GHOSTofSIKMA wrote:coolhandluke121 wrote:soxperry wrote:Its becoming increasingly clear to me that this team doesnt need anyone outside of giannis and bud to win 55 games in the east.   Its also probable that we cant win a title without a true number two.  No one on the roster qualifies for that, neither does Brogdon.  We need to go all in the next time a true superstar wants out of his situation.
This is actually the main reason I wanted Brogdon + someone else over Khris. I don't think Brogdon is anything special and I'm not losing any sleep at all over the numbers he's putting up (see my analysis of the PG "defense" he's faced this year on the previous page; it's an April tank-worthy slate), but there's no question that a slightly younger player with a little intrigue left is 
much easier to include as an asset in a trade for the next disgruntled star who becomes available. Teams that are trading away guys like PG13 or Anthony Davis aren't touching Khris Middleton on his current deal with a 10-foot pole. 
The real problem is that Giannis is not only the only 
great player on the roster, but also the only 
very good one. And they couldn't keep all their good players under any realistic circumstances, so I've just accepted that somebody had to go. I'm okay with letting the biggest injury risk be the guy to leave, and that's before you even consider some of the other rumors.
 
like the post alright but i think middleton could have much more value in a 3 way then a heads up.
flip him for for salary and some picks and youth.....then package that salary with our own picks and young guys and we could be really really close if a lillard goes on the block.  a team giving up their stud wont mind a package of scrap salary coming in if theyre also getting a bunch of picks and a stable of youth.
 
But that's the issue - you have to find a third team to make it work, and Khris's new salary slot is a serious limitation. You can't just assume there will be a team with the right combination of salaries to make something like that work. A salary slot like Brogdon's is far more flexible, and he's much more likely to have direct appeal to a team that's trading away a star because he still has some intrigue associated with being a little younger and still being an emerging guy. It would be like trading Khris in the first year of his 
previous contract, before he was one of the highest-paid players in the league and before he was considered an all-star candidate. Teams trading away Paul George or Anthony Davis are looking for contracts and players like that, not guys like Khris. 
Plus you can make all sorts of combinations work. If Khris's salary doesn't match up in a trade, then teams not only have to be willing to make the trade in principle, they also have to have other pieces they're willing to trade to make it work. And the Bucks can add combo's of draft picks, young players, and expiring contracts to Brogdon's salary, but you can't add that to Khris's salary and expect the other team to be able to make it work. It's just more moving parts, and therefore more likely that some other team with a good offer swoops in and makes the deal out from under you. 
Nothing against Khris, not being a Brogdon stan, but I don't see any way to debate that Brogdon was the more appropriate fit for maintaining the flexibility to make the type of consolidation trade the Bucks desperately need to be better in the playoffs, where quality trumps depth.
 
            
                                    
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