AshBlackstone wrote:Uncommon wrote:AshBlackstone wrote:
Hill was a trade, and he was hurt. McGrady averaged 11 ppg the year before in Toronto, and came off the bench. He wasn’t a star.
Orlando has never signed a real established star in free agency. So the idea that we need to save our cap space to go after superstars is silly. They’re not signing with us. We have to build through the draft. And our young players need to be developed. Which means we have to sign veteran players with some level of talent to help the youth.
We need a guy who can get the ball to our young frontcourt. There’s really no reason to save cap space, because trying to attract superstars is a pipe dream. It’s not logical at all.
This is very, very wrong.
I won’t even bring up Duncan in your “Orlando has never signed a star” argument, but Orlando has signed Grant Hill, Tracy McGrady, and Rashard Lewis.
For all intents and purposes, Hill was a free agent signing. It was a sign-and-trade after Hill agreed to sign with Orlando. The Magic and Pistons agreed to the trade so Orlando could get some cap relief in trading out players and so that Detroit got SOMETHING for letting Hill go.
Tracy McGrady did NOT average 11ppg in Toronto before he signed with the Magic. He averaged 15ppg. And what’s more, he started off pretty slow at the beginning of his last season with Toronto, but halfway in the season, he completely took off after Toronto gave him some real minutes. After about the 45th game, he began to start and averaged almost 38 mpg and 19 ppg, 7 rpg, and 5apg. He was a very coveted free agent that offseason and courted hard by Toronto, Miami, and Chicago.
Rashard Lewis averaged 22 ppg in Seattle before signing with Orlando. The Heat and Sonics wanted his services and he chose to sign with Orlando. Sure, the Magic outbid themselves, but he was the number 1 marquee free agent on the market the summer.
This notion that the Magic have never signed free agents is categorically false. The Magic aren’t major players in the FA market as long as they’re a bad team. Most teams aren’t players either if they’re not winners, except for maybe LA. Once the Magic begin to win again, of course they’ll be able to sign FAs. It’s absurd to think otherwise.
You won’t bring up Duncan, because there’s nothing to bring up. He didn’t sign with us.
Hill was trade. Period. Nothing really to discuss there.
Rashard Lewis was not a superstar. Everyone knew when we signed him, including us, he wasn’t worth the money.
Whether it was 11 or 15, McGrady wasn’t a star.
The only error I made was McGrady’s ppg.
I repeat, we’ve never signed a star in free agency. Nothing you’ve said changes that. On top of that, acquiring Hill and McGrady was 18 years ago.
No one is coming here. Stop doing drugs.
You’re wrong, and now you’re mad.
It’s all semantics. Did LeBron sign with the Heat as a FA? Technically, no, he was traded. Do you know what a sign-and-trade is? No one with an IQ above 6 would argue that LeBron to Miami wasn’t a free agent acquisition. It’s the exact same with Grant Hill. Tell me, what is your IQ?
By the way, good job backtracking. 2 separate occasions you use the word “star,” specifically when you said, and I quote, “Orlando has never signed a real established star in free agency.” No one is arguing that Rashard Lewis was a superstar. Hell, there’s only like 3 or 4 of those in the NBA at any given moment. But star? Lewis definitely was a star, and the Magic got him. So your point is automatically moot.
Your butchering of McGrady’s PPG tells me a couple things: 1) you don’t fact-check and bother looking up what you’re arguing, 2) you rely on shoddy memory and opinions and pass them off as fact, 3) you’re not especially knowledgeable about the NBA or Magic. Either you’re totally non-credible and anything you should immediately be questioned and treated with absolute skepticism.
Like I said, outside of a very select few exceptions like Los Angeles, a winning team, culture or environment (and available cap space) provides the best chance at drawing free agents. When Orlando has had those, they’ve attracted free agents. You just honestly sound very dumb arguing otherwise using your silly arbitrary semantics.