ray ray wrote:Kyrie Irving is 20 times better than Brandon Knights..
Without a doubt Ray Ray. Have you herd anything new since you last posted?
Moderators: bwgood77, lilfishi22, Qwigglez
ray ray wrote:Kyrie Irving is 20 times better than Brandon Knights..
DirtyDez wrote:The fillers could be managed but the assets would favor the other two...
Murray or Harris > Brogdon > Bledsoe
Maker > Chriss or Bender > Lyles or Hernangomez
Suns top-3 protected > Nuggs top-3 > Bucks top-3
I'd take one of the Denver guards or Maker's upside as the headliner but the Suns' pick makes it close.
1UPZ wrote:the Knight hate is understandable based on his last season play.
lilfishi22 wrote:bwgood77 wrote:lilfishi22 wrote:I care as much as you about where we are a few years from now. But I don't see it as dismantling the team. I see it as trading some pieces which are going to be very costly to retain in 2 years anyway for an elite talent that 100% fits our core. Sure there's a chance he could walk in 2yrs but the players we trade for him, are probably going to go anyway in 2yrs. Ultimately, we lose Chriss and a draft pick and that's a price I'm willing to pay, especially when we still have Booker, Bender, Jackson, Ulis and whoever else we draft with our remaining picks should the worse come to worst and Kyrie walks.
Let's face it, as much as I like our young guys, statistically most of them won't ever be more than rotation players, as much as I wish they could be more.
100% fits our core? How would we know that? They may hate playing with a guy that won't give up the ball just like they seemed to hate playing with Mike James in summer league. Obviously we know what types of guards McD likes. They all seem to play pretty similarly. For themselves.
1. Experience. Check
2. Age. Check
3. Potential. Check
He fits our core. I can't believe you're comparing Kyrie to 3-4 SL games of Mike James lol...Mike James isn't even on the same stratosphere a passer is Irving so you're making a HUGE leap that because the guys didn't like playing with Mike James, they wouldn't want to play with Irving?
Whether he's a good fit next to Booker, JJ and Bender. It's debateable. I don't know, you don't know. And I'm sure you'll find supporters on both sides of the fence. I'm of the belief that Kyrie is a talented enough passer, being able to run the offense and not having to wait for offense to be initiated by someone else will allow him to play with more flexibility and more freedom.
dremill24 wrote:JMac1 wrote:Hmmmm...... been listening to Gambo for 47 minutes and nothing on the trade so far, not coming up in the next segment either. I wonder why?
He made a very definitive claim last week that there would be no deal of Kyrie to the Suns. At this point he'd be admitting he was wrong if he continued to speculate, which we know he just can't do. If it does go down, he'll backtrack on what he said and split hairs about his terminology
TOO wrote:Boston was thought to be in a position of strength in multiple trade scenarios too.. What did they end up with?
Sometimes you gotta bite the bullet to get the guy you want.
Moochthemonkey wrote:TOO wrote:Boston was thought to be in a position of strength in multiple trade scenarios too.. What did they end up with?
Sometimes you gotta bite the bullet to get the guy you want.
Jaymes Young, Jaylen Brown, Jayson Tatum, and even more draft picks
TOO wrote:Boston was thought to be in a position of strength in multiple trade scenarios too.. What did they end up with?
Sometimes you gotta bite the bullet to get the guy you want.
TOO wrote:Boston was thought to be in a position of strength in multiple trade scenarios too.. What did they end up with?
Sometimes you gotta bite the bullet to get the guy you want.
lilfishi22 wrote:Whether he's a good fit next to Booker, JJ and Bender. It's debateable. I don't know, you don't know. And I'm sure you'll find supporters on both sides of the fence. I'm of the belief that Kyrie is a talented enough passer, being able to run the offense and not having to wait for offense to be initiated by someone else will allow him to play with more flexibility and more freedom.
bwgood77 wrote:I am not sure where you get this belief about him as a passer. A video compilation of his best passes since being in the league? I haven't heard one person who has watched a great deal of him say that it's something he willing does consistently in games.
I am a big believer in team chemistry. I was finally happy that we finally seemed to be developing chemistry after the guard debacle, Morris debacle, etc, and now that is at risk. He's a star player and a big name, and in NBA2K you could make it work. In real life, we don't know.
All I am saying is that many risks come with this. And I am happy where are team is RIGHT NOW and the direction we are headed. COULD this make us a better TEAM? Maybe, but I don't know, and I wouldn't necessarily bet on it. Could it hurt chemistry? Without a doubt. Will we lose perhaps a promising young player and pick to take those risks? Yes. Will he be here more than 2 years? Maybe. Probably not. Is he an ideal pairing with Booker? Not at all.
Does he make a team better? Biff's post on the other thread was quite alarming. That, combined with how Cleveland this year played when LeBron sat are scary signs for whether or not he really is a team player. Anything you read shows red flags. He may be one of the hardest, if not THE hardest guys to stop one on one...and he'd be a good pick in a 1 on 1 tournament. To inject into a team that already has good chemistry, is young, and growing? I have my doubts.
I really hope it works if this trade goes down. I'm really going to hate it if we lose Jackson, since he is the guy we would really need to try and cover for these two guards defensively.
I definitely think there is no question we will easily have the worst defense in the league.
If it's a reasonable deal, it's a deal that's kind of hard not to make. In theory, if the fit wasn't right, or you got the feeling he wasn't all that happy to be here after half a season, you could trade him. But that would be unlikely to happen after you made the trade..you would almost have to ride it out.
Sometimes the best move is the move you don't make, even though it might look good on paper, or especially look good in NBA2K.
lilfishi22 wrote:bwgood77 wrote:Harden wasn't even a PG until last season, so that's not the best comparison. Once he was given that duty, he thrived passing the ball. Irving's had that responsibility all along.
That's just not true.
Harden had been to go-to man in Houston since basically the day he got there. He didn't play the PG position until last season but that certainly didn't mean Patrick Beverley was their point man. Irving played the PG position, but let's not kid ourselves, he hasn't been the Cavs point man since Lebron came to town.
BobbieL wrote:TOO wrote:Boston was thought to be in a position of strength in multiple trade scenarios too.. What did they end up with?
Sometimes you gotta bite the bullet to get the guy you want.
If the deal is truly, at the core, Bledsoe, the Heat pick, Chriss /Warren for Kyrie - for me its a good deal.
There might be other players added in but at the core - that seems like a good solid trade for Kyrie. Suns are better with Kyrie
He is 25. Maybe he is an ISO ball hog; maybe with the Suns he will evolved. But there is no guarantee Chriss will develop or how much better Warren will get. And that Heat pick -- not giving the Suns pick - but that Heat pick will be in the teens, who knows about that.
I think its a right move.
Moochthemonkey wrote:1UPZ wrote:the Knight hate is understandable based on his last season play.
no it continues back from when Bledsoe went down. Knight as the starting PG in '16 was disastrous.
Waylay13 wrote:lilfishi22 wrote:Whether he's a good fit next to Booker, JJ and Bender. It's debateable. I don't know, you don't know. And I'm sure you'll find supporters on both sides of the fence. I'm of the belief that Kyrie is a talented enough passer, being able to run the offense and not having to wait for offense to be initiated by someone else will allow him to play with more flexibility and more freedom.
in college averaged only 4.3 assist per game and his first couple years in the NBA he averaged 5.4, 5.9 and 6.1 assists per game before Lebron returned. Since playing with the one of the greatest players in the game his assist total has dropped and if that wouldnt matter if when Lebron wasnt on the floor: Kyrie led team was -130 meaning against the second string players he cant keep the lead. So his stats are largely based off being next to Lebron. So Lilifishi22 how do you answer the fact that when given the freedom that you think he should get he isnt productive?
Puff wrote:BobbieL wrote:TOO wrote:Boston was thought to be in a position of strength in multiple trade scenarios too.. What did they end up with?
Sometimes you gotta bite the bullet to get the guy you want.
If the deal is truly, at the core, Bledsoe, the Heat pick, Chriss /Warren for Kyrie - for me its a good deal.
There might be other players added in but at the core - that seems like a good solid trade for Kyrie. Suns are better with Kyrie
He is 25. Maybe he is an ISO ball hog; maybe with the Suns he will evolved. But there is no guarantee Chriss will develop or how much better Warren will get. And that Heat pick -- not giving the Suns pick - but that Heat pick will be in the teens, who knows about that.
I think its a right move.
My sweetener would be to take on additional salary, Frye and Shumpert. As I understand that for every dollar the Cavs are over the cap they pay $4. That means that if we take on an additional $10 Mil that saves them $40 Mil. They can then just transfer that money to Lebron's checking account so they can keep him next summer. I believe we have more than enough cap room to do that, if we do not sign Alex Len.
I could easily live with a Chandler, Frye, Williams rotation at the 5 next season. I have always liked Shumpert's game but I think he has turned into a punk. Hopefully we can change that once he gets to the desert. Wait, with have the punk creator as our head coach. On 2nd thought..........
I don't know if other teams can offer that savings but I think we can. We should use it to our advantage.
bwgood77 wrote:OK, you're right, and you're actually using an argument I use about who is "called" PG isn't always necessarily the "point". But, even though Harden usually had the ball in his hands and was more the point guy than Beverley, he didn't truly transform into the MVP caliber type player he is until he played and bought into the D'Antoni system. He was the type of player that was not fun to watch whatsoever in his play style and it wasn't really "team" ball.
And if you read the players tribune article about him and D'Antoni watching Nash footage, Harden said he first though "I don't want to do SSOL" or something like that, but finally bought in, and that is when he took a major leap.
Kyrie has shared those duties with LeBron, but even before LeBron he never averaged more assists, and Lowe and others have since pointed out that when LeBron sat, his shot rate went to historic levels while he only had a slight uptick in assists...so he doesn't suddenly change if he is in charge. He still was surrounded by great shooters.
Since these guards (Kyrie, Booker) are all offense, no D, to REALLY maximize their effectiveness offensively in a sheer effort to outscore opponents, it would be interesting if D'Antoni was the coach and to see if those guys would buy in. Sometimes players do and sometimes they don't. Some players are just kind of stuck in their ways and resort to playing how they always have.
I do hope if we get him he really makes an effort to get everyone involved so everyone stays engaged on the floor. While I have my doubt about fit and whether he would like to stay long term, and how I like what we have going without him, and not wanting to give up too much, I know he is a premier talent and that players with his elite scoring skill don't come along too often.