ImageImage

Cleavland and Atlanta talking

Moderators: dms269, HMFFL, Jamaaliver

mrmsix6
Bench Warmer
Posts: 1,454
And1: 1,778
Joined: Dec 29, 2011

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#21 » by mrmsix6 » Tue Mar 13, 2012 5:10 pm

There is no chance that the Cavs give up any combination of Varejao/Tristan Thompson/1st round pick for Josh Smith/Marvin Williams, let alone anyone else on the Hawks roster.

Someone seriously considered "Josh and Marvin for Jamison, Sessions, an unprotected pick, and Tristan Thompson" as something the Cavs wouldn't laugh at? Think about what you're proposing: 2 lottery picks, a huge expiring contract in Jamison (who is still a capable scorer this year), and a decent PG in Sessions for a 0-time all star PF with a low BBIQ and a lousy contract in Marvin Williams. Yup, that would be laughed at by the Cavs.
Superiorblogman
Banned User
Posts: 2,173
And1: 0
Joined: Jun 21, 2011
Location: The Transplant Capital

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#22 » by Superiorblogman » Tue Mar 13, 2012 5:35 pm

Cavs have nothing the Hawks should be interested in other than expirings and lotto picks. Josh Smith should not even be in the equation for a expiring or a late lotto pick. Cavs are the ones that should be getting laughed at here. :lol:
Rip2137
Analyst
Posts: 3,317
And1: 228
Joined: Jun 24, 2006

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#23 » by Rip2137 » Tue Mar 13, 2012 6:55 pm

How is Anderson Varajo any more a center than Al Horford? A inch and 5 lbs is the difference between a CLEAR PF in Horford and a Center in Anderson?
User avatar
ATL Boy
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 10,959
And1: 4,005
Joined: May 15, 2011
Location: Atlanta GA
       

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#24 » by ATL Boy » Tue Mar 13, 2012 7:08 pm

mrmsix6 wrote:There is no chance that the Cavs give up any combination of Varejao/Tristan Thompson/1st round pick for Josh Smith/Marvin Williams, let alone anyone else on the Hawks roster.

Someone seriously considered "Josh and Marvin for Jamison, Sessions, an unprotected pick, and Tristan Thompson" as something the Cavs wouldn't laugh at? Think about what you're proposing: 2 lottery picks, a huge expiring contract in Jamison (who is still a capable scorer this year), and a decent PG in Sessions for a 0-time all star PF with a low BBIQ and a lousy contract in Marvin Williams. Yup, that would be laughed at by the Cavs.

The Cavs wouldn't be in the lotto if they got Josh Smith, they'd probably get the number 8 spot the way the bottom of the east is. And btw Smith>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Thompson. Also the Cavs writers and reporters should GTFO with these Bull **** Smith/Marvin for Jamison rumors. That's something even Sund would laugh at. Like Blogman said the Cavs have nothing of interest to us other than expirings/lotto picks
SichtingLives wrote:life hack:

When a man heaves a live chainsaw towards you from distance, stand still. No one has good accuracy throwing a chainsaw.
User avatar
evildallas
General Manager
Posts: 9,412
And1: 1
Joined: Aug 11, 2005
Location: in the land of weak ownership
Contact:

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#25 » by evildallas » Tue Mar 13, 2012 10:41 pm

Rip2137 wrote:How is Anderson Varajo any more a center than Al Horford? A inch and 5 lbs is the difference between a CLEAR PF in Horford and a Center in Anderson?


He's more willing to play C than Horford and from watching the two play each other AV plays with a lot more length judging from the rebounding. Also for me the key is the draft picks this year to hopefully land Centers to groom. If we added a late lottery (or middle of the round pick) to our own, I'd say we go for Fab Melo (if you're not going to eligible then declare for the draft) and Festus Ezeli. That's 2 shots at a real NBA C to learn behind Varejao. If Cleveland's pick is high enough I consider Tyler Zeller (or Cody if he declares, but I don't think he will) as the big because he's more ready than Fab Melo.

If I draft a big the first thing I do is contact Clifford Ray and see if he'd like to come to Atlanta to work with my new project(s).
Going to donkey punch a leprechaun!
User avatar
evildallas
General Manager
Posts: 9,412
And1: 1
Joined: Aug 11, 2005
Location: in the land of weak ownership
Contact:

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#26 » by evildallas » Tue Mar 13, 2012 10:53 pm

As for Cleveland laughing, I'd point out that I didn't even include Thompson in my trade scenario. Also the horrible contract of Marvin Williams isn't actually that horrible. He has 2 more years at 16M on it. His PER is considerably higher than any SF that Cleveland has. Furthermore he plays good defense. His contract hurts us because we have 3 other guys in the lineup adding up to 50M dollars and only 1 player on a rookie scale deal. Cleveland is under the cap and have Irving and Thompson on rookie deals for many years to come. They can easily afford Marvin Williams at SF and improve their roster.

How about Marvin Williams for Omri Casspi:

http://games.espn.go.com/nba/tradeMachi ... Id=8yg8au9

Saves us a lot a cap space and probably pushes the Cavs over the top into the playoffs because it doesn't cost them Sessions or Jamison and upgrades one of the 2 weak spots in their lineup.
Going to donkey punch a leprechaun!
johnny878
Senior
Posts: 685
And1: 1
Joined: Jul 27, 2008

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#27 » by johnny878 » Wed Mar 14, 2012 12:22 am

evildallas wrote:
Rip2137 wrote:How is Anderson Varajo any more a center than Al Horford? A inch and 5 lbs is the difference between a CLEAR PF in Horford and a Center in Anderson?


He's more willing to play C than Horford and from watching the two play each other AV plays with a lot more length judging from the rebounding. Also for me the key is the draft picks this year to hopefully land Centers to groom. If we added a late lottery (or middle of the round pick) to our own, I'd say we go for Fab Melo (if you're not going to eligible then declare for the draft) and Festus Ezeli. That's 2 shots at a real NBA C to learn behind Varejao. If Cleveland's pick is high enough I consider Tyler Zeller (or Cody if he declares, but I don't think he will) as the big because he's more ready than Fab Melo.

If I draft a big the first thing I do is contact Clifford Ray and see if he'd like to come to Atlanta to work with my new project(s).



The reason Varajo is thought of more of a center than AL is because Al is soft as hell. Whereas Varajo plays hard.

It doesnt matter the guys height or length, if he plays soft, people always will say he is a natural powerforward
User avatar
Ruhiel
Lead Assistant
Posts: 4,502
And1: 45
Joined: Dec 28, 2010

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#28 » by Ruhiel » Wed Mar 14, 2012 12:49 am

johnny878 wrote:
The reason Varajo is thought of more of a center than AL is because Al is soft as hell. Whereas Varajo plays hard.

It doesnt matter the guys height or length, if he plays soft, people always will say he is a natural powerforward


Agenda

Horford disagrees with this bolded part. “I'm fine with [center] but my natural position is obviously the four,” he said.
parson
RealGM
Posts: 10,316
And1: 469
Joined: May 02, 2001

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#29 » by parson » Wed Mar 14, 2012 4:53 pm

johnny878 wrote:The reason Varajo is thought of more of a center than AL is because Al is soft as hell. Whereas Varajo plays hard.

It doesnt matter the guys height or length, if he plays soft, people always will say he is a natural powerforward

That wasn't true until the end of last year. Up till then, he'd been a pretty tough player. I wonder if the back injury (Griffin throw-down) and the hamstring problems contributed. Still, he has a record of production at Center that merits a little more respect, I think. A career 9.4 rebound/game Center, giving up size and weight almost every game and playing good defense is not soft. Horford also has more than 50% more blocks/game than Varajao.

Varajao is a career 7.2 reb/game player, and only in the last 2 years has he done any strong rebounding. He's only rebounding well now at 29 years old - his prime. His most effective feature on defense is flopping. CLE would take Horford for Varajao every time and laugh at us.
My mother told me, she said, "Elwood, to make it in this world you either have to be oh, so clever or oh, so pleasant." Well, for years I was clever; I recommend pleasant.
Elwood P. Dowd (Jimmy Stewart, in the film "Harvey")
TheOUTLAW
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 41,920
And1: 2,757
Joined: Aug 23, 2002
     

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#30 » by TheOUTLAW » Sat Mar 17, 2012 11:20 pm

Varajao is a career 7.2 reb/game player, and only in the last 2 years has he done any strong rebounding. He's only rebounding well now at 29 years old - his prime. His most effective feature on defense is flopping. CLE would take Horford for Varajao every time and laugh at us.


None of this is true. Varejao has always been a good offensive rebounder, but his minutes have been up the last 2 years. Not to mention, his job description changed significantly the last 2 years over when we had Z, LeBron and various other bigs who were also good rebounders (this was why the Cavs were always among the best rebounding teams in the NBA). You view on his defense is not only wrong but laughable.
UncleDrew wrote: I get Buckets!
parson
RealGM
Posts: 10,316
And1: 469
Joined: May 02, 2001

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#31 » by parson » Sun Mar 18, 2012 3:53 am

TheOUTLAW wrote:
Varajao is a career 7.2 reb/game player, and only in the last 2 years has he done any strong rebounding. He's only rebounding well now at 29 years old - his prime. His most effective feature on defense is flopping. CLE would take Horford for Varajao every time and laugh at us.


None of this is true. Varejao has always been a good offensive rebounder, but his minutes have been up the last 2 years. Not to mention, his job description changed significantly the last 2 years over when we had Z, LeBron and various other bigs who were also good rebounders (this was why the Cavs were always among the best rebounding teams in the NBA). You view on his defense is not only wrong but laughable.

Everything I posted was true.
His career average is 7.2/game.
He has averaged 23.9 or more min/game since his 3rd NBA season (23.9 - 27.5 - 28.5 - 28.5 - 32.1 - 31.4). In that span, only in the last 2 seasons has he averaged more than 8.3 reb/game - a strong 9.7 and 11.5 in those last 2 years.

I think you really meant to post that you disagreed with the thrust of my statement, not that "None of this is true." But, unless you re-interpret "strong rebounding" to mean "decent rebounding", unless you discount Varajao's fame as a flopper, unless you grossly undervalue Al Horford's worth in relation to Varajao's .... you have to at least admit I have some good points.
My mother told me, she said, "Elwood, to make it in this world you either have to be oh, so clever or oh, so pleasant." Well, for years I was clever; I recommend pleasant.
Elwood P. Dowd (Jimmy Stewart, in the film "Harvey")
User avatar
HMFFL
Global Mod
Global Mod
Posts: 53,975
And1: 10,352
Joined: Mar 10, 2004

Re: Cleavland and Atlanta talking 

Post#32 » by HMFFL » Sat Mar 24, 2012 4:19 pm

Alex Kennedy: The Lakers weren't the only team pursuing Ramon Sessions. The Hawks expressed interest as well. Lucky for LA, those talks didn't progress. Twitter

Return to Atlanta Hawks