slappyg wrote:The point is that very few of them are willing to leave money on the table and an even bigger point is that they aren't willing to do it because of their ego.
LeBron did that.

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                                                                                                          slappyg wrote:The point is that very few of them are willing to leave money on the table and an even bigger point is that they aren't willing to do it because of their ego.

John Henson wrote:This lady just asked me who I play for and I said the Milwaukee Bucks, she quickly replied “oh the highschool across the street?”
Baddy Chuck wrote:slappyg wrote:The point is that very few of them are willing to leave money on the table and an even bigger point is that they aren't willing to do it because of their ego.
LeBron did that.

 
                                      
                                                                      imithanos wrote:DanoMac wrote:



And there no Butlers, PGs available, no Millsaps, no Griffins.... Perhaps G.Hill, but they have IT.
End the EAST will hit epic levels of crappiness.
MilBucksBackOnTop06 wrote:The fight for civil rights just like for liberty and justice and peace won't be won by man. It will take a god...so lets move on to sports.
Magic Giannison wrote:Giannis is god but even god's cannot save our **** team.
 
                    
                    
                                                        
               DanoMac wrote:
 
                    
                    
                                                                       
                    
                    
                    
                    
                                  KnicksGod wrote:Middleton probably the most underrated player in NBA History
MoreTrife wrote:Love seeing two buffoons have a buffoon competition.
 
                                      
                                                        
               Bucksfan28 wrote:Ainge may have been his own biggest detriment. I'm sure opposing GM's had ambitious visions at what they could shake out of his desperation, and when he wasn't throwing everything but the kitchen sink (EDIT: maybe he was? I missed any reported offers), they turned elsewhere.
Playing the long game could prove to be fruitful if GS disbands in a few years and LBJ is finally gone.
 
                    
                    
                                                        
               RRyder823 wrote:Bucksfan28 wrote:Ainge may have been his own biggest detriment. I'm sure opposing GM's had ambitious visions at what they could shake out of his desperation, and when he wasn't throwing everything but the kitchen sink (EDIT: maybe he was? I missed any reported offers), they turned elsewhere.
Playing the long game could prove to be fruitful if GS disbands in a few years and LBJ is finally gone.
No matter how Ainge plays it they're in great shape. Trade the future picks for a star and they could make a push now with the added security of knowing they got at least one star. Hold on to them and add 4 top 5 picks in 4 years while also making deep PO runs so there's not really the concern of them hitting the treadmill for another 4-5 years and that's only if none of those picks develop and if they don't then they can still tear down n rebuild.
Really it's the best of both worlds right now for them.
Honestly, despite my love for Giannis and how great he's going to be, if we could trade him for the entire Boston situation, (that includes Ainge, Stevens, roster and future picks), I'd probably do it. Their entire situation is that good.
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               RRyder823 wrote:Bucksfan28 wrote:Ainge may have been his own biggest detriment. I'm sure opposing GM's had ambitious visions at what they could shake out of his desperation, and when he wasn't throwing everything but the kitchen sink (EDIT: maybe he was? I missed any reported offers), they turned elsewhere.
Playing the long game could prove to be fruitful if GS disbands in a few years and LBJ is finally gone.
No matter how Ainge plays it they're in great shape. Trade the future picks for a star and they could make a push now with the added security of knowing they got at least one star. Hold on to them and add 4 top 5 picks in 4 years while also making deep PO runs so there's not really the concern of them hitting the treadmill for another 4-5 years and that's only if none of those picks develop and if they don't then they can still tear down n rebuild.
Really it's the best of both worlds right now for them.
Honestly, despite my love for Giannis and how great he's going to be, if we could trade him for the entire Boston situation, (that includes Ainge, Stevens, roster and future picks), I'd probably do it. Their entire situation is that good.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G870A using RealGM mobile app

 
                                                                                            
                
                    
                    
                                                        
               Prez wrote:
MoreTrife wrote:Love seeing two buffoons have a buffoon competition.
 
                    
                    
                                                        
               Bucksfan28 wrote:I like Randolph's deal more than Hill's, simply because George will eat in to De'Aaron's playing time. That team woulda been crazy young without those two.
 
                                      
                                                        
               BroncoBuck wrote:RRyder823 wrote:Bucksfan28 wrote:Ainge may have been his own biggest detriment. I'm sure opposing GM's had ambitious visions at what they could shake out of his desperation, and when he wasn't throwing everything but the kitchen sink (EDIT: maybe he was? I missed any reported offers), they turned elsewhere.
Playing the long game could prove to be fruitful if GS disbands in a few years and LBJ is finally gone.
No matter how Ainge plays it they're in great shape. Trade the future picks for a star and they could make a push now with the added security of knowing they got at least one star. Hold on to them and add 4 top 5 picks in 4 years while also making deep PO runs so there's not really the concern of them hitting the treadmill for another 4-5 years and that's only if none of those picks develop and if they don't then they can still tear down n rebuild.
Really it's the best of both worlds right now for them.
Honestly, despite my love for Giannis and how great he's going to be, if we could trade him for the entire Boston situation, (that includes Ainge, Stevens, roster and future picks), I'd probably do it. Their entire situation is that good.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G870A using RealGM mobile app
You're better off having a star than not having a star. In that regard Bucks are ahead of Boston right now.
Not to mention the Horford contract and impending IT/Bradley contracts. That Horford deal was terrible. I get they did it to try and lure Durant, but the minute Durant went to Golden State that deal became a ball and chain. If not for that deal Boston wouldn't have had to wait on a PG or Butler trade until after FA because they'd have the cap to absorb both outright.
 
                                                                                                          fishnc wrote:If I had a gun with two bullets and I was in a room with Hitler, Bin Laden, and LeBron, I would shoot LeBron twice.