moocow007 wrote:nyqua11 wrote:moocow007 wrote:Then he's done a terrible job worrying about his team. What he should be doing is pursuing every option possible in moving Arenas to Orlando for anything (even Rashard Lewis). THAT is what he needed the most to do...to get Arenas the heck out of there and away from Wall while adding someone that doesn't make more (and right now NO ONE IN THE NBA makes more than Arenas) and who can actually contribute. He didn't need to get a "good guy" to "tutor" Wall (as was supposedly the justification for Hinrich)...honestly does anyone really actually and honestly believe that Wall believes he needs anyone to "mentor" him? And Yi? Wow that's a terrible trade. Yi stinks (he does) and he's a puss (he is). Why would you want a guy who shrivels at the first sign of pressure on your team? To show the other players that they too can go into a shell at the first sign of trouble?
Deals like this has happened before. In NY. Starting roughly 5 years ago. Get the best talent, regardless of need, fit, salary or bargaining power. Honestly, looks like Ernie is trying to challenge Kublai Kahn for worst GM in the NBA right now.
I assume he is trying to move Arenas, then he can plug Hinrich into the SG spot or have him backup both positions. And he can trade Hinrich in the future for future picks to a contending team this year or next year. And Wall is 19/20 years old. Lots of young players aren't ready for the NBA and Hinrich can help him cope and deal with the NBA life. And they also got Seraphin in the Hinrich deal, so that factors into the trade. Yi is an expiring contract that will be a backup for his team, so it's not like they're taking on a giant contract.
Hinrich isn't a SG...why do people keep trying to poney him up as one. He failed in the "hey let's keep Hinrich and move Gordon cause Hinrich can be a SG" experiment. But that's besides the point, the Bulls (and now the Nets) were NOT in the drivers seat on these deals. Each team pretty much HAD TO shed these guys. And instead of doing what he's supposed to be doing (milking it for all it's worth) he basically gave each team a favor. As mentioned before, the Rockets set the market. Grunfeld didn't bother using it. He could have asked for a future 1st rounder from the Bulls and the Nets and you think either team would have said "there's no precedence for that?". He got flubbed.
Do you work in the Wizards' front office, or any front office for that matter? Do you know for sure what GMs around the League are discussing? How do you know what EG has been asking for?













