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Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV

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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1221 » by stevemcqueen1 » Thu Oct 17, 2013 10:55 pm

Dark Faze wrote:Asik is one of the best bigs in basketball and there's virtually zero chance we miss the playoffs so long as he's on the floor.


Statements like this just do not compute for me. How is Asik one of the best bigs in basketball?

Asik is not one of the best bigs in basketball, he's a role player. And he's not an automatic ticket to the playoffs.

So many of our fans serially overrate role players. Same deal with Ilyasova and people arguing for us to trade our draft pick for him. Though to be fair to them, Ilyasova is a far better player than Asik.

BTW I actually like both Asik and Ilyasova and would like to have seen both here, but there is absolutely no way I'd pay the kinds of prices so many around here seem happy to pay for them.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1222 » by payitforward » Fri Oct 18, 2013 1:10 am

stevemcqueen1 wrote:
Dark Faze wrote:Asik is one of the best bigs in basketball and there's virtually zero chance we miss the playoffs so long as he's on the floor.


Statements like this just do not compute for me. How is Asik one of the best bigs in basketball?

Asik is not one of the best bigs in basketball, he's a role player. And he's not an automatic ticket to the playoffs.

In my case, it's statements like yours that don't compute. "How is Asik one of the best bigs in basketball?" you ask. Well, just the way any player is one of the best at his position: by putting up numbers.

Asik was the second most prolific per-minute rebounder in the league among all Centers who played 15 or more minutes a game.

He's also a very strong defensive player. And he's a pretty efficient scorer -- but he doesn't shoot a lot, so he doesn't score a lot of points. Is that why you think he's a role player?

That said, I'm not altogether sure I'd rank him "one of the best bigs..." either. Depends on how big a group you think "the best" is. But, he's a very very good one -- in the top ten or dozen I'd say. By no means "a role player."
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1223 » by Illuminaire » Fri Oct 18, 2013 2:23 am

Asik is an excellent center. As PIF points out his defense and rebounding are elite.

I would agree with the heart of Steve's rebuttal, however. Asik is not an automatic playoff ticket because he is a 1-way player and falls short of true stardom (not in an all-star sense, but in a basketball impact sense). I watched about 30 Rockets games last season and his offensive limitations were clear. He could finish when Harden or Lin drew the defense out and then gave him a clear path to the basket, and struggled mightily to do almost anything else. His hands weren't great either, he bobbled and dropped a lot of passes most guys would catch and finish cleanly.

I certainly think he has a lot of value and brings a lot to the table, I'm just pointing out that Asik has some significant negatives too. Which, now that I re-read your last paragraph, brings us to about the same place on him. Lol. :P
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1224 » by payitforward » Fri Oct 18, 2013 9:22 pm

Illuminaire wrote:Asik is an excellent center. As PIF points out his defense and rebounding are elite.

Wouldn't it be nice to have an excellent center whose defense and rebounding are elite!

Illuminaire wrote:Asik is not an automatic playoff ticket,,,

So what? There are very very few automatic playoff ticket guys -- LeBron and... maybe Durant... and... no one else I can think of.

Illuminaire wrote:he is a 1-way player and falls short of true stardom (not in an all-star sense, but in a basketball impact sense).

So what? The more productive the players on your team are the more productive your team is -- and therefore the more games you win. And if such a guy is young enough to be on his highest-production plateau over the coming several years, he's an automatic want. That's Asik.

Of course, salary enters into the equation as well, and Asik brings a big number for next year whereafter he's unrestricted. So the questions about trading for him turn on what we'd have to give up and whether we'd have some understanding w/ his agent about his next contract, i.e. some way to feel close to certain we'd be able to keep him and at what price. I wouldn't be likely to rank him above Pekovic (or if so then only a little above). That's a $12m salary. Something to consider.

Illuminaire wrote:...brings us to about the same place on him. Lol. :P

I.e. he's among the top dozen big men, and he's young -- and he's available, which not a lot of guys like him are! Have to think about a guy like that.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1225 » by mhd » Fri Oct 18, 2013 9:39 pm

My latest:

Wiz trade Nene+Porter for Josh Smith+Charlie V
Det trade: Josh Smith+Monroe+Charlie V for Blake Griffin+Otto Porter
LAC trade: Blake Griffin for Monroe+Nene

Clips get Nene & Monroe to beef up the frontcourt.
Det gets a much more structured lineup in Drummond at Center, Blake at PF, and Porter at SF.
Wiz get Josh Smith to play PF next to Emeka.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1226 » by nuposse04 » Fri Oct 18, 2013 9:45 pm

Josh Smith is terrible at his price, why would you want him for the next 4 years? AND you give Porter to take on his awfulness. :/
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1227 » by LyricalRico » Fri Oct 18, 2013 9:47 pm

^ I really don't see the Clippers trading Griffin. I also don't see Griffin as enough of an upgrade IMO over Josh Smith to justify giving up Monroe.

But if DET were willing to give up Monroe for a wing to balance the roster, I'd offer Porter+Ariza+first (protected) for Monroe+Charlie V as fast as I could.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1228 » by mhd » Fri Oct 18, 2013 10:00 pm

LyricalRico wrote:^ I really don't see the Clippers trading Griffin. I also don't see Griffin as enough of an upgrade IMO over Josh Smith to justify giving up Monroe.

But if DET were willing to give up Monroe for a wing to balance the roster, I'd offer Porter+Ariza+first (protected) for Monroe+Charlie V as fast as I could.



I wouldn't. I think Monroe is an AWFUL defender. He's Jamison/Bargnani-like in his defense. Couple that with his impending extension, I'd pass and keep Porter.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1229 » by Illuminaire » Sat Oct 19, 2013 12:00 am

payitforward wrote:
Illuminaire wrote:Asik is an excellent center. As PIF points out his defense and rebounding are elite.

Wouldn't it be nice to have an excellent center whose defense and rebounding are elite!


Of course. Which is why I concluded he was a good player worthy of acquiring. Stop being blindly contentious.

Illuminaire wrote:Asik is not an automatic playoff ticket,,,
payitforward wrote:So what? There are very very few automatic playoff ticket guys -- LeBron and... maybe Durant... and... no one else I can think of.


Conversational context. A poster claimed that Asik was an automatic playoff ticket. I disagreed, and said so. You are once again being reactionary for zero reason.

Illuminaire wrote:he is a 1-way player and falls short of true stardom (not in an all-star sense, but in a basketball impact sense).
payitforward wrote:So what? The more productive the players on your team are the more productive your team is -- and therefore the more games you win. And if such a guy is young enough to be on his highest-production plateau over the coming several years, he's an automatic want. That's Asik.


See above.

Illuminaire wrote:...brings us to about the same place on him. Lol. :P
payitforward wrote:I.e. he's among the top dozen big men, and he's young -- and he's available, which not a lot of guys like him are! Have to think about a guy like that.


Sure, if the price is right.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1230 » by stevemcqueen1 » Sat Oct 19, 2013 2:36 am

nuposse04 wrote:Josh Smith is terrible at his price, why would you want him for the next 4 years? AND you give Porter to take on his awfulness. :/


I actually think JSmoove has a fair contract. Remember when they were talking max deal with him?

Remember there is a big man tax for PFs and Cs. Four years is OK for his age and his skill set. That last year might be dicey, but he should be about the same player over most of the deal.

But I definitely would not make that deal for him. I think Porter ends up being a better and more valuable player than him outright. And probably within the next four years too, not to mention all the years after that.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1231 » by stevemcqueen1 » Sat Oct 19, 2013 3:45 am

payitforward wrote:In my case, it's statements like yours that don't compute. "How is Asik one of the best bigs in basketball?" you ask. Well, just the way any player is one of the best at his position: by putting up numbers.

Asik was the second most prolific per-minute rebounder in the league among all Centers who played 15 or more minutes a game.

He's also a very strong defensive player. And he's a pretty efficient scorer -- but he doesn't shoot a lot, so he doesn't score a lot of points. Is that why you think he's a role player?

That said, I'm not altogether sure I'd rank him "one of the best bigs..." either. Depends on how big a group you think "the best" is. But, he's a very very good one -- in the top ten or dozen I'd say. By no means "a role player."


In your first paragraph, I think you highlight our fundamental disconnect that keeps cropping up over and over. You tend to define players by their numbers--products of past performances in a specific set of circumstances. I prefer to define them by their collection of skills and physical attributes. I think those are better predictors of future performance than past numbers because I think what a player will do in the future is MOST determined by X, Y, and Z things that he can do, independent of any outside factors like teammates, systems, and situations. Of course, the difficulty in this approach is in accurately defining skill sets, which is not a science, and requires lots of observation, perspective, and revision because players change a lot.

And it needs to be repeated often around here, basketball's numbers do a very poor job truly capturing on court events. To me this is a self evident truth. I simply can not get on the same page with someone who disagrees with that. Its the main reason I've had so many disagreements with you and other stat guys like Nivek.

Anyway, I think you do raise an interesting and difficult questions. How do you define a role player? What is this opposed to? How do you determine a role player's value?

I think the proper answers to those questions are very nebulous. I'm not sure you can figure out absolute values in team building resources for players in practice. Everything is going to be very comparative, very relative.

This is my attempt at defining what a role player is: someone who is useful primarily for filling in the cracks in your roster between your foundation pieces.

A foundation piece is determined by the value of his collection of attributes. For someone to be a foundation piece, they need to do enough things at a high level to build your lineups around without having to compensate too much for their weaknesses. A foundation piece is a foundation piece because it would be extremely difficult and costly to replace what they bring to the table. They need to be excellent at some skills that are rare and thus difficult and expensive to acquire in team building resources.

And this skews towards offense and scoring because high level offensive ability is the most skill intensive and the most uncommon set of skills. 1.) Individual shot creativity or consistent ability to create shots for teammates. 2.) Scoring or assisting in volume with acceptable efficiency. 3.) Clutch scoring. These are the MOST rare and valuable skills in the NBA by far. They define a player's value more than any other collection of attributes because basketball is a game of scoring buckets and scoring buckets in the NBA is extremely hard. Somebody has to be able to do it or your team will lose. It doesn't matter how good a defender you are. It doesn't matter how good a rebounder you are. You have to be able to contribute on offense in some sort of uniquely useful way at an above average level, or you are a role player. You have to be able to do something on offense that most other NBA players can't.

Individual creativity, volume scoring ability, and clutch scoring ability being the most valuable attributes in the NBA is why every single NBA player and coach ever would understand and accept that a player like Carmelo Anthony is far more valuable than a role player like, say, Larry Sanders, even though stat nerds are absolutely certain the opposite is true. It's why Carmelo makes tons of money and his teams win a ton of games. The best defensive and best rebounding team will still lose in the NBA if they don't have someone that can nut up and score. Or regularly help someone else score.

Anyway, your position on Asik being one of the dozen best bigs in the NBA is coherent given what I know of your position on a player like Drummond. I strongly disagree with you on both. Simply put, you overvalue players with almost no unique scoring ability based on their rebounding ability. Rebounding is an important part of a team's success in general, but it is not a uniquely valuable individual skill. It's a cheaply acquired skill. Reggie Evans led the league in rebounding rate last season and makes 1.2 million this season. He'll probably struggle for minutes behind a group of front court players who who are FAR inferior rebounders but are far superior offensive players. Rebounding ability is the least valuable of the three phases of the game, behind offense and defense.

Asik has an extremely limited offensive skill set. He does not have shooting range beyond 3 feet. He can't dribble, can't face up, can't get himself to the rim. He can't create looks for himself from the post. He can't get himself to the FT line at an unusual rate and he can't shoot FTs well. He can't facilitate offense for others from the high post or the top of the key. His one offensive skill is catching the ball at the rim and dunking it or laying it in. This is not a rare or valuable offensive skill set. This is why he's a role player. He's a fifth option on offense for a team. He doesn't score much because he CAN'T score much. You could not run a successful offense through him. You could not build a good offense around him by treating him as a foundational piece and devoting those kinds of team building resources to him.

- Dwight Howard
- Tim Duncan
- Joakim Noah
- Carlos Boozer
- Roy Hibbert
- David West
- Nene
- Al Horford
- Paul Millsap
- LaMarcus Aldridge
- Kevin Love
- Marc Gasol
- Zach Randolph
- Pau Gasol
- Serge Ibaka
- Blake Griffin
- Dirk Nowitzki
- Chris Bosh
- Brook Lopez
- Kevin Garnett
- David Lee
- Josh Smith

There's 22 NBA bigs off the top of my head who are unquestionably better and more valuable than Asik. Most significantly so. Plenty more who are better than him too but don't have as obvious a case and I don't feel like having to argue against those who would cherry pick them. Suffice to say most teams have at least one big man who is a better and more valuable player than Asik. Asik is a quality role player, but an average player by the standards of all NBA bigs when you include the foundational guys, much less players across all positions in the league.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1232 » by stevemcqueen1 » Sat Oct 19, 2013 4:16 am

Illuminaire wrote:Asik is an excellent center. As PIF points out his defense and rebounding are elite.


I agree with most of your post. I disagree that Asik's defense is elite though. Asik's defense in limited minutes and a fairly limited role in that Chicago system was elite. But that's a lot of caveats. Expand his role and minutes and put him in a far less favorable run and shoot system in Houston and his defense is better than average, but not elite.

This goes back to deficiencies in his skill set that limit him. He doesn't have great feet and he's not very fast. He's a grounded player and he's not an elite PnR defender. He's not particularly rangy, not someone who negates space. He's out of his element when trying to stay in front of perimeter ball handlers. He's alright at some of those things, but not elite at any of them. And he's a pretty average shot blocker. He's a big body and very physical presence, typical goon. He's an elite rebounder and does a great job finishing off the D and ending possessions. He can body up most bigs in the lane and make them uncomfortable, he can hard foul judiciously and effectively, he's fairly cerebral, and he excels in man D on back to basket scorers. Those are definitely very important qualities for a defensive C. But he's not the complete defender that the truly elite guys like Gasol, Howard, Noah, Duncan, and Hibbert are.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1233 » by popper » Sat Oct 19, 2013 4:29 am

stevemcqueen1 wrote:
payitforward wrote:In my case, it's statements like yours that don't compute. "How is Asik one of the best bigs in basketball?" you ask. Well, just the way any player is one of the best at his position: by putting up numbers.

Asik was the second most prolific per-minute rebounder in the league among all Centers who played 15 or more minutes a game.

He's also a very strong defensive player. And he's a pretty efficient scorer -- but he doesn't shoot a lot, so he doesn't score a lot of points. Is that why you think he's a role player?

That said, I'm not altogether sure I'd rank him "one of the best bigs..." either. Depends on how big a group you think "the best" is. But, he's a very very good one -- in the top ten or dozen I'd say. By no means "a role player."


In your first paragraph, I think you highlight our fundamental disconnect that keeps cropping up over and over. You tend to define players by their numbers--products of past performances in a specific set of circumstances. I prefer to define them by their collection of skills and physical attributes. I think those are better predictors of future performance than past numbers because I think what a player will do in the future is MOST determined by X, Y, and Z things that he can do, independent of any outside factors like teammates, systems, and situations. Of course, the difficulty in this approach is in accurately defining skill sets, which is not a science, and requires lots of observation, perspective, and revision because players change a lot.

And it needs to be repeated often around here, basketball's numbers do a very poor job truly capturing on court events. To me this is a self evident truth. I simply can not get on the same page with someone who disagrees with that. Its the main reason I've had so many disagreements with you and other stat guys like Nivek.

Anyway, I think you do raise an interesting and difficult questions. How do you define a role player? What is this opposed to? How do you determine a role player's value?

I think the proper answers to those questions are very nebulous. I'm not sure you can figure out absolute values in team building resources for players in practice. Everything is going to be very comparative, very relative.

This is my attempt at defining what a role player is: someone who is useful primarily for filling in the cracks in your roster between your foundation pieces.

A foundation piece is determined by the value of his collection of attributes. For someone to be a foundation piece, they need to do enough things at a high level to build your lineups around without having to compensate too much for their weaknesses. A foundation piece is a foundation piece because it would be extremely difficult and costly to replace what they bring to the table. They need to be excellent at some skills that are rare and thus difficult and expensive to acquire in team building resources.

And this skews towards offense and scoring because high level offensive ability is the most skill intensive and the most uncommon set of skills. 1.) Individual shot creativity or consistent ability to create shots for teammates. 2.) Scoring or assisting in volume with acceptable efficiency. 3.) Clutch scoring. These are the MOST rare and valuable skills in the NBA by far. They define a player's value more than any other collection of attributes because basketball is a game of scoring buckets and scoring buckets in the NBA is extremely hard. Somebody has to be able to do it or your team will lose. It doesn't matter how good a defender you are. It doesn't matter how good a rebounder you are. You have to be able to contribute on offense in some sort of uniquely useful way at an above average level, or you are a role player. You have to be able to do something on offense that most other NBA players can't.

Individual creativity, volume scoring ability, and clutch scoring ability being the most valuable attributes in the NBA is why every single NBA player and coach ever would understand and accept that a player like Carmelo Anthony is far more valuable than a role player like, say, Larry Sanders, even though stat nerds are absolutely certain the opposite is true. It's why Carmelo makes tons of money and his teams win a ton of games. The best defensive and best rebounding team will still lose in the NBA if they don't have someone that can nut up and score. Or regularly help someone else score.

Anyway, your position on Asik being one of the dozen best bigs in the NBA is coherent given what I know of your position on a player like Drummond. I strongly disagree with you on both. Simply put, you overvalue players with almost no unique scoring ability based on their rebounding ability. Rebounding is an important part of a team's success in general, but it is not a uniquely valuable individual skill. It's a cheaply acquired skill. Reggie Evans led the league in rebounding rate last season and makes 1.2 million this season. He'll probably struggle for minutes behind a group of front court players who who are FAR inferior rebounders but are far superior offensive players. Rebounding ability is the least valuable of the three phases of the game, behind offense and defense.

Asik has an extremely limited offensive skill set. He does not have shooting range beyond 3 feet. He can't dribble, can't face up, can't get himself to the rim. He can't create looks for himself from the post. He can't get himself to the FT line at an unusual rate and he can't shoot FTs well. He can't facilitate offense for others from the high post or the top of the key. His one offensive skill is catching the ball at the rim and dunking it or laying it in. This is not a rare or valuable offensive skill set. This is why he's a role player. He's a fifth option on offense for a team. He doesn't score much because he CAN'T score much. You could not run a successful offense through him. You could not build a good offense around him by treating him as a foundational piece and devoting those kinds of team building resources to him.

- Dwight Howard
- Tim Duncan
- Joakim Noah
- Carlos Boozer
- Roy Hibbert
- David West
- Nene
- Al Horford
- Paul Millsap
- LaMarcus Aldridge
- Kevin Love
- Marc Gasol
- Zach Randolph
- Pau Gasol
- Serge Ibaka
- Blake Griffin
- Dirk Nowitzki
- Chris Bosh
- Brook Lopez
- Kevin Garnett
- David Lee
- Josh Smith

There's 22 NBA bigs off the top of my head who are unquestionably better and more valuable than Asik. Most significantly so. Plenty more who are better than him too but don't have as obvious a case and I don't feel like having to argue against those who would cherry pick them. Suffice to say most teams have at least one big man who is a better and more valuable player than Asik. Asik is a quality role player, but an average player by the standards of all NBA bigs when you include the foundational guys, much less players across all positions in the league.


Steve - Very nice analysis and you make many excellent points but I would still love to have Asik just the same. And weren't Charles Oakley and Dennis Rodman super-valuable just being tough defenders and rebounders (although Oakley did develop a nice mid-range shot toward the latter part of his career - a skill Asik and Rodman lack). As you mention, stats don't tell the complete story.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1234 » by payitforward » Sat Oct 19, 2013 1:35 pm

Illuminaire wrote:You are ...reactionary for zero reason.

You're right. Apologies. You and I are in violent agreement; I was argueing w/ someone else but in the wrong place.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1235 » by payitforward » Sat Oct 19, 2013 1:53 pm

stevemcqueen1 wrote:...our fundamental disconnect... You tend to define players by their numbers--products of past performances in a specific set of circumstances. I prefer to define them by their collection of skills and physical attributes. I think those are better predictors of future performance than past numbers because I think what a player will do in the future is MOST determined by X, Y, and Z things that he can do, independent of any outside factors like teammates, systems, and situations. Of course, the difficulty in this approach is in accurately defining skill sets, which is not a science, and requires lots of observation, perspective, and revision because players change a lot.

This is great, steve.... But I think the reasons you give to support your pov actually support my pov. :) Let me say why.

Actually, it's pretty simple. If "what a player will do in the future is MOST determined by X, Y, and Z things that he can do, independent of any outside factors like teammates, systems, and situations" then surely the same can be said of what that player did in the past. What he did in the past was produced by his own capabilities (i.e. "independent of any outside factors like teammates, systems, and situations").

Hence, we can reasonably predict what a guy will do in the future from what he did in the past. Of course, we also want to take into account injuries, etc. when we look at what he did in the past, and we want to take into account aging, etc. when we look at the future. But still your point holds. And, in fact, research supports it: players tend to produce more or less the same numbers as they move from team to team (i.e. "independent of... outside factors"). You have to factor in the arc from raw rookie to diminished last years, of course, but the point still holds.

So... if I can predict a player's future from his past w/ reasonable accuracy (taking into account injuries and "the arc"), then why do I need to be engaging in this "not a science" activity of worrying about "skill sets?" Don't get me wrong -- you can't have all shooters no matter how good they are, you can't put 5 Centers on the floor, etc. But given these obvious factors to keep in mind, the smart thing to do seems to be to acquire players who put up the best numbers in the past: they'll put up the best numbers in the future.

And in fact that's how it works in practice, because it is true by definition that the players on the best teams put up the best numbers! (and this is confirmed when you list teams in order of those numbers -- the order is the same as ordering by win-loss record, to @98% I believe over the 82 game schedule)

In short, get players w/ the best numbers and you have the best team. I can't understand why anyone would think this was controversial. Not that this simple rule is simple to execute: the cap, market size, etc. turn it into a complex process. Still some guys are good at it (Darryl Morey, Sam Presti...) and some aren't (Ernie Grunfeld).
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1236 » by Nivek » Sat Oct 19, 2013 3:24 pm

SteveMcQueen: You'll need to identify what "numbers" you're talking about. On its face, that statement is an exaggeration, at best.

As for "skills" -- they're wonderful when they translate into production. Can't begin to think of the number of times I've admired or heard tale of a guy's "skills" only to realize he doesn't actually accomplish much.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1237 » by mhd » Sat Oct 19, 2013 8:52 pm

BTW, I think there is a 0% chance Emeka is traded. Insurance is going to pick up his contract if he's out for an extended period of time. That's a ton of money Ted is going to save.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1238 » by gambitx777 » Sun Oct 20, 2013 10:13 pm

if some one want's him, and we can get a nice return for him, meaning that any one we get in return does not harm the team and we do not give up picks in the trade. I'm ok with it.
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1239 » by deneem4 » Mon Oct 21, 2013 11:20 am

Of course deneem favorite trade scenario...
Pj3=harrison barnes

Nene/singleton/seraphin/2015 2nd
For
Perkins/collison/pj3/2014 1st/2015 1st rd

Nene shot 3% better than perkins last yr...
Collsion becomes a reliable backup with harrington
Pj3 becomes otto evil twin
2 1st rounders for singleton and seraphin...

Steven adams is looking good we need to press the issue before he becomes theyre starter...nene doesn't want to play for the wizards he going to be injured every other game again considering wittman wony limit his minutes and he is going to have to play center...he already bitched abouyt playing against reggir Evans and lopez...imagine hibbert boozer drummond etc

Perkins sucks but shidd nene do too nowadays....I dont trust him, he obviously dont want to be here, he wants his minutes limited, whittman isnt going to do tht which is jus going to make nene say hes injured every other game...AGAIN..
Now while I would love a boozer or asik...the idea of getting draft picks trump the idea of adding contracts to get swept in the playoffs...while theyre not top draft picks...theyre picks regardless, and can be packaged to get us a better one or quality role player...
Perkins become an expiring nxt yr...he can be our bruiser til okafor comes baxk and bruise opponents off the bench,


Pj3 has been extended for 3yrs at 1mil...thats a steal if he can be half of the player hes projected...he have the potential skills and size...jus lack the determination....I see it as being on a top contender in the thunder...he knows he wont see minutes behind kd or ibaka...nor will he see touches as long as westbrook running point...on the wizards he have a chance...hes the perfect stretch 4 for wall considering he can take it coast to coast on a fast break...not to mention hes 7ft with a 38" vert...him and ves can be lob city with the right backup pg..the kid is going to be good
Pay your beals....or its lights out!!!
Bron, Bosh, Wade is like Mike, Hakeem, barkley...3 top 5 picks from same draft
mike, hakeem and Barkley on the same team!!!!
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TGW
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Re: Official Trade Thread - Part XXIV 

Post#1240 » by TGW » Mon Oct 21, 2013 6:01 pm

Looks pretty terrible deneem. Just from my perpective. Perkins stinks, and Collison is a low minute backup at this point. The Wizards could get Jones for much cheaper than this.
Some random troll wrote:Not to sound negative, but this team is owned by an arrogant cheapskate, managed by a moron and coached by an idiot. Recipe for disaster.

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