I don't believe that *spiting* Klutch has anything to do with it. There may be teams that are leery of dealing with Klutch and everything that entails, but that's as much a rational response as much as an emotional one. I mean you're trading for for a really good, but also seriously flawed player on a max contract who just demanded a trade with 4 years left on his contract. He's credibly threatening not to report. How are teams not going factor that in? There's a lot of risk here.Texas Chuck wrote:NYG wrote:Ballerhogger wrote:So get nothing for him get worst as team hope for the best? i guess the story wont go away. How long do 76fans want hear about ben ?
I don't see how you be the team that sets a precedent for allowing a player locked up for 4 years to force his way out like this. It's not like anything great is on the table now anyway. If somehow you find a way to get Lillard or Beal in the meantime, you do it, but short of that why not sit him and see if you have addition by subtraction or just let Embiid sit out the year and have a lotto pick next year and a well rested Embiid.
I still think this will end when a smart franchise puts a real offer on the table. Foolish not to buy cheap on a guy like Ben Simmons given this rare opportunity and spiting yourself to punish Simmons/Klutch isn't really a solution for Philly either.
Real NBA teams aren't nearly as extreme as RealGM trade board posters and common sense will prevail.
The reality is that Simmons isn't Beal, Dame, or Harden where you're able to convince yourself that despite whatever shortcomings they might have on the floor you can make it work and come out way ahead. This is more like trading for Kyrie, and not in 2017, but right now.
I'm not really sure what a real offer or buying cheap means with respect to Simmons. I think the Kings should put Fox on the table but that's mostly due to the fact that Fox is overrated and they can't really play together.
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