dremill24 wrote:GoranTragic wrote:dremill24 wrote:
I just can't understand it..his value isn't even that good when he's NOT acting like an entitled baby. And now that he's a complete drain on the franchise we're still gonna hold out for some marginal upgrade that isn't coming anyway? I'd trade him for a bag of ball at this point. If they could get a full $8M expiring for him it'd be a huge win. Just get the **** done.
He's not good enough on the court to be worth all the hassle, and the perceived 'extra value' we'd get if he was at peak trade value isn't worth the hassle. This marriage just needs to end.
What the hell are you talking about? We are not dumping Kieff for garbage (that is what a bad GM would do) just because emotions are high. This is a business and McD is not in the business of doing horrible trades just for fun.
If these "contenders" want to make improvements then they will have to give us a nice package. Otherwise we continue tanking into the off-season. We are in no hurry and McD is not here to make other teams better.
Call it what you want but Kevin Love or Victor Oladipo or anybody who's actually worth anything isn't coming through that door in a deal for Kieff. You guys can dream all you want about dealing Chandler/Tucker/Kieff for some savior but it's not gonna happen. Every person here who is on the "keep Kieff til we get full value" kick thinks he's netting a package that is wildly unrealistic. There's no reason for it.
No doubt about that at this point in time. However if we can package Kieff/Chandler/Knight (or Bledose) in the off-season then we can get a better deal. Right now we are asking for the moon because there are multiple teams out there that will make the play-offs and will not get past the first round. You know who you are treadmill teams.
Even Atlanta has given up on their current squad and want to rebuild. This season is done and gone. Keep playing the youth and re-evaluate this off-season. I know that this process is slow as **** but it is the only option. We need patience more than we need a "savior" trade.