PhilaOwnsBoston wrote:
Morey would know if a team would deal with him or not, he wouldn't have bothered if they were not in the mix.
How would he know? do you think he's professor x?
PhilaOwnsBoston wrote:You have to ask yourself this question: hypothetically, if the Sixers offered Simmons, Thybulle, Maxey 3 picks and 3 swaps, would the Rockets have accepted that? The answer to that is of course, because that's a ridiculous amount.
The Rockets could had get Lavert/Allen/Dinwiddie and Picks but didn't. The nets would had not even flinch to give them that, they have to move Spencer now anyways.
Fertitta basically just cut costs from what the salary on the team was. That was all, he's a notorious cheap guy and if you doubt this just look at the Oladipo deal on the trade deadline.
PhilaOwnsBoston wrote:Now I'm not saying the Sixers should have or shouldn't have offered that, but if the answer to that question is yes, then they would have traded Harden to the Sixers, it's just what price point would Morey have to reach before it was enough for Fertitta to bite the bullet and trade him to Morey.
For the tenth time, Morey tought he had a deal and Ben and Mattise were informed of it....Fertitta pulled off
PhilaOwnsBoston wrote:No one in sports flat out refuses trades out of spite if the offer is definitely better. It just doesn't happen. Maybe if both offers are equal or close to equal. But not when one is clearly better. That's organizational malpractice.
I'll love to live in your world where teams don't make several mistakes based on pettiness, bad evaluations and ego driven motives. Here in the normal world this is often common.
PhilaOwnsBoston wrote:I don't think the Sixers offer was better. The Nets gave up a lot for a team who might prefer cap flexibility with the draft picks.
The Nets gave a player they needed to put on a bigger contract next season while they were trying to play small, other one that wasn't needed anymore with Durant/Dinwiddie/Kyrie and didn't even needed to move Dinwiddie... And picks that are gonna be bad with how good they currently are anyways.
I would love to know what you consider "little"
PhilaOwnsBoston wrote:If anything, I think this non trade is more about the Rockets not valuing Simmons as much as people thought than it is them trying to stick it to Morey. If the Rockets thought Simmons was a can't-miss franchise player, then there's no way they turn that down out of spite. Don't care how bitter he was about Morey.
Even if this was true, they could have move him before the deadline like they did with Oladipo, probably to a bad team, and a much better pick than any pick they got from the Nets.
And this is true not only for Simmons but Jarrett Allen as well.
The rockets did an horrible trade, no matter how you slice it. And if Simmons was on the table it was a no brainer, you don't need to hold on to the player to make the trade valuable, specially if you're on a rebuilding phase. The only better trade was the one i mentioned before (Allen/Levert/Dinwiddie/picks)