PrecociousNeoph wrote:kneega wrote:PEOPLE!

That's just it. There hasn't been any confirmation that Gallo is available and I don't believe he is...
gallinari is definitely available for melo... everyone on this team except for amare is, and yes that includes Chandler, fields and Felton
That's your opinion. I think Donnie is very high on Gallo and this is why I believe that:
In 1999, Nowitzki was a gawky, 20-year-old rookie from Germany, trying to simultaneously acclimate to the United States and save the beleaguered Dallas Mavericks.
He shot poorly, scored infrequently and played so little defense that critics mockingly called him “irk” — as in, no D. Mavericks fans booed him mercilessly. But by 2002, Nowitzki was an All-Star, and by 2007, he was the N.B.A.’s most valuable player. The Knicks have quiet hopes that Gallinari will follow a roughly similar path, and that Nowitzki is the model for what Gallinari could be: a tall, rangy power forward with a brilliant shooting stroke, a sharp basketball mind and an underrated grit.
It is dangerous to compare a second-year player to a perennial All-Star. But Nowitzki did not flinch at the analogy. And he offered an encouraging endorsement in advance of the Knicks’ surprising 128-94 victory over the Mavericks on Saturday night that ended Dallas’s 13-game winning streak.
“I think he’s way ahead of my curve,” Nowitzki said of Gallinari. “When I was 20, I was struggling so much. I watched a bunch of games this year, and he looks confident out there. He’s knocking big shots down for them. I think he worked on his drive some, he’s finishing in the paint some, and they’re looking for him to get big baskets. So, definitely ahead of me.”
“You really got to give those guys two years before you really judge them,” said Donnie Nelson, the Mavericks president, who, along with his father, Don Nelson, drafted Nowitzki. “A guy coming from overseas, unless he’s played in the states extensively, it’s a little bit different game. There’s a different rhythm, the athleticism takes a period of time to get used to.”
Nelson added, “It’s a process of really learning everything an American learns from the time he’s in grade school all the way up through college, and understanding those nuances.”
“The biggest thing for those guys is, you’re going to get your block knocked off a lot,” Nelson said. “And you have got to have great resolve. And I think that’s the difference in the guys that make it or not.
From what I’ve seen, Gallinari definitely has that. He’s got a huge heart.”http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/14/sport ... ricks.htmlSTAT's opinion on Gallo:
“He reminds me of Dirk [Nowitzki] a lot…He’s at that same level as Dirk at the same age if not better.”
http://probasketballtalk.nbcsports.com/ ... -nowitzki/Not trying to make this thread about Gallo. Just presenting info that supports why I believe Donnie doesn't even have Gallo on the trading block for Melo at this point.