RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14

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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#61 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Jul 17, 2017 4:59 pm

wojoaderge wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:One or two franchises can be mistaken, or a quirk of fate, or whatever, but the general rule is that you hold on to big time talent with your life. That's not how franchises treated Moses.

What are you talking about?


When we talk about Moses in this context we basically talk only about his time in Houston and Philly, but he played on 9 teams. Yes his team changes became more rapid as he gets older so you can argue that over states the issue, but both Houston and Philly had moved on from him by the time he was about 30. This is not how things typically go for top tier franchise players.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#62 » by wojoaderge » Mon Jul 17, 2017 5:20 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
wojoaderge wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:One or two franchises can be mistaken, or a quirk of fate, or whatever, but the general rule is that you hold on to big time talent with your life. That's not how franchises treated Moses.

What are you talking about?


When we talk about Moses in this context we basically talk only about his time in Houston and Philly, but he played on 9 teams. Yes his team changes became more rapid as he gets older so you can argue that over states the issue, but both Houston and Philly had moved on from him by the time he was about 30. This is not how things typically go for top tier franchise players.

He joined the Rockets in '76. He was traded from the 76ers in '86 with 12 years of wear and tear on him. So he was traded once during his prime era. Kareem and Wilt were also traded.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#63 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:07 pm

wojoaderge wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
wojoaderge wrote:What are you talking about?


When we talk about Moses in this context we basically talk only about his time in Houston and Philly, but he played on 9 teams. Yes his team changes became more rapid as he gets older so you can argue that over states the issue, but both Houston and Philly had moved on from him by the time he was about 30. This is not how things typically go for top tier franchise players.

He joined the Rockets in '76. He was traded from the 76ers in '86 with 12 years of wear and tear on him. So he was traded once during his prime era. Kareem and Wilt were also traded.


Go look at Moses' stats. He didn't fall off a cliff after he left Philly. The team made a decision to move on at a time when Moses was still Moses, and this was done after Houston had done the same.

Also, Kareem only played for 2 teams, Wilt only played for 3...and both are overrated in my book because I don't think they had the time of franchise benefit I see from most of the players we've been talking about so far.

Of course it's not the fact that Kareem played on 2 teams that means anything, but I'm absolutely telling you that whenever an in-prime superstar changes teams, it makes him suspect in my eyes. The way it just kept happening to Moses over and over again is frankly amazing.

Quite literally, Mike Conley is more revered by the Grizzlies than Moses seems to have ever been by any franchise. If you simply assume that's due to luck, I think you assume too much.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#64 » by wojoaderge » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:21 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:Of course it's not the fact that Kareem played on 2 teams that means anything, but I'm absolutely telling you that whenever an in-prime superstar changes teams, it makes him suspect in my eyes. The way it just kept happening to Moses over and over again is frankly amazing.

It happened once, and it only happened because he signed an offer sheet with 76ers.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#65 » by trex_8063 » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:29 pm

drza wrote:
Spoiler:
Travel has completely disconnected me from these discussions, and makes it hard to jump in at this point in the thread and make any difference. My main methods of evaluation thus far have been impact-oriented, trying to identify which (among the sea of great NBA players) have done the most to help their teams succeed. Evaluating this is more difficult once we get before the databall era, but with the +/- data from the 76ers statistician that fpliii gathered and the WOWY work that ElGee has spearheaded we've got more tools on that front than we have for any previous project.

Of the players left on the board, it seems to me that West, Robinson and Dirk have the best impact cases left. Dr. J, Malone and Malone also have strong cases in general, but there are more questions there. I'll get into them more in future threads (any that don't go in here), and they have the chance to move up my list. But coming in late without much time, for this thread I'll focus most on West, Robinson and Dirk.

West's WOWY results support that his abilities as a scoring team offense initiator made him one of the biggest impact players of his era, or any other. His game also seems very translatable across era, as there's little doubt in my mind that he would have been able to use the 3-pointer as a weapon to make him even more effective in the modern game than he was in his own. Injuries are a big concern for West. I could consider them as another area, though, in which West would have benefited from the more modern era with better medical and training techniques. That's less tangible, though. What is tangible is that West, along with Oscar, was one of the greatest offensive players of his era with a separation from anyone else of that time. That West had a lot of injuries is a negative, but those injuries also gave us plenty of chances to evaluate what his teams looked like without him...and they struggled. With him, they were great. And he did have a history of putting up big boxscore numbers in the postseason that, without any method of estimating postseason impact, defaults to looking really elite considering his measured/estimated regular season impact.

Robinson
was electric, to my eye test. His tournament run at Navy was some of the most exciting individual play I remember in the NCAA, and when he burst onto the scene in the pros after his tour of duty was up, he immediately looked like one of the best players in the NBA. Before the RPoY project I always felt like Robinson was overly downgraded for the Hakeem series in 95, but in that RPoY project several posters (especially Kaima) did a great job of pointing out how Robinson relatively struggled in 94, 96 and 98 against Karl Malone and the Jazz and used that as a basis for arguing that Robinson's playoff issues weren't just a Hakeem 95 thing, but a systemic issue. Subsequent research, posts and project discussions about Robinson's mechanisms of impact have been convincing that Robinson's game really does have tangible difficulty to be the focal iso-scoring lead in the playoffs...and that his overall offensive game wasn't diverse enough to maintain his offensive impact in the postseason. There is even some evidence that in the postseason in his peak, while trying to carry the load on both ends against some tough competition, Robinson's defensive impact slid a bit as well. These are all issues.

However, we have more information than that to work with to try to peg Robinson's level. It shouldn't have come as a shock to anyone, but Robinson's regular season on/off +/- data did peg him as the highest regular season impact player of the mid-90s (94 - 96). That's expected, but it is good to be able to quantify that. However, we also have quantitative impact estimates for another time period that is often minimized/ignored for Robinson...the 98 - 2000 period that has historically been considered the "Duncan era".

While it is unarguable that Duncan's presence as the focal point of the Spurs was huge in bringing the Spurs to championship level, and probably made the game much easier for Robinson...and while one could also strongly argue that Duncan may have been the actual leader of those teams and the player that opponents game-planned for...it's ALSO clear from the RAPM results that Robinson was having just about as much impact on the scoring margins of those 98 - 00 Spurs as Duncan was. Robinson was the defensive anchor on those teams, and with Timmy there as another offensive focus Robinson's offense was also able to flourish. And even in the postseason, the available on/off +/- numbers suggest that Robinson was able to maintain his huge regular season impact into the postseason in this era. Again, when we compare Robinson's postseason impact in the Duncan era to his impact at his peak, I think we have to credit Duncan's presence with making the game easier for him to maintain his best impact. However...that doesn't disqualify the impact itself. And I think that it also suggests that, while a team wouldn't want to move forward with Robinson as their focal offensive player, that a team that allows him to play to his strengths would be getting very possibly the highest impact player in the NBA in both the regular and post season.

Dirk played his whole career in the databall era, so we have the ability to measure/estimate his impact at a granularity that isn't available for previous generations. In both the regular and the postseason. He was a unique beast as a player, in that there isn't really a template for how a 7-footer with the offensive/scoring abilities of an elite wing can affect the game. What we saw, in practice, was that Dirk was able to make a very high impact on the game for much of the 2000s...he was regularly among the top 10, if not top-5, in the league as far as individual regular season impacts while carrying very successful teams.

But, while he actually improved on many of his boxscore stats in the postseason, he didn't have a very strong postseason impact run for most of the 2000s. I've argued, in the past, that those lower playoffs +/- numbers may have come from teams not distorting their defenses to defend him in the postseason the way that they did in the regular season. That teams may have been more willing to play Dirk straight up and let him get his as he could in the postseason, which allowed him to improve his scoring volume/efficiency, but may have weakened his spacing impact. That some of the teams would go so far as to defend Dirk with a wing instead of a big man, which further may have allowed him to get his but weakened his spacing impact on his team's results. And (as I've been arguing more and more in recent times), I think that a player's impact on team results can be much more important than his own scoring numbers, when it comes to estimating his overall impact.

Up through most of the 2000s, then, I'd argue that Dirk's seasons were similar impact-wise (in both the regular season and the playoffs) to what we saw from 90s Karl Malone. Malone's postseason scoring numbers dipped, unlike Dirk's, but again I don't know that Dirk's boxscore numbers were indicative of his actual impact. And in the larger regular season samples, both Karl (as measured by the available +/- numbers from 1994 on) and Dirk measured out in that top 5 - 10 players in the NBA range in the regular season and had trouble maintaining that in the postseason.

However, in the late 2000s up through 2011, Dirk upped his game. He added a more effective iso post game on offense, that took him out of the range of 7-foot scoring wing and gave him a legit big-boy component to his game. Thereafter, teams that tried to defend him with Stephen Jackson types would get punished. Also, I'd argue that by diversifying his scoring mechanisms an operating more from the post, it changed Dirk's center of offensive gravity and caused defenses to have to react to him in a more dynamic way. His shooting still provided interior spacing by bringing folks out, but his post-game could pull defenses more into the paint and make life a breeze for guys like Jason Terry. And his ability to partner the pick and roll/pop did the same, most famously around here for guys like J.J. Barea. And it's this late-prime modification to his game that separates Dirk from a player like Karl Malone, who also developed and diversified his offensive game in his late-prime to become a bigger offensive impact player...but never was able to do so to the full extent/effectiveness demonstrated by late-prime Dirk.

Overall: each of West, Robinson an Dirk had both a demonstrated/measurable all-time level impact that neither Erving, the Malones, or anyone else up in this category were able to match. However, each also had warts/limitations that kept them from going even higher on this list. To me, that means that right here is the exact right time to be discussing all three. And I'm not sure which is the correct order for the three. However, at the moment, Robinson's all-time defense in addition to his ability to operate at high level impacts as a secondary offensive threat (which is actually ideal for almost all big men) seems like the most effective of these three in the widest array of possibilities. West's injuries bother me, especially compared to a relative iron man like Dirk, but he also seemed to maintain his impact better throughout the course of his career...perhaps because his impact didn't rely so heavily on how teams chose to defend him, the way that Dirk's did until his post-game came into focus. Again, could be argued in any number of directions here (including with players that I didn't focus on), but having come in at this late stage of the thread, for now I have to just pick an order to vote, and then hope to have better discussions moving forward.

Vote: David Robinson
2nd: Jerry West


iirc, you and I have had some spirited debates in the past, but you are definitely among my favorite and most-respected posters. I love how you've recently been prefacing each post with "travel/work won't allow me to say much" or similar......and then [repeatedly] proceed to lay out some of the lengthiest and most detailed posts within the thread(s). I'd hate to see (and by that I mean I'd love to see) what you could do if you actually had some time.

I'm glad to see DRob get some support at this stage; it won't be long before I lend my vote to him too. The on/off totals of '94-'96 (and the RAPM----or it might actually "just" be an APM model, not sure----that colts18 did for those years (rs only)) paint peakish Robinson as the most impactful player (often by a substantial margin) in EACH of those years (during the rs).
That's no small statement considering that's over peakish Hakeem Olajuwon in '94-'95, and over a prime Jordan in '96 (to say nothing of the prime Mailmans, Barkleys, Pippens, Ewings, etc who were also around).

I generally agree with your assessment of him. Obviously his offense slips in the playoffs, for reasons I think you pretty well nailed. otoh, I was questioning the comment about his defense slipping a little in the ps, too. Not saying it's untrue, but it's something I'm going to look into when I have a half-hour uninterrupted to do so. Will be back with my findings when I get it done.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#66 » by Dr Positivity » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:30 pm

The 86 Sixers being in possession of Barkley, the #1 pick and 31 year old Moses and trading away the last two is one of the most baffling decisions in NBA history, I'm not going to hold it against Moses that they lost their damn minds
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#67 » by wojoaderge » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:31 pm

Dr Positivity wrote:The 86 Sixers being in possession of Barkley, the #1 pick and Moses and trading away the last two is one of the most baffling series of moves in history, I'm not going to hold it against Moses that they lost their damn minds

I thought it was a pretty good trade at the time
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#68 » by trex_8063 » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:33 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
wojoaderge wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:One or two franchises can be mistaken, or a quirk of fate, or whatever, but the general rule is that you hold on to big time talent with your life. That's not how franchises treated Moses.

What are you talking about?


When we talk about Moses in this context we basically talk only about his time in Houston and Philly, but he played on 9 teams. Yes his team changes became more rapid as he gets older so you can argue that over states the issue, but both Houston and Philly had moved on from him by the time he was about 30. This is not how things typically go for top tier franchise players.


Especially in that era, I would add. It does kinda stir one's curiosity, now that you mention it.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#69 » by wojoaderge » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:35 pm

trex_8063 wrote:Especially in that era, I would add. It does kinda stir one's curiosity, now that you mention it.

Except that he was traded once, for a team that he didn't want to play for anymore
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#70 » by trex_8063 » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:37 pm

Thru post #68 (will leave thread open maybe 2-3 hours more):

Jerry West - 5 (andrewww, Doctor MJ, mdonnelly1989, Outside, RCM88x)
Karl Malone - 5 (scabbarista, trex_8063, Winsome Gerbil, Joao Saraiva, oldschooled)
Julius Erving - 4 (BasketballFan7, Dr Positivity, Pablo Novi, Hornet Mania)
George Mikan - 2 (penbeast0, wojoaderge)
Moses Malone - 1 (JordansBulls)
David Robinson - 1 (drza)
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#71 » by trex_8063 » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:44 pm

wojoaderge wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:Especially in that era, I would add. It does kinda stir one's curiosity, now that you mention it.

Except that he was traded once, for a team that he didn't want to play for anymore


Twice by my eye (or arguably three times).
He was 31 (no longer young, but not overly long in the tooth either) and still in his prime in 1986 when Philly traded him away (along with a young Terry Catledge and TWO 1st round picks) for Cliff Robinson and Jeff Ruland----that almost seems like they're giving him away. That's the second time in his prime.

Pending semantics on the term "prime", one could argue he was still in his prime when Washington traded him to Atlanta in 1988, too.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#72 » by eminence » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:45 pm

Moses underwent a bit of a fiasco during his transition from ABA to NBA as well... Jazz/Blazers/Braves all had his rights before he wound up in Houston. He wasn't quite in prime, but he was a 21 year old all-star caliber player. I'm not sure what it says, but it's not something I think can be completely ignored either.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#73 » by wojoaderge » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:55 pm

trex_8063 wrote:Twice by my eye (or arguably three times).
He was 31 (no longer young, but not overly long in the tooth either) and still in his prime in 1986 when Philly traded him away (along with a young Terry Catledge and TWO 1st round picks) for Cliff Robinson and Jeff Ruland----that almost seems like they're giving him away. That's the second time in his prime.

Again, he already had 12 years of mileage on him in an era when players' careers simply weren't expected to last as long as they do today. Jeff Ruland and Cliff Robinson were pretty darn good players, Ruland especially
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#74 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Jul 17, 2017 8:17 pm

Glad this discussion is going forward let's address one elephant in the room:

The 76ers clearly traded away Moses with Barkley in mind. Whether it was a good trade or not, that the two players were similar in many ways made it reasonable to see them as a poor fit.

Barkley was younger and cheaper so there's that.

Here's the thing though: I think Barkley was better too.

You can argue that Barkley weaknesses give the edge to Moses, but Barkley was a vastly more capable scorer and passer, a comparable rebounder, and for his personal flaws he seemed considerably more coveted than Moses throughout his career.

There's also the matter that for all the talk of wear and tear for Moses, Barkley career totals look just fine next to Moses.

To be clear, there's a reason I haven't brought up Barkley as a contender yet. I'm not advocating for him here either.


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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#75 » by Senior » Mon Jul 17, 2017 8:22 pm

Winsome Gerbil wrote:1) by 2000 Mailman was 36. Stockton was 37. It's beyond irrational to think that any team in history at that stage of its life cycle would contend.

It's not that I blame the 00 Jazz for not contending. It's that I blame them for having many more years than other contenders to break through and by the time their contemporaries were out of the way, the newer and younger contenders were already there. Their time to shine passed them because they let it pass them.

2) actually what happened back then was this: MJ's Final MVP was a bit dicey. Or...maybe not dicey because it was always said back then that you could have given him the MVP every year for the last 10 years of his main career, but voters got tired and wanted to spread the wealth to some of the other all timers being eclipsed. But in any case in Jordan's last season the voters wanted to make sure they tipped their caps, and so in 1998 Mailman was imminently worthy of the MVP and everybody knew it, but Jordan was going to get it. Then 1999 comes around, there is the strike and resulting chaos, nobody really looks worthy, and so they gave it to Mailman for continued excellence and as a bit of an apology for 1998. But his numbers were already falling off, and critically, John Stockton was getting ancient. Its a ridiculous expectation that a 36 yr old PG is going to be able to lead his barely talented team to a title. By that point Hornacek was nothing. A 12ppg scorer. And their roleplayers were nothing. Their best roleplayer was a guy named David Benoit. So it was Mailman at 35 having to do everything during a sprint season, and it was just too much. That's not a real opportunity. Or if it is, if Mailman pulls that off at that age, then a large chunk of the Top 10 should be tasting his rear end fumes, because there's no way they could have pulled that off.

Again, Malone was recognized as at least one of the best players of that year. Whether or not he was the best is debatable, but fact of the matter is that the Jazz had an excellent chance at the title with all of the circumstances in their favor and they threw it away. The MJ excuse can't be used for Malone at all because of this year. You only see this with MJ for guys like Barkley, Ewing, or Malone, and it's wrong for 2 reasons - it ignores all the other years they lost to non-MJ teams, and it could've been completely avoided if they were better players or played better in their series against Chicago. The two Bulls/Jazz Finals were already close without Malone playing to what his RS numbers said, and if his skillset allowed him to maintain the level of play his numbers implied, then he'd have won at least once.

All that stuff you said about the 99 Jazz didn't seem to matter on the way to a pro-rated 61 win season and the best record in the league. The entire field was weak and it was a prime opportunity for any superstar to win the title.

Just ran out of time. And despite all the hubub, in the end, during the entire prime run for Stockton to Malone there were only 2 seasons where they could have had their shot, and those were the two seasons Hakeem surged forward to take instead. In fact when you get down to it, 4 times in 5 years the Jazz lost to the eventual NBA champions ('94, '95, '97, '98).

They ran out of time because they couldn't beat better teams than them in the playoffs for a decade because Malone's skillset wasn't as resilient as it needed to be and it definitely wasn't as good as his RS metrics indicated. That's what it comes down to. The Jazz beat a lot of good teams, but they always lost to the best and they got upset quite a few times as well. Malone's underperformance is part of why his teams were losing those elimination series to the champion, and it's ridiculous to separate the outcome of a series from the players who were part of it.

edit: I realize I've been coming off as a Malone hater, but I actually think he's one of the best offensive players left. His only real weakness was iso scoring - outside of that fadeaway, he really wasn't too versatile in creating in halfcourt situations and it often led to the breakdown of his team's offenses late in games. He actually had a lot of excellent offensive skills - decent range, could pass, transition killer, consistency/durability, great screen setter, good decision maker, etc. It's just the guys he's being compared to in this area such as Dirk don't have this issue in crunch time while still creating enormous impact on offense - and I don't believe Malone's defense was game-changing, although it was good. Same with someone like West. Even a guy like Barkley whose offense was probably better had his own glaring flaws on defense that could tip the scale to Karl.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#76 » by wojoaderge » Mon Jul 17, 2017 8:29 pm

eminence wrote:Moses underwent a bit of a fiasco during his transition from ABA to NBA as well... Jazz/Blazers/Braves all had his rights before he wound up in Houston. He wasn't quite in prime, but he was a 21 year old all-star caliber player. I'm not sure what it says, but it's not something I think can be completely ignored either.

Stars (not the Jazz) folded. Spirits folded. Blazers couldn't afford his salary. Braves were mismanaged and probably couldn't afford his salary either.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#77 » by eminence » Mon Jul 17, 2017 8:34 pm

wojoaderge wrote:
eminence wrote:Moses underwent a bit of a fiasco during his transition from ABA to NBA as well... Jazz/Blazers/Braves all had his rights before he wound up in Houston. He wasn't quite in prime, but he was a 21 year old all-star caliber player. I'm not sure what it says, but it's not something I think can be completely ignored either.

Stars (not the Jazz) folded. Spirits folded. Blazers couldn't afford his salary. Braves were mismanaged and probably couldn't afford his salary either.


No, I wasn't including ABA, his rights were owned by the Jazz as well in that window. They got him in some sort of young ABA player draft and gave him up to get a pick back - used in the Goodrich trade :(
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#78 » by wojoaderge » Mon Jul 17, 2017 8:43 pm

eminence wrote:No, I wasn't including ABA, his rights were owned by the Jazz as well in that window. They got him in some sort of young ABA player draft and gave him up to get a pick back - used in the Goodrich trade :(

Never knew that, thanks
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#79 » by janmagn » Mon Jul 17, 2017 8:44 pm

Vote: Karl Malone
2nd vote: George Mikan

Malone was great. He was physically just too good to be stopped with. He was elite finisher and rebounded very well. Good to great defender at the 4, even though stats might not show that.

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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 2017 -- #14 

Post#80 » by JoeMalburg » Mon Jul 17, 2017 8:58 pm

wojoaderge wrote:
eminence wrote:Moses underwent a bit of a fiasco during his transition from ABA to NBA as well... Jazz/Blazers/Braves all had his rights before he wound up in Houston. He wasn't quite in prime, but he was a 21 year old all-star caliber player. I'm not sure what it says, but it's not something I think can be completely ignored either.

Stars (not the Jazz) folded. Spirits folded. Blazers couldn't afford his salary. Braves were mismanaged and probably couldn't afford his salary either.


I believe the Braves traded for him to trade him again because they knew that Portland was letting him go for too little. The Blazers traded him for a first round pick and the Braves turned around a week later and traded him for three first round picks.

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