whoknows wrote:Face it - BC is the only name from this pathetic organization that gets respect in the league.
Not true. Several people in the organization have been linked to Rod Black. They are feared and respected throughout the world.
Moderators: 7 Footer, Morris_Shatford, niQ, Duffman100, tsherkin, Reeko, lebron stopper, DG88, HiJiNX

whoknows wrote:Face it - BC is the only name from this pathetic organization that gets respect in the league.
Reignman wrote:
Honestly, you cry way too much. Are you a dude or a lady?
raps95 wrote:So, this first season of Bargnani's that you're referring to. That was the one where he came over as a highly skilled seven footer and was runner up for rookie of the year? That's when it was best for us to just cut bait on him?
At this point in time with many more years of evidence I'm willing to accept there is some merit to the idea of trading him. After year 1 though? Seems a bit reactionary to say the least. Especially since it seems to me that he was also one of our better players in that playoff season too.
To your treadmill point, I think it was a calculated risk, not some attempt to just "make do" and keep us going on a treadmill. Chandler was expiring this year and would (maybe) have been that perfect match to cover up for Bargnani's obvious deficiencies. This was a perfect opportunity to find that out. To me, we still don't have that answer, and that might be part of the reason Bargnani is still around. Because BC doesn't feel that he has, yet, put him in that *perfect* situation for him where he maximizes his strengths and minimizes his weaknesses.
Plus, Diaw was expiring a year earlier than Calderon. So, all in, this may have delayed our full on tanking by a year if it hadn't worked out, but it by no means would have tied our hands for the next three to four years or anything.
Again, it goes back to my marathon/sprint comment. If you take a long-term view of things, the net downside of this (delaying tank by a year) was outweighed by the potential net upside of discovering that Bargnani matched with a true 7-footer who does nothing but block and rebound was a killer combination. I'm not saying that *would* have happened, but when you take the big picture view it was a risk worth taking.
LodzBaluty wrote:I can't leave... its impossible. Help me, to help you... please. Help me make this forum a place where we are talking about the playoffs.
Cause this crap I keep reading about us needing to hold on to Bryan at all costs, is going to make me slit my wrists. (that is joke, but its that depressing to see this forum so disappointed every year.)
JN wrote:I got bored with the agenda after a few paragraphs -- . "fully fixing mistakes", labelling any criticism as "blindly hating" and "insane". It lacked any merit. A case can be made to keep BC, even if I disagree. The agenda laden plea that you presented is not it and was not worth my time to read any further.
This board has issues, but in this case the issue is your reading comprehension ...
Only one poster has put an argument of retaining Bryan at all cost, everyone else has either said there dissapointed but don't mind him being back or don't want him back at all ... thats hardly the "need Bryan at all cost" mentality your crying about ...
LodzBaluty wrote:Reignman wrote:
Honestly, you cry way too much. Are you a dude or a lady?
I think you guys are the ladies that can't be without your man Bryan. It bothers me.
Or are you saying I am way too expressive of my opinion to be a man? LOL, if so that is a compliment, thanks. Means I am gifted.
LodzBaluty wrote:This board has issues, but in this case the issue is your reading comprehension ...
Only one poster has put an argument of retaining Bryan at all cost, everyone else has either said there dissapointed but don't mind him being back or don't want him back at all ... thats hardly the "need Bryan at all cost" mentality your crying about ...
Read this thread.
There are posters saying that this organization is NOTHING without Bryan. This disturbs me. It insults my city, my pride, my loyalty to this team.



Profanity wrote:This is why I question a Canadian team in our league. it's a govt conspiracy trina to sell all our milk to Russia. They let the raptors participate to not let canadians demand crossing taxes. it will backfire one day.


whoknows wrote:Face it - BC is the only name from this pathetic organization that gets respect in the league.
If he decides to leave the things will get worst fast.
First the value of the franchise will get a lot lower, since no decent GM would want to touch it.
And how many Canadian owners do you know that really would want to spend money on the NBA laughing stock franchise?
I think that if he leaves in bad terms, it is the beginning of the end for the raps stay in Canada. He will leave with the last shred of credibility for a franchise that has always had hard time to attract any real talent.
darth_federer wrote:I can understand some of you arguing that BC is a good executive even though I disagree, but to suggest that this team will somehow fold or that GMs wouldnt touch our team with a ten foot pole just beggars belief. I guess people will delude themselves into believing whatever they want. Bryan is not the man with the finger in the broken dam. If he leaves we ll move on. This is a top 10 franchise in terms of profit and revenue. This city is one of the richest in North America and it has a great fanbase. We will move on and adapt like we always have.
SDM wrote:In what other avenue of life would we even be considering Colangelo to "finish what he started"? Lets think about it:
Say we hire some guys to build a deck and they do a crappy job and the deck falls apart. The same guys put in a bid to fix the deck. Do you hire them?
Say we visit a restaurant and receive a pube in the food. Do we send the food back and ask them to take the pube out or do we just not go back?
I mean, are both of those comparisons out to lunch? I think they're frighteningly accurate.
LodzBaluty wrote:His ability to change his vision overtime, cost this organization dearly.
The JO flip flop was the biggest mistake. We should have lived with it and enjoyed the cap that year. Miami would not have had the same leverage, and we would not be in this position.
Changing your vision, every year, is not exactly a sign of focus. A rebuilding team needs a vision that is adhered to for the long term. It is my understanding that Bryan wanted to use the pick to make trades to get us back into the playoffs and got shot down by the board.