Battery wrote:doc.end wrote:Fourth huh? Wow!
Just imagine if we had Okafor. We would be favored to win the NBA title.
Once again, if we still had Okafor then I doubt we would have Jackson right now. Which one would you rather have?
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Battery wrote:doc.end wrote:Fourth huh? Wow!
Just imagine if we had Okafor. We would be favored to win the NBA title.
Howard Mass wrote:You do not have the right to not be offended. Just because something is offensive to you does not mean that it breaks the board rules.
W_HAMILTON wrote:If you buy into the argument that there would have been too much money tied up long-term, well, you would have had two seasons to solve that problem. And if the team with Okafor would have been as good as I believe, it may have been a moot point anyway because the added revenue from being a top NBA team, the added interest from outside investors looking to buy the team, etc.
RaptorJ wrote:they (Bobcats' fans) seem to be some of the least intelligent posters on RealGM from some of the trash they say.
W_HAMILTON wrote:Once again, we have a higher payroll with Chandler than we did with Okafor. If we can currently afford Chandler + Jackson, we could have afforded Okafor + Jackson, since it would have actually saved us money over this season and next.
spectre_ wrote:The two moves weren't done with both in mind, they were totally separate:
1) reduce longterm money by moving Okafor but not hurt the team by getting a similar player (which obviously hasn't worked out).
2) take back more money (but not as much longterm) in hopes of improving the team to increase it's value.
Mezotarkus wrote:Your argument assumes away the issue. Everyone - including the Bobcats - knows Okafor is a better basketball talent than Chandler.
Management wanted to reduce their future salary commitments. The trade was purely a move to reduce the total salary commitment (meaning the total contract commitment - not just what is paid this year) of the Bobcats.
Howard Mass wrote:You do not have the right to not be offended. Just because something is offensive to you does not mean that it breaks the board rules.
Mezotarkus wrote:Agreed, the Okafor trade was not done with the Jackson trade in mind. But ownership would not haven taken on another $36m of salary commitment (Jackson) if it still had Okafor on the books.
Howard Mass wrote:You do not have the right to not be offended. Just because something is offensive to you does not mean that it breaks the board rules.
W_HAMILTON wrote:Mezotarkus wrote:Agreed, the Okafor trade was not done with the Jackson trade in mind. But ownership would not haven taken on another $36m of salary commitment (Jackson) if it still had Okafor on the books.
Says who? So, there is no chance we will sign Felton to a long-term deal because we don't want to tie up anymore long-term salary, correct? Are we going to get rid of Wallace to retain Felton? Maybe Diaw? Jackson?
W_HAMILTON wrote:Then you don't do the trades you do, because in the end, it saves us around 4m/year through the lives of everyone's contract. You don't say you want to clear long-term cap space, then take on a long-term contract.
In reality, most likely what happened is management did want to shed salary, and figured Chandler would be a comparable contributor to Okafor (in addition to appeasing Brown). Chandler was horrible, the team was horrible, and in another one of those "oh sh*t, we have to do something!" moves, they made a no-brainer traded for Jackson with one of our favorite trade partners.
If anything, you could say that with Okafor, we would have been better and steadier throughout the year, so maybe the team would haven't traded for Jackson because we wouldn't have been as awful as we were with Chandler, and hence management didn't reach that "oh sh*t, we have to do something!" moment.
But attributing it all to salary implications is silly. You don't take on long-term contracts if your only goal is to shed long-term salary.?
Walt Cronkite wrote:LOL @ Mezo claiming Johnson is trying to run this team like a business... wish I had the desire to find the articles about how the Bobcats have been bleeding 10s of millions of dollars each season...
Mezotarkus wrote:Walt Cronkite wrote:LOL @ Mezo claiming Johnson is trying to run this team like a business... wish I had the desire to find the articles about how the Bobcats have been bleeding 10s of millions of dollars each season...
LOL @ Cronkite - GM has been bleeding tens of billions of dollars but that does not mean it hasn't been run as a business. Think then post. It works better that way.
If he had not traded Okafor and the team sucked and season ticket holders had complained he would have said "too bad" because he would not want to dance anywhere near the luxury tax and his own internal salary cap tied up with a few players.
Walt Cronkite wrote:Anyway, here's the kicker-- the major flaw in your argument about cutting future costs:
The 40 million difference between Okafor & Jackson and Chandler & Jackson is going to have to be offset by new contractual obligations or the team will suffer a significant team skill decline, which will lead to a decrease in revenue stream for a "business" that will have been bleeding money for over a decade with an owner that is no longer anywhere close to what he was worth when he got the grand idea to go into the professional basketball "business". Furthermore, looking at the situation from an overall contract commitment instead of an annual expense is... really dumb. Teams get revenue from the league annually for being under the luxury tax and from aspects tied to team success.
doc.end wrote:HAm, seriously don't bring Okafor to every thread and if the debate is already there don't feed it please.
Howard Mass wrote:You do not have the right to not be offended. Just because something is offensive to you does not mean that it breaks the board rules.