average NBA player.
The point i wnated to make is, that BI is often injured and actually did came back playing hurt. While with us the last 2 years, it was not necessary to let someone play hurt.
nikster wrote:But look how long it took for them to get to their peaks. Siakam was peaking with us at 28 in his 7th season. Powell took a leap in year 5 at 26 years old. Derozan had his best season with us year 8. 2 of those guys were drafted as older rookies, and they all continued to improve even after they were traded.
Why cant Ingram, RJ or quick be in a similar boat? Continue to improve and either keep them if they fit or flip them for future assets or another opportunity. For Quick and RJ we essentialy just skipped the first contract years where players are generally less productive anyway. Ingram we are getting right as he should be entering his best years.

LoveMyRaps wrote:Introductory presser today btw.