Magic Giannison wrote:Remember when people wanted Bradley?
Still do, he’s had some crazy injuries this season. Tobes shooting great from downtown, clips won that trade easy
Moderators: paulpressey25, MickeyDavis
Magic Giannison wrote:Remember when people wanted Bradley?
Ron Swanson wrote:Ok, but don't tell me that trading away 25-30 minutes of quality 3&D wing play for 20-25 minutes of quality C play in Marcin Gortat or Dewayne Dedmon in anyway accomplishes this ultimate goal of investing that money in great players. It doesn't. You're just reallocating that money to older, similar caliber players and shuffling deck chairs.
Magic Giannison wrote:Remember when people wanted Bradley?
leroyjw10 wrote:I'd be more than OK with this: http://www.espn.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=y72fsdyl
and slightly less OK with this: http://www.espn.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=y7wwgojl
To me, Brogdon and Bledsoe are a wash overall, but Brogdon is a much better fit. Meanwhile, DJ over any of our centers is a colossal upgrade. Plus, this feels like a package that would allow the Clips to "remain competitive."
jmart762 wrote:leroyjw10 wrote:I'd be more than OK with this: http://www.espn.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=y72fsdyl
and slightly less OK with this: http://www.espn.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=y7wwgojl
To me, Brogdon and Bledsoe are a wash overall, but Brogdon is a much better fit. Meanwhile, DJ over any of our centers is a colossal upgrade. Plus, this feels like a package that would allow the Clips to "remain competitive."
I was thinking of something similar. Bledsoe and Henson and throw-in (pick, Vaugh, Wilson) for DAJ and Lou Williams. Works in the checker. Would be dependent on the Clippers wanting cap space in 18 or 19. And then follow up with a trade for Dedmon or Hernangomez or something cheap.
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drone3 wrote:Wouldn't mind Tyreke running our second unit
Baddy Chuck wrote:I want to win but I also love chaos.
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?”
JustinCredible wrote:Dandridgefav wrote:ElPeregrino wrote:Points per 100 possessions:
Milwaukee Bucks w/ Plumlee on the court (+11.7)
1. Golden State Warriors (+10.5)
Milwaukee Bucks w/ Henson on the court (+7.4)
2. Houston Rockets (+7.4)
3. Toronto Raptors (+6.8)
4. Boston Celtics (+4.4)
5. Oklahoma City Thunder (+3.9)
6. San Antonio Spurs (+3.8)
7. Minnesota Timberwolves (+3.2)
8. Philadelphia 76ers (+2.4)
9. Indiana Pacers (+1.6)
10. Washington Wizards (+1.5)
11. New Orleans Pelicans (+1.2)
12. Portland Trail Blazers (+0.7)
14. LA Clippers (+0.6)
15. Cleveland Cavaliers (+0.3)
16. Denver Nuggets (0.0)
17. Charlotte Hornets (-0.1)
18. Utah Jazz (-0.9)
19. Miami Heat (-1.2)
20. Detroit Pistons (-1.2)
21. New York Knicks (-1.3)
22. Dallas Mavericks (-2.2)
23. Los Angeles Lakers (-3.0)
24. Memphis Grizzlies (-3.1)
25. Brooklyn Nets (-3.9)
26. Atlanta Hawks (-4.6)
27. Orlando Magic (-4.9)
28. Chicago Bulls (-6.1)
29. Phoenix Suns (-7.3)
Milwaukee Bucks w/ Thon on the court (-9.4)
30. Sacramento Kings (-9.6)
Plumlee has only played 19 minutes this season so take his rating with a grain of salt. Obviously the Bucks are not going to continue playing better than the Warriors when Plumlee is on the floor. Nonetheless, this should support the notion that you can't trade John Henson unless you are trying to tank the season. The main problem with the Bucks all season has been Thon Maker. The Bucks play like an elite team any time Thon Maker is not on the floor. If the Bucks are going to make a trade, it needs to be to find somebody to take Maker's minute.
Well then Bucks better sign Plumlee fast at the start of the off season - offer him $12mil right out the gate so Bucks stay ahead of the crowd rushing to sign him.
The point here (obviously) is that our offense is 2nd best in the league when Henson is on the floor and 2nd worst in the league when Thon is on the floor. Those are both massive sample sizes.
I’m curious how both of those guys stack up in this stat only looking at minutes they share the floor with Giannis. If it is still this wide of a gap than we need to trade Thon or send him to the G League immediately.
paulpressey25 wrote:ElPeregrino wrote:The main problem with the Bucks all season has been Thon Maker. The Bucks play like an elite team any time Thon Maker is not on the floor. If the Bucks are going to make a trade, it needs to be to find somebody to take Maker's minute.
Prunty has made a major adjustment to cover this up. Giannis goes to the bench for rest at the 6 minute mark of the first quarter. He then comes back in concurrent with Thon or a minute into Thon's first appearance.
Has two benefits. Giannis can cover up for Thon running around like a chicken with his head cut off by providing help defense. Two, Giannis then feasts on the other team's second unit.
This seems to be a thing now.
raferfenix wrote:randy84 wrote:I am still sticking to my Vaughn and a 2nd rd. for Willy H. or a 2nd rd. for KOQ.
Keep it simple, stupid.
I could see us shopping around Vaughn + a 2nd for the best big we can get on the market.
Henangomez or KOQ would be great. I don't know if we could get either that cheaply though.
Doesn't seem like that much incentive for the Knicks. And if Noah is done there the minutes crunch isn't quite as crazy as it is with him in tow.

ElPeregrino wrote:You're disguising the problem but you're not solving the problem. Thon and Giannis playing together results in a Bucks lineup that performs basically at a neutral level. This is a huge improvement from what Thon lineups typically give the team without Giannis, but is this how we want to use our superstar's minutes? To be a carpet that we sweep Thon underneath?
Ron Swanson wrote:Tony Snell making less than 10% of the salary cap isn't going to be the difference between keeping and losing Jabari.
skones wrote:Ron Swanson wrote:Tony Snell making less than 10% of the salary cap isn't going to be the difference between keeping and losing Jabari.
I think it's pretty obvious that doling out long term deals at around 10 million per season to average players at best has the potential to hamper that in a pretty big way.
See, Teletovic, Delly, Snell, Henson. 41 Million Dollars committed to these bums next season. Contracts don't exist in a vacuum. They apply to your overall payroll makeup.
Krispy Kreme wrote:skones wrote:Ron Swanson wrote:Tony Snell making less than 10% of the salary cap isn't going to be the difference between keeping and losing Jabari.
I think it's pretty obvious that doling out long term deals at around 10 million per season to average players at best has the potential to hamper that in a pretty big way.
See, Teletovic, Delly, Snell, Henson. 41 Million Dollars committed to these bums next season. Contracts don't exist in a vacuum. They apply to your overall payroll makeup.
Snell and Henson are living up to their contracts right now.
Krispy Kreme wrote:skones wrote:Ron Swanson wrote:Tony Snell making less than 10% of the salary cap isn't going to be the difference between keeping and losing Jabari.
I think it's pretty obvious that doling out long term deals at around 10 million per season to average players at best has the potential to hamper that in a pretty big way.
See, Teletovic, Delly, Snell, Henson. 41 Million Dollars committed to these bums next season. Contracts don't exist in a vacuum. They apply to your overall payroll makeup.
Snell and Henson are living up to their contracts right now.