Hello Brooklyn wrote:bebopdeluxe wrote:Laimbeer wrote:
Gosh, you're right. He didn't use that exact phrase.
Yup. Don't you know that "I want to take my time with it" means "I want to take my time with it before I ABSOLUTELY re-sign with the Nets".
Get with the program, bro.
What an absurd response.![]()
All I said is he didn't say he wanted to explore his options.
I never said hes def resigning with the Nets.
Try reading the conversation before you comment. Thanks.
You do understand how "through the looking glass" this post is...right?
I don't post on RealGM as much as I used to. Is this your go-to move? Get into battles with posters on these ridiculous semantic differences? Huh?
If I read that a player - being asked about their pending opportunity at free agency - says "I want to take my time with it", to say that statement is not synonymous with " I want to explore my options" is ridiculous. I would agree that saying "I want to take my time with it" does not imply that he is definitely going to walk away from his player option and become a FA, and Harden's situation has so many factor that come to bear on it (i.e. who would have cap space to sign him if he became a FA, are there teams that he would use his option to be a FA to force a S&T to his desired team like Butler did with the Sixers) that it is impossible to predict what he will do.
I think Harden likes his current situation. Why wouldn't he? Playing with KD and (sometimes) Kyrie must be great. And even if he wants to stay in Brooklyn, it makes sense that he would keep his cards close to his vest. There is no value to coming out with any kind of declarative statement. But for you to try to suggest that "I want to take my time with it" is somehow different than him saying "I want to keep my options open" seems silly. Both statements project ambiguity and uncertainity.





























