Paper Face wrote:The final offer makes it quite clear that OKC are not "nickle-and-diming" their fans. It was well within market range, and the luxury tax was all but guaranteed.
But yeah, congratulations are in order for Mr. Pelinka.
While it is a lose-lose, I have to tip my hat to Presti who still maximized Harden's value and played the whole situation like a complete professional. He's one of the best GM's in the league.
Harden is worth every penny. He might be undervalued at the max. We'll just have to agree to disagree.
I'm of the opinion that billionaire owners owe it to the fans to take a loss for a couple of years to win a championship. They probably would have stayed borderline profitable if they just raised ticket prices (which are quite low for how good they are) anyways. I mean it's their money, I just think it makes you an a**hole if you're worth billions and would rather have another $50M than give your fans something truly special. Staying profitable is important to owners like the millers, but if you're worth billions (fun fact, the majority owner made $112M in 2008 alone), just try being not so cheap for once. You'll die with more money than 99.99999% of people could ever imagine having either way.
I think the title of this thread should be "Harden got traded since Aubrey Mclendon wanted too much money."