jowglenn wrote:GodDamnRobin, you are seriously one of the most ridiculous Pacers haters I've ever seen. One of the most ridiculous haters, period.
Yeah, the Pacers PR machine... Uh, every team has those. Everyone posts news about their favorite team, any good news that comes out during the offseason. I'm pretty sure Demar Derozan did some amazing thing, and Eliot Williams has a 48 inch vertical, and so on and so forth.
They sure do, but the Pacers seem better at this than other front offices, because the fans fall for it all the time.
But your complete historical ignorance is astounding. Yes, usually cap space is used to take on overpaid players. You're right. But often times you get some compensation in return. Also, they're usually overpaid for 2 or 3 years, not 4 or 5 like if you sign them as a FA.
Here are some examples (these are literally the ones off the top of my head) that show what a fool you are:
1. OKC trades cap space for Matt Harpring and Eric Maynor. So yeah, they pay Harpring but got a young guy on a rookie contract.
You're going to build your team around Maynor? Nobody is saying you can't get a talent upgrade by eating some bad contracts, the point being made (very clearly I think) is you can't use it to get the sort of upgrade you guys need.
2. OKC trades cap space for Mo Pete and moving up like 10 spots in the draft. They moved up like 10 spots, which isn't nothing.
Same point, it's not like they moved from 11 to 1, this is all marginal stuff, and in a weak draft to boot. Note also, OKC was able to do this sort of thing because they were a losing team with a low payroll, whereas Indy is trying to win and, if they get their way and spend on someone like Nene, they will not have enough space to be pulling off all these trades for long. I'd be thrilled if the Pacers tried to blow it up like this, it doesn't seem to be the direction they're moving for though.
3. Jazz got Al Jefferson for 2 picks and cap space - cap space is way more attractive than an expiring contract. Yes, Jefferson is maybe overpaid, but the cap space allowed them to get him there when there would not have been much of any chance to get him as a FA.
... how has Al Jefferson worked out for them? Notice the 2 picks. You guys can't give them picks if you're trying to win and rebuild at the same time, and that's the exact problem with Indy. Let's say you traded your next 2 picks and cap space for Jefferson circa 2010. Would that solve your problems? No. That's the point, you can't solve your core problems this way.
4. Heat gave Beasley to the Wolves for cap space (so they could sign Lebron/Bosh).
You can't sign Lebron and Bosh. This is what we call an outlier. You're not it.
5. Bullls traded Hinrich and the 17th pick to Washington for... cap space.
Hinrich did Washington little good and was soon moved, the Bulls needed the space to acquire the much more talented Boozer. That's the thing I keep explaining, these are all marginal upgrades, the sort that won't help your team change the fundamental realities of your make uo. And you don't have the cap space to do all these deals, just 1 or 2.
So, to recap: You have no f***ing clue what you're talking about, you're an anti-Pacers troll (which is super-weird... i mean... the pacers? who HATES the pacers?) and your references on other threads to players like David Harrison (who you referred to as Dwight Harrison) and Jonathan Bender show just how woefully stuck in the past you are.
Re-cap, you didn't read anything I said.
You couldn't even come up with any recent examples of how the pacers "PR Machine" hypes up players. David Harrison was never nearly as hyped up as you seem to think, anyway. He was a 30th pick in the draft, was 7' and huge, and at the time we thought, "hey he could end up being a contributor."
Big concession there. Dude, I gave you plenty of examples of hyped up players on your team. Bender, F.Jones, B.Rush, I.Diogu, Harrison, S.Williams,
the guys you have on your team right now.
Bender actually WAS A GOOD PLAYER. Not that you would know that, given your utterly pathetic knowledge of basketball, particularly as it pertains to the Pacers. The guy was a great contributor for us; health issues derailed his whole career while he was just coming into his own.
Bender sucked long before any injury problems, he was a DNP machine while in perfect health. But thanks for being honest with how you felt about him.