Ralphb07 wrote:DuckIII wrote:chitowndish wrote:This situation worries me because NYK is trying to unload Melo and Boston is the obvious trade partner so I could just see our FO freak out thinking they are going to lose out. Add into it that I think Gar is a horrible GM and I just feel like we're walking into a buzzsaw here. Ainge will just play us and the Knicks off of each other till he gets the offer he wants.
That's a good point about the Knicks, so the Bulls need to avoid that game. Melo is a trash asset compared to Butler. But I could understand the Celtics going that route knowing that Phil would trade him for a lot less than the Bulls would trade Butler. Makes some sense for Ainge.
So the Bulls can't play that game. To me Butler has played at such a high level that now two options are perfectly reasonable.
1. If Boston, or someone else but really only Boston appears to have the assets, will give it up to the tune of at the absolute minimum 2017 Nets pick, Brown and players, trade Butler and start over.
2. If the Bulls have to compromise, keep Butler, take a run at 2017 free agency.
There is no definitive "must keep Butler" or "must trade Butler" position that holds up to real scrutiny. It's a very, very close call that will be decided by context.
Minny has the assets too. Boston and Minnesota have been the teams my money has been on if they trade him
I'd hate to deal with Minnesota because I'm of the opinion that to win on a trade, you need the hope of getting a player who can one day outperform a max contract like Butler does now. Even if you get LaVine and Wiggins (and Minnesota fans wouldn't want to do it because while Butler would do more for them than those 2 for the next couple years, the T-Wolves are in no rush to contend), I think that's a bad deal for the Bulls because in a couple years, you have to pay both of these guys the max and I'm not sure even then they'll collectively impact winning as much as Butler does. You'd be paying those collectively over $50mm a year and if they can't bring the Wolves to mediocrity with Towns, they're going to have to make very significant improvement to make the Bulls even average. Certainly plausible, but unlikely.
Obviously, if you see LaVine or Wiggins as players who will one day be capable of outperforming a max contract, then you would disagree with my statement. I think they're both the kind of guys who are going to get max deals but not make huge impacts on the win/loss column.
If forced to deal Butler, I'd take the unknown of the Brooklyn picks, which I think gives you a better chance of landing a guy who will one day outperform a max deal. Based solely on opinion, I'd say whoever you get with 2 Brooklyn picks has maybe a 30ish percent chance of outperforming a max deal on their 2nd contract whereas I have a really hard time envisioning LaVine or Wiggins ever being that good.