Hoopstarr wrote:Right, because that would be logical conclusion when someone wonders why a team would want Bosh if they want to be a contender.
Ripp, good points in that response, but I don't buy that you can build a contender around multiple 8-10 FTA guys as the basis of an offense. We'll see. For a GM who is all about synergies gained largely from role players, it's seems like a big gamble to give them up and go with 3 guys who need the ball in their hands.
Well, there are two other additional ingredients for a championship team....defense, rebounding, etc. There was a bit of a discussion on the general boards about how it would work out, I sorta hashed out the additional synergies there. Basically, to summarize...Yao is really one of the last true Cs. You can check the records, but aside from his rookie season, the Rockets have been at worst the 6th best defense in the league. So for 7 straight seasons, top 6 defense. And this is with Yao missing a ton of games, not maturing into the player he later bacame, playing limited minutes, etc. And again, check the records, but they've put lots and lots of notorious pylons around Yao. Yet Yao has erased their mistakes and anchored on of the best defenses of the past decade.
So how does Bosh fit in? Well, he has anchored one of the best offenses of the the past 6 years. Aside from the 2008-2009 season, the Raps have been a top 10 offense for a very long time. The recipe for building a good offensive team is pretty simple...good shooters at the 1, 2 and 3, a C who is either an active husting big man like Amir, or a very skilled guy like Rasho. With all due respect to the other players on the current Raps team, none of them aside from possibly Jack can reliably create their own high-quality offense. So imagine if you send Bosh from the Raptors to the Rockets...at every position aside from SF, you've upgraded in offense. Aaron Brooks for example has DEEP 3 point range, and can create off the bounce. Kevin Martin can do pretty much anything offensively....shoot threes, go to the rack, come off of screens, draw fouls, etc.
So the point is, you get the best of both worlds....top 10 offense, and top 10 defense. This is enough to win a championship, even without LeBron.
Basically, if you cannot get LeBron, you collect other players who combined can have the same cumulative effect.
You should listen to Morey's interview...one of the other guys asked Morey basically, "So doesn't it look bad if a so-called elite player hasn't had much team success?" And then Morey responds, sort of emphasizing that there are other factors that might make this not happen, and I think he brought up Karl Malone, Dirk, etc.
So call him crazy, but Morey seems to believe you can win a championship next year with Bosh. It will be the biggest test of all this statistics stuff in basketball...all of the advanced stats indicate that Bosh is one of the top 10 best players in the league, and I'm sure Morey has even more refined models that he uses to analyze things.
J-Roc wrote:So based on all this Houston talk, it's safe to say Houston is willing to pay Bosh $130M. I wonder how many GM's out there actually want to be in the running for him. Forget the suspected teams who just happen to be able to afford it. How many really want to pony up? You'd be paying him "like" LeBron or Wade, but not exactly getting the same return.
That's what I'm wondering, especially since Morey is the one doing it. But apparently asking that question makes you a Bosh fanboy...
Well, if CB ends up choosing the Rockets and they win a championship, or go to the finals, etc, we'll end up seeing how things turn out.
Truth be told...even w/o Bosh, the Rockets will be a pretty stacked team next year. If he is the piece that puts you over the edge, you've gotta do it, I think. Championship-contending teams cannot afford to pinch pennies. And the fact that the Rockets won 42 games in the West w/o the services of Yao or TMac for most of the season should suggest to you that if the do add Yao and Bosh next year, they will win a helluva lot of games.
Undoubtedly though, there will be a substantial portion of Raps fans rooting for failure. If Morey is right, and CB is this ginormous undervalued asset, as he seems to believe, then it is a huge indictment of Bryan Colangelo and the Raps as an organization. Nobody likes looking like a fool..