esvl wrote:What’s wrong with the Luka for Davis + Flagg deal? Looks pretty fair to me.
Flagg was not part of the deal. At least not officially.
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esvl wrote:What’s wrong with the Luka for Davis + Flagg deal? Looks pretty fair to me.
hugepatsfan wrote:
3) Less nuanced player evaluations and less thought out development plans. We make snap judgements of guys based on what they done. Very few actually scout to the extent a team would. We say a guy sucks at 3 point shooting; an actual GM/scouting team might think he's being asked to shoot off the dribble too much and would be fine as a supporting piece where it's more catch and shoot threes. We rely on statistics which are, in large part, driven by what your teammates do. You teammates shoot like ****, you look like a ball hog with a low assist %. Your teammates can't defend - you have a poor defensive rating. Teams probably watch the on court play and don't make that entirely an individual evaluation.
brackdan70 wrote:Not everyone here is off all the time.
In general there are some biases that affect views on valuation. Age, box score stats, player size etc. also sometimes we think a contract is bad because we are stuck in the past a bit.
Texas Chuck wrote:OGSactownballer wrote:kobe_vs_jordan wrote:Think honestly CBA killed free agency. Sign and trade is so limiting now. Players have way less options driving down their value. Getting rid of the 125 percent rule makes it so much harder to dump money.
Think we seeing similar value driven down in trades. Players have less options on the open market. Not as many teams could make a trade for stars now like they could on old CBA .
Players use to be picking from 6 to 10 teams in free agency or trade market. Now you lucky if 2 or 3 teams can afford you.
Actually the CBA did exactly what it was designed to do - level the playing field.
The actual fans that are ticked off about this are Lakers/Boston et al who can no longer simply out spend the smaller markets to steal players and treat the small markets as farm teams.
And look at this past finals - two small market teams. Definitely a successful result.
Lakers haven't been outspending teams. And in fact spending has not a ton to do with market and more about the specific governor, right? Clippers started spending with Ballmer, but didn't before. Chicago hates paying tax. Houston doesn't pay a lot of tax. OKC has been a big taxpayer before and almost certainly will be again. Minnesota has a very high payroll, etc...
I don't think its really a market thing. Yes big markets have real financial advantages, but its not like baseball where that tends to dictate the haves from the have nots pretty exclusively.
With the right governor, the Kings could be a big spender too, just the Maloofs went broke and the new guy isn't willing to spend huge either.
KembaWalker wrote:agent relationships matter as much as on the court productivity
Scoot McGroot wrote:Texas Chuck wrote:OGSactownballer wrote:
Actually the CBA did exactly what it was designed to do - level the playing field.
The actual fans that are ticked off about this are Lakers/Boston et al who can no longer simply out spend the smaller markets to steal players and treat the small markets as farm teams.
And look at this past finals - two small market teams. Definitely a successful result.
Lakers haven't been outspending teams. And in fact spending has not a ton to do with market and more about the specific governor, right? Clippers started spending with Ballmer, but didn't before. Chicago hates paying tax. Houston doesn't pay a lot of tax. OKC has been a big taxpayer before and almost certainly will be again. Minnesota has a very high payroll, etc...
I don't think its really a market thing. Yes big markets have real financial advantages, but its not like baseball where that tends to dictate the haves from the have nots pretty exclusively.
With the right governor, the Kings could be a big spender too, just the Maloofs went broke and the new guy isn't willing to spend huge either.
Yup. Lakers haven’t spent in years. And have specifically made transactions that hard cap themselves at lower spending limits.
But this is also indicative of another thing we miss. Ownerships/governors have directives. And ownership is expensive now, so there’s a LOT more minority investors involved all with different spending limits on a year to year basis. Markets go up and down, and owners get older and older, and we don’t always know what their directives are to personnel management. For example, the Buss’s have almost all their wealth tied up in the Lakers franchise and have had to progressively sell more of the franchise. Simon has gotten older in Indy and has sold part of his stake as he’s prepared for the survivorship of the franchise for his son to inherit (but is still largely invested in the open market with his wealth, and largely divested from malls for years now).
There’s just too many people involved, all with their own motivations and interests, to be able to speak as uniformly about the market at large as we tend to in this forum.
TPA wrote:It has been reported that while Troy Weaver was GM in Detroit, teams were calling him for deals because they knew they could get over on him. And they did. Over and over again. He would have been better served reading our message board and running trade scenarios with our input. I guess my point is, not all GM's are as good at their job as you'd expect them to be at the highest organizational levels. You can say the same thing for a lot of executives in many industries (and government).
shrink wrote:Internet posters don’t have million dollar GM salaries on the line. This causes many to be far more risk-tolerant, and compared to actual GMs, over-value prospects and picks, and under-value consistent high (not superstar) level performers.
The NBA shows us they value older star players with high salaries and more trade value than we predict. But we refuse to accept that, and often call those guys “over-priced negative contracts,” while we fall in love with the upside of every rookie or sophomore prospect that shows any nba skills whatsoever.
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