Bigfactsstackz wrote:Lunartic wrote:Can someone explain whats wrong with "colluding" ? I'm not a fan of the NBA becoming less competitive but Leonard just wanted to play at home with a fellow great player. He didn't stack the deck like Bron did with Miami or Durant did with Golden State.
The league is probably at it's most wide open its been in years.
Rockets
Bucks
Philly
Lakers
Clippers
Nuggets/Blazers
All have a shot at getting to the finals
Leonard has paid his dues to the Spurs and Raptors. He gave them the ultimate prize and when it was time to leave, he left.
Spurs fans are understandably unhappy but get over it. He was a crucial part of winning you a championship. And for all the posters attempting to portray Leonard as just a cog in the wheel that won that title, why are you so vitriolic if he was so unimportant? I can't imagine being too upset if Kris Dunn of the Bulls asked for a trade to his homestate team.
Furthermore, answer this; If the Spurs decided to trade Leonard against his wishes for Doncic and KP, would you have the same angst directed towards the Spurs GM? Why is it so utterly dreadful for a player to request a trade to another team after paying his dues, but so fine if the team trades them mid-contract for an upgrade? Why can't players ever upgrade?
"bu- but he led the team on by lying about his injury!"
There's zero evidence that he was healthy and painfree. This is evidenced by his constant rest days with the Raptors and how quickly his body was breaking down during the postseason.
Even if you believe he lied about his injury and sat out the entire season out of protest, okay fine, that's the worst thing Leonard has done.
Raptors fans have absolutely zero reason to hate him. He came, he conquered, he left. Your team wasn't winning anything, ever without someone like him. Chuckrozan wasn't winning you anything. You guys need to retire his jersey. Not only did you guys win a Title but you beat literally the greatest team ever assembled (with some key injuries), it's one of the great post season runs in NBA history and it's all because of Leonard.
Cause he obviously became the teams best player after the 2014 season
To add to that, it's not that he left, it's HOW they went about it.
Which bring me to the periodic addressing of falsehoods that reappear now and again. As to the italicized part, for the umpteenth time, the Spurs diagnosed him with the more severe injury, repeatedly tried to shelve #2 for the season but THEY refused, this after repeatedly telling the team he was ready to go and then at the last minute backing out. This is AFTER they kept the team in the dark about his medical progress / issues, this AFTER #2 started ghosting team representatives (August, 2017) BEFORE any medical disagreements between the two sides surfaced.
Don't minimize sitting out for an entire season or justify it with 'out of protest' - it was unprofessional.
If uncle had been honest, he would not have declared #2 "100% healthy" conveniently around the time just before the 2018 draft. As it stands, all that rest the quad and knee needed vindicated the Spurs and the chronic condition they all along said he had. Spurs knew it; THEY knew it; then Raptors and the rest of the NBA knew it.
Somehow this almost always gets lost in discussion about #2 ending up in LA, but it needs repeating: 2016 is a crux year, the year when Elfus was let go (and if I recall, the lawsuit over unpaid fees owed to him is still pending, in which he also alleges that uncle and mom were being paid by the agency) and uncle took over. Agency was bleeding money, agency was infused with cash by a billionaire, billionaire put his son as manager of agency, son and uncle concocted a plan to get #2 in a bigger market. This has been central despite all the multiple narratives that were put out.
Just get the facts right. These were researched and written about by Michael C. Wright & Ramona and if memory serves, Woj, in addition to several Spurs sports writers closely following the events throughout the whole thing.
Anyway, there are now two franchises that, despite on court play, are glad to be done with the group. That is revealing in terms of the machinations that were swirling behind the scenes of which we are getting but glimpses.
As to the topic at hand, I'd be shocked if the NBA actually censured a player, and I'm not sure if they can do so for a player's representatives outside of an agent (maybe that can be something addressed in the new rules or CBA or something or the like). The only time I recall that a player was directly reprimanded was AD being fined $50K last season for publicly demanding a trade.































