halfHAVOC wrote:what if we don't even land lebron?
then we're screwed.. but we're getting lebron. Plenty of cap space, moving to Brooklyn, friends with jay z, shot at a championship if he comes.. it all fits.
Harris
CDR
LBJ
Yi
Lopez
Moderators: Rich Rane, NyCeEvO
halfHAVOC wrote:what if we don't even land lebron?
Stone wrote:Weather or not we get LeBron we had to rebuild. Its good to see were going in the right direction. I was hoping we missed getting into the playoffs last season then we'ed be in year two of the process. Its going to painfull to watch the next couple of seasons but hey, most of us have been there and done that.
As a Jersey guy I would have loved to have seen a champianship here. But the magic of those two trips to the finals and the dogfights the following years were a great memory that not all teams get to say they were a part of.
Now it comes down to developing our young guys. I'm pretty sure Opie has the green light to do so.
NjNeTs1029 wrote:halfHAVOC wrote:what if we don't even land lebron?
then we're screwed.. but we're getting lebron. Plenty of cap space, moving to Brooklyn, friends with jay z, shot at a championship if he comes.. it all fits.
Harris
CDR
LBJ
Yi
Lopez
wiff wrote:NjNeTs1029 wrote:halfHAVOC wrote:what if we don't even land lebron?
then we're screwed.. but we're getting lebron. Plenty of cap space, moving to Brooklyn, friends with jay z, shot at a championship if he comes.. it all fits.
Harris
CDR
LBJ
Yi
Lopez
You realize that you are putting your hopes on a great young point guard, two rookies who dropped like led in the draft and a second year player who had a horrible rookie year?
Mmmmmmmm....yeah that screams LeBron
DowJones wrote:There is no way that Nike will give LeBron an extra $100 million. Not only would it be a HORRIBLE business move, it is not legal according to the NBA. There is no way that Stern would allow shoe companies to subsidize select franchises like that.
BTW, the shoe industry has really fallen over the last few years. A sports economist on CNBC mentioned that the $4 billion industry is now worth a little over $2 billion. That is just about a 50% drop, for all of you math-majors. OJ Mayo got a deal with Nike that will give him barely over $1million a year, which is far less than he would have got a few years ago. How do you imagine that Nike will give James an EXTRA $100 million for moving to a major-market when the ENTIRE industry is worth only $2 billion?
Jay-Z and LeBron are friends, but you are delusional if you think the Cavs don't have many members on staff that are CLOSER to LeBron than Jay-Z is. Google Maverick Carter and Richard Paul, both of whom are from the Cleveland area. They are much closer with LeBron than Jay-Z is.
lurkingobeiscity wrote:Carter, Harris, Yi, Swill, and Boone (counts about 6 mil as a FA) combine to count 39 million against the cap in the summer of 2010. That is far enough under the cap to offer a max contract. You do have to account for the 5 1st round draft picks the Nets would have between now and then however. Adding about 10 million more for that puts the Nets at 49 million for that summer with 10, young aside from Carter, guys under contract. This makes them big players in that free agency whether Carter is moved or not.
DowJones wrote:That increase is going to be minor though. More people may buy his shoes, but the increase won't even be enough to cover the difference in contracts that Cleveland can offer. It sure as heck won't be in the $50 million range.
LeBron is already a global name. He is already the highest paid American athlete in all of the team sports. LeBron goes beyond the question of "what market does he play for". His sales won't increase that much by moving to New Jersey. He will get more local sales, but that is really minor compared to everything else. LeBron is already at or near the peak when it comes to endorsement dollars.
Preludepunk27 wrote:DowJones wrote:That increase is going to be minor though. More people may buy his shoes, but the increase won't even be enough to cover the difference in contracts that Cleveland can offer. It sure as heck won't be in the $50 million range.
LeBron is already a global name. He is already the highest paid American athlete in all of the team sports. LeBron goes beyond the question of "what market does he play for". His sales won't increase that much by moving to New Jersey. He will get more local sales, but that is really minor compared to everything else. LeBron is already at or near the peak when it comes to endorsement dollars.
You'd honestly be surprised that, yes he is a global name, but not as much as you think. I've been to Japan and China a few times over the last 5 or so years and yeah he's there but I wouldn't say he's like godzilla huge. Honestly, the 2 most global names in the NBA are Kobe and Shaq in terms of active players.
And Nike doesn't just make shoes by the way.
It's not gonna be in the $50 million range but unless the Cavs win a title in the next couple years, and depending on how other teams build/set up cap space, a major market is more enticing...even if it only means a few more dollars.
DowJones wrote:Preludepunk27 wrote:DowJones wrote:That increase is going to be minor though. More people may buy his shoes, but the increase won't even be enough to cover the difference in contracts that Cleveland can offer. It sure as heck won't be in the $50 million range.
LeBron is already a global name. He is already the highest paid American athlete in all of the team sports. LeBron goes beyond the question of "what market does he play for". His sales won't increase that much by moving to New Jersey. He will get more local sales, but that is really minor compared to everything else. LeBron is already at or near the peak when it comes to endorsement dollars.
You'd honestly be surprised that, yes he is a global name, but not as much as you think. I've been to Japan and China a few times over the last 5 or so years and yeah he's there but I wouldn't say he's like godzilla huge. Honestly, the 2 most global names in the NBA are Kobe and Shaq in terms of active players.
And Nike doesn't just make shoes by the way.
It's not gonna be in the $50 million range but unless the Cavs win a title in the next couple years, and depending on how other teams build/set up cap space, a major market is more enticing...even if it only means a few more dollars.
Not even close. LeBron is easily the NBA's most marketable star, which is why he earns the most in endorsements....he almost doubles what Kobe makes. LeBron has been on the covers of SI, ESPN, Sporting News, etc but he has also been on the cover of Fortune, Wall Street Journal, and Vogue. He goes beyond the NBA and basketball already.
LeBron is also much more popular in Asia than Shaq and Kobe. He is HUGE over there.
Da_Kidd wrote:jerseyjac wrote:undecided...I understand the perspective on this trade...just not 100% sure I like this...
Re-signing Carter signaled the end of RJ, I think. Having both RJ and Vince without JKidd was redundant. It seems like the Nets are in rebuilding mode and RJ's contract was getting in the way.
That plus the thinking that Yi would entice the heavy Chinese population in NY into watching Nets games must be a major breaking point that this deal fell through. After all, in the end, it's still about the money right?
NjNeTs1029 wrote:halfHAVOC wrote:what if we don't even land lebron?
then we're screwed.. but we're getting lebron. Plenty of cap space, moving to Brooklyn, friends with jay z, shot at a championship if he comes.. it all fits.
Harris
CDR
LBJ
Yi
Lopez