dougthonus wrote:HomoSapien wrote:Regarding Krause's last memoir entry from KC ... what a load of BS to make Rodman and Longley's status such a big focal point of why you couldn't bring back Michael Jordan. As a GM it's his job to get creative and try to fill in the holes. Longley, though he knew how to do his job, was infinitely replaceable. I mean, you could get Oliver Miller here on the minimum and he'll provide more interior defense, rebounding, and passing. Or if you're such a sleuth take a flyer on recently released hustle player like Scott Pollard or a young guy that can rebound like Jamie Feick. Not sure what kind of cap space we actually had, but Dino Radja was in Europe and could have been a Rodman replacement or supplement. Maybe give Carl Herrara, who knows what it takes to win a championship, some bench minutes. Plus if Longley's trade value was a first-round pick, then you have to assume he could have brought us back an actual rotation player from a different team.
Kerr's getting old and expensive? Sign Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf for the minimum. Or Bring back BJ Armstrong cheaply. Or sign a ring chaser like Terry Porter. Or a guy who just played well against you in the playoffs like Sherman Douglas. Need some depth? Dominique Wilkins just averaged 18 ppg the year before and is in Italy looking to get back in the NBA. Blue Edwards is desperately looking to get on a contender. Convince Mario Ellie that the Bulls are a better place to spend your twilight years than San Antonio.
There were ways to get replacements here. Ultimately it may not have worked, but we could've given Jordan a chance to get the next batch of guys ready.
My opinion on blame of the break up definitely shifted to blame Reinsdorf more and everyone else much less. I always felt it was an issue between Jackson/Krause that was at the heart of it, but Jerry Reinsdorf, in his own words, with years to reflect, described it as "suicidal" to bring everyone back and discussing the expenses.
Jordan is probably responsible for a good half a billion to one billion in extra profits for Reinsdorf over the course of the franchise. There was nothing suicidal here, you weren't going out of business or threatening to go out of business. You weren't going to lose money for a year or anything. You were just going to make a little less. For a guy who basically got 200x growth on his investment, Reinsdorf sure is a greedy SOB.
I think that's the most disturbing thing for die hard fans to understand right now and just as damning, if not more so, than Krause's "I don't care if you go 82-0 you won't come back" quote.
I just do not see how the team could be losing money if you re-signed all of those guys to the contracts they ended up with. Maybe (and even this feels like a stretch) in the last couple of years of the Pippen/Longley deals if you just look at each individual year but even then it would have been made up on the front end. Would love to hear JR discuss the finances in more detail, although obviously that’s unrealistic.



















