paulpressey25 wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
I'm not sure there is a market out there for Ford given his injury risk. Sure, we'd trade Bobby for him but I can't see the Raptors getting anything worthwhile back for him. It would be a salary exchange move, and if you do that, you might as well hang onto TJ since he's a good player.
As for the upside, I'm not sure there is anymore as this point. He's been in Toronto now two-years. He's gotten better with his shooting and is a better player than when he was here. But his body has taken a beating and he is a guy who relies on physical skills.
All that said, I'd send CV/Gadz back to Toronto for Ford.....
I'm not getting into that in this forum.
As far as his trade value, there's no question it's low. The injury issues are simply far too great at this time to ignore. That said, when healthy and starting he has had a major impact on the Raptors. There were many people around the league who believed he was playing at an All-Star level this season prior to his injury (John Hollinger was one who wrote that he was strongly considering Ford as an All-Star performer at that time). His game has continued to improve greatly the past two seasons. I think the upside is clearly there and I'm confident in saying there are a number of teams who still believe strongly in what Ford can do and what he can become should he remain healthy.
But that last part is the key without question. And that's going to put the Raptors in a tough spot. They have been a very good team with Ford starting and Calderon coming off the bench. I'd hazard a guess and say that played a huge role in the decision to re-insert Ford into the starting lineup last night. Colangelo would be a fool to give Ford away. One team has already made the huge mistake of trading Ford for less than proper value and that GM is currently out of a job. I don't see Colangelo making the same mistake.
Like I said, I think the smart move for the Raptors is to go with Calderon and look to trade Ford. Your team isn't potentially as good since Calderon isn't as talented as Ford and lacks Ford's potential. But Calderon is a strong PG and it's a much safer route to take so it's not like your team will stink without Ford. If a team isn't willing to give the Raptors anything of value for Ford, I would be very surprised if Colangelo traded him. As you correctly pointed out, there isn't a strong market for PGs this summer and even though Calderon is talented there may not be a team that can make a strong bid for him - and I don't see the Raptors foolishly outbidding themselves for Calderon the way the Bucks did for Mo when he had a similar market last summer. So the Raptors could still keep both and not face the question of paying their backup more than their starter.
I don't think that happens, though. I think a team like Portland - which badly needs a standout PG - could make a play for Ford and offer up someone like Outlaw or maybe Webster and include the first-round pick (maybe a swap of firsts). Like I said, I think the Blazers would be a great fit for Ford. A Roy-Oden-Ford-Aldridge foundation could make Portland a legitimate contender overnight.
Nothing will not break me.