Post#193 » by TheMachine » Mon Mar 2, 2009 3:42 pm
[quote="old skool"]I think that it is very easy to sit on line and spout off about what trades should be made.
Some posters are upset that the Bucks are about to lose assets for nothing. Their solution: give up assets for nothing. A curious position to take.
Most NBA teams have been surprised by the sudden shift in the economy and in the resulting impact on the NBA. Most teams are decrying their large salaries. There are few teams interested in adding payroll. So the Bucks stood pat. So did almost every other team in the league.
We know this much: the Bucks are going to lose some assets. Picks or players, they can't afford to keep everyone. Let's see how that plays out.
And let's stop pretending that we fans are so omnipotent. We have some knowledge, but not as much as the Bucks front office. We are not hearing from sKiles and his staff. We are not hearing from scouts. We are not talking to other GMs and hearing what they might consider this summer. When it comes to trade evaluation, we are long on opinion and short on facts.
We might not like it if Hammond likes RJ better than Villanueva. But if I was in Hammond's shoes and sKiles was telling me that he would rather have Jefferson than CV, I would have to take that into consideration. If sKiles is telling me that Alexander is going to turn into a starting PF who will be able to defend and rebound, I would have to listen.
sKiles has expressed his opinion that defense is more important than offense. He reinforced that recently, mentioning that a good defensive team can withstand key injuries more easily than an offensive team. CV is a good scorer, but he stinks on the defensive end. Let's not ignore that very important fact.
We fans might be underestimating the value of having Redd's and Jefferson's contracts expire together. Maybe there is some value there. Value in starting fresh with a couple of young players who can grow together. Grow with Sessions and Mbah a Moute and Bogut. Maybe Hammond and sKiles want the current young core of Bogut, Sessions and Mbah a Moute to learn from veterans like Malik Allen and Richard Jefferson. Maybe they want to build a team culture - and not just amass raw talent that would make the Bucks the Clippers of the North.
It will take a few years to rebuild the Bucks. There are contract problems to address and some of those problems will require the passage of time to play out. Larry Harris was adept at stirring the pot and making trades. But he never built anything. He never developed stability. He never put a working team together. Most fans here recognized that he was getting nowhere and criticized Harris for those failures. But for some reason, there is a reluctance to let Hammond build a team. The majority here seem more concerned with doing something quickly than with doing it right.
As fans, we are fickle. We did not applaud Memphis when they sent Gasol to the Lakers. We did not applaud Denver when they sent Camby to the Clippers. We did not applaud Minnesota when they sent Garnett to Boston. Most fans view those as lopsided trades that hurt Memphis, Denver and Minnesota. But that is exactly the type of trade so many here impatiently espouse.
As fans, we are often shortsighted. Who among us praised the trade that sent Grant Hill to Orlando for Ben Wallace and filler? Who among us touted the signing of Billups to a free agent contract? Or the drafting of Darko Milic? So do those moves make Joe Dumars a good GM or a "moron"?
As fans, we foolishly dissect the response to a single question, parsing every phrase to extract massive significance. From that response we confirm our worst fears - ignoring the possibility that Hammond might not have been quoted precisely or that he might have mangled his response or that he might have been trying to posture for an upcoming deal or negotiation. Maybe he is a dolt. Maybe he is a genius. Either way, we probably can't tell by his response to one question.
I heard Hammond say that he will consider several possibilities in coming months. If the team struggles and he can move a large contract, he will. If nothing else, the Bucks should be competitive for a couple of years and be able to take advantage of large expiring contracts in two summers.
I am willing to give sKiles and Hammond and their staffs time to do this right. No one can evaluate an NBA GM in just a single season. Not even NBA experts like us.
oLd sKool[/quote
+1 Excellent post. Sums up my feelings exactly. Hammond/Skiles has inherited quite a mess from Kohl/Harris. It will not be cleared up in 6 months. Takes time. If it costs a prospect or a pick, well unfortunately so be it. Hopefully not. There is only so much you can do.
For all the fans that have wanted Redd traded, I personally have wanted Redd traded for 3 years now. I said the day he signed his contract, that this would be the most damaging thing to ever happen to the Bucks, and they will not be contenders as long as that contract has been on the books. But I can not believe for one minute that Hammond has had the opportunity to trade Redd yet. With Isaih gone, there is not one GM in the league that would take on that contract, just won't happen.
I for one believe that Redd is not in Hammonds plans. He has never said that. In fact he has hinted between the lines since the day he was hired that Redd will have to go. Think about it, Redd is the anti-Skiles (soft, no d, low iq, selfish). The minute he gets real offer, he will unload him (I don't feel that something like 2 Gadzurichs and a Brian Cardinal is a real offer).
It just takes time. In the meantime, I will enjoy the current Redd-less Bucks and know that Redd will be gone, and better things are ahead (albeit, maybe not for 2 more years).