Dankoz wrote:I hope someone buys him. His one-man show doesn't fit our system at all.
Nailed it. Nor the system of any team preparing for the modern NBA.
Boston. Golden State.
I even think this culture clash is why there were sparks in San Antonio between Pop and Aldridge and now Kawhi.
I think its how LeBron has seduced himself into gutting his own team, being 'the man' and GM and Coach.
This is not the And1 era any more. It's not hero-ball anymore.
Golden State didn't have any do-it-all players until KD and no only did they win two before his arrival,but they beat KD to get there. He joinedthem, not the other way around, and they were a rag-tag team of specialists, like the A-Team or the X-Men, not Gladys Knight and the Smurfs or whatever.
Not only am not. in the market for a 'saviour', if I'm the Bulls front office, I don't know how I'm imagining Zach LaVne as that person.
I'm looking at the dysfunction between Bradley Beal and John Wall, thinking that eventually,one of the two is going to give up and demand achange of scenery. Same with Dame Lillard andCJ McCollum.
If an opportunity like that materialized, given that salaries would have to match, do I:
A. Want to be caught with my pants down, trying to trade LaVine for one of those four straight up while other teams offer multi-player packages, because they priced their talent more rationally and not so emotionally? Or
B. Price my player reasonably enough that, if I had to add another player or two, to make up the difference between Zach and one of those four (and there IS a difference) there is room over Zach's salary to add that extra player without killing the salary requirements needed to make the trade happen?