CalamityX12 wrote:Hold Durant til final games before playoffs if needed
I have no problem with that, EXCEPT ONE, it's probably gonna cost us the #1 Seed.
Sux because I know we would win more games than Philly or the Bucks if we had KD back.
Moderators: Rich Rane, NyCeEvO
CalamityX12 wrote:Hold Durant til final games before playoffs if needed
Whiskey Slick wrote:CalamityX12 wrote:Hold Durant til final games before playoffs if needed
I have no problem with that, EXCEPT ONE, it's probably gonna cost us the #1 Seed.![]()
Sux because I know we would win more games than Philly or the Bucks if we had KD back.

Whiskey Slick wrote:CalamityX12 wrote:Hold Durant til final games before playoffs if needed
I have no problem with that, EXCEPT ONE, it's probably gonna cost us the #1 Seed.![]()
Sux because I know we would win more games than Philly or the Bucks if we had KD back.
GTR11 wrote:?s=20
Prokorov wrote:GTR11 wrote:?s=20
I Think April 7th looks like an ideal return. back to back home games with 3 days in between. keep him out the next 2 road games and then back against the hornets after 5 more days off.

Whiskey Slick wrote:Prokorov wrote:GTR11 wrote:?s=20
I Think April 7th looks like an ideal return. back to back home games with 3 days in between. keep him out the next 2 road games and then back against the hornets after 5 more days off.
And you know that, HOW?
HardenGoat wrote:Harden is like having a tank to ride on your journey
HardenGoat wrote:Harden is like having a tank to ride on your journey
Claud wrote:Why wouldn't Dinwiddie opt in for next season to run again for a chip?
He'd still be in his prime and get paid + he'd have a year to show off his skills.
Part of me is starting to think Dinwiddie doesn't get traded + will try to return during the playoffs + will be back next season.
In a separate story on Pistons trade possibilities, Shams and another colleague on The Athletic, Alex Schiffer discussed the possibility of a Nets trade with Detroit sending Spencer Dinwiddie and Mason Plumlee back to the teams that drafted them, saying there have been “whispers” of Brooklyn interest in the 6’11” big man.
In the trade, the Nets would send Dinwiddie to the Pistons along with a second rounder in 2022 in return for Plumlee and Wayne Ellington, the sharpshooter who played for the Nets in 2015-16.
There have been some whispers around the league surrounding the Nets’ interest in Plumlee, leagues sources tell The Athletic. Dinwiddie, who was drafted in 2014 by Detroit, will likely miss all of this season with an ACL injury, but this would be a good gamble by Detroit.
For starters, trading Plumlee opens up a bigger role for rookie Isaiah Stewart, who the team is very, very high on. Secondly, Dinwiddie, a dynamic guard when healthy, has a player option for next season that he would be wise to pick up since he will be coming off an injury. The Pistons could showcase him next season and potentially get solid value in a trade before the deadline (ACL recovery isn’t what it used to be). If Dinwiddie opts out, the Pistons end up with cap space and a second-round pick.
Plumlee is earning $8 million this season, $8.1 million next year with a partial guarantee in 2022-23. He’s one of the best passing bigs in the NBA, racking up two triple-doubles already this season.
Shams also tweeted that the Nets are being extra cautions with Kevin Durant’s hamstring strain, saying he doesn’t expect KD to return for one or two weeks. Considering that Steve Nash said five days ago that the Durant would undergo another scan sometime this week, followed by a ramp-up, that’s not surprising.
Nope, I'm good, I don't want Plumlee. Plumlee has shown time and time again that he's a liability in playoffs, and we really have no use for Ellington.HotShots wrote:In a separate story on Pistons trade possibilities, Shams and another colleague on The Athletic, Alex Schiffer discussed the possibility of a Nets trade with Detroit sending Spencer Dinwiddie and Mason Plumlee back to the teams that drafted them, saying there have been “whispers” of Brooklyn interest in the 6’11” big man.
In the trade, the Nets would send Dinwiddie to the Pistons along with a second rounder in 2022 in return for Plumlee and Wayne Ellington, the sharpshooter who played for the Nets in 2015-16.
There have been some whispers around the league surrounding the Nets’ interest in Plumlee, leagues sources tell The Athletic. Dinwiddie, who was drafted in 2014 by Detroit, will likely miss all of this season with an ACL injury, but this would be a good gamble by Detroit.
For starters, trading Plumlee opens up a bigger role for rookie Isaiah Stewart, who the team is very, very high on. Secondly, Dinwiddie, a dynamic guard when healthy, has a player option for next season that he would be wise to pick up since he will be coming off an injury. The Pistons could showcase him next season and potentially get solid value in a trade before the deadline (ACL recovery isn’t what it used to be). If Dinwiddie opts out, the Pistons end up with cap space and a second-round pick.
Plumlee is earning $8 million this season, $8.1 million next year with a partial guarantee in 2022-23. He’s one of the best passing bigs in the NBA, racking up two triple-doubles already this season.
Shams also tweeted that the Nets are being extra cautions with Kevin Durant’s hamstring strain, saying he doesn’t expect KD to return for one or two weeks. Considering that Steve Nash said five days ago that the Durant would undergo another scan sometime this week, followed by a ramp-up, that’s not surprising.
https://www.netsdaily.com/2021/3/15/22331731/shams-nets-still-in-andre-drummond-buyout-sweepstakes-not-interested-in-p-j-tucker
I'm packing Spencer Dinwiddie bags for Detroit now.
Whiskey Slick wrote:I have to admit I knew Harden was a great scorer, but didn't know he was such a great facilitator.