Post#114 » by Smitty731 » Sun Jul 24, 2016 12:19 am
I posted this on the Trade board, but I want to post it here too to give a little understanding of why trades can take quite a while to come together from the first time a rumor of them is put out there:
While it isn't fantasy sports in that real life trades take time to come together, I see some similarities in the process.
When you want to make a trade in fantasy, you rarely start with your best offer. You start with something lower in hopes the other guy will bite. If not, you increase it until you land to a point as far as you go. It is a game.
You lowball, they come in way higher, you both know you will meet in the middle in the end. But if you don't start at either point you wonder "Damn could I have gotten it for less?"
Having met a lot of people the past year, it isn't much different at all in real life in terms of process. What is different is that it takes more than a handful of texts and emails to get it done. These are real people with real situations. And you don't get to start over fresh the following season. You have to manage the entire processes carefully to take care of all parties involved (owners, GMs, coaches, players, agents, families of each). Making even what we determine to be a ridiculously small trade takes time. And that is before you factor in the league itself and any sort of medical sitaution.
I have gone back and forth for ages on sharing this, but I want to now for some context:
I was told by several people very close (VERY close) to the Cameron Bairstow/Spencer Dinwiddie trade (about as minor a NBA deal as you can get) that it took well over a week to come together. Both sides had lots of due diligence to do. And in that trade both players were ultimately waived by the teams that acquired them. So, if that minor of a deal took over a week, you can only imagine how long it takes for "big" trades to come together.
The one exception is at the Draft. And there is a reason several teams rarely, if ever, trade at the Draft. They aren't comfortable with the rapid fire nature. But even then, Draft day trades are often put together days or weeks in advance in theory and then executed as the Draft unfolds. I had one team tell me that they had no less than 5 or 6 options set up in advance with other teams based on various scenarios that could have happened in the Draft.
So, even when a GM says "It came together quickly." it is important to understand that is relative to how quickly a trade usually happens in the NBA.