ABM
Happily Married In Music City, USA!
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Good read. These are organizations worth hundreds of millions of dollars, I don't think that personality comes into play that much when teams look to make deals.

What's an "extravert?"
I am too damn lazy to click links most of the time.
If you want to share, I would like the money quote.
Thanks.


Where I come from, those guys are dangerous, but only if you're close to them. They do stuff that gets you killed. Being an NBAGM isn't the same as being military, but those types of guys aren't generally the type that logic applies to.Is it too early for "I told you so's" to the doom-and-gloomers? The ones who said we'll be sued by Miles, the NBAPA, and everyone else b/c we dared to send an email that said "don't maliciously eff with us"? AFTER 6 months of tacitly letting it go by, which Wallace didn't feel the need to listen to our phone calls saying "you really don't want to be blackmailing us..."
IMO, this actually shows how dumb Wallace and Ainge can be. All Wallace had to do was keep him 4 games (which, iirc, would have let them ditch Miles before the guarantee deadline), then have the word come out that "oh, btw the preseason counted, too". Ainge could've said "man, we didn't know...we were just trying him out". Wallace could've said "I had no intention of playing him just to mess with Portland...we were testing him out for 4 games, and we had no idea the preseason stuff counted". We would've been up a creek with the "malicious" argument.
Instead, MEM tries to get greedy. If their intention was to milk money out of Portland, then why help another team get under the lux tax mark? That cuts their check at the end of the year by another portion, and makes the pool of money to be split up smaller.![]()
I keep coming back to this: Wallace is not as smart as he thinks he is, he's not that good at subterfuge, and he's the type that accepts challenges into pissing contests.Where I come from, those guys are dangerous, but only if you're close to them. They do stuff that gets you killed. Being an NBAGM isn't the same as being military, but those types of guys aren't generally the type that logic applies to.

Outgoing, proactive, intentional.
And in a business predicated on "relationships", how will this bode for Portland's immediate dealings around the league, particularly with the NBA trade deadline just over a month away.
Are teams around the league now more hesitant to negotiate with Portland based on their forceful e-mail stance regarding Miles?
So this writer worries that the relationships based deal making may suffer for Portland because of this e-mail.
It is a topic worth pondering, that of relationships. Have seen similar thoughts in the media and on the boards before.
Yet every single time, the worries expressed are that Portland has been the one to damage whatever relationships existed or could have existed.
Relationships are not one-sided. So why are the comments about damaging relationships one-sided?
Where is the concern for those teams that may have gleefully conspired to game the system mostly or solely to reduce Portland's ability to make free agent offers next summer, and force them to pay millions of dollars in luxury tax?
Haven't those team already damaged their "relationships" - certainly with Portland, and possibly with other team's that are sympathetic to Portland's situation (ie Cuban)?
I think a more nuanced question would be "to what extent may Portland have FURTHER damaged its already strained relationships by sending this e-mail".
If Portland bites their tounge - sends no e-mail: Does anybody really think that after their stunts that Boston and Memphis were going to be making deals with Portland any time soon? What has changed? Were aren't trading for LeBron now because Dan Gilbert is offended by an e-mail?
Sports writers (and internet posters and bloggers) in general, are FAR FAR FAR FAR more excited by a mass e-mail legal warning then the majority of big-time execs for NBA teams.The team's decision to send a threatening letter to every team in the league is world's different than one or another team deciding to sign a player which has the potential to financially damage a single entity. This is the equivalent of a 1 vs. 1 altercation being expanded to include everyone in the room -- the equivalent of carpet bombing a village to get one target.
Sports writers (and internet posters and bloggers) in general, are FAR FAR FAR FAR more excited by a mass e-mail legal warning then the majority of big-time execs for NBA teams.
The fact of the matter was the e-mail didn't apply to nearly all the teams. It was a CYA, prep the ground warning note, that is common in business.
Trust me, most of the NBA had a collective yawn. A few reacted. The extreme reactions don't define the issue or nail down its impact.
If most of the NBA had a collective yawn . . . wouldn't some (besides Cuban) come to the defense of the Blazers when they get blasted by a owner and the player's association.
Why would they? They are not that interested one way or the other. That is what collective yawn means. Best to stay out of it really.If most of the NBA had a collective yawn . . . wouldn't some (besides Cuban) come to the defense of the Blazers when they get blasted by a owner and the player's association.
I don't see the collective yawn happening behind close doors. I see a lot of "who does that son of bitch think he is" with no comment to the press. And although this type of email might be common in business, it is not common among big ego NBA owners.
But does it hurt Blazers future negotaitions . . . I don't think the Blazers are blackballed or anything. I think many GMs will want to make sure they are gettin a good deal and might be less likely to engage in a flyer type trade with the Blazers, but I agree a GMs job is to improve their team and taht is what they will focus on.
The whole thing just sounds like sour grapes from the Blazers with very few feeling sorry for the Blazers and some upset with the Blazers.
(also, I would hate to enter into negotiations with anopther business partner that I know is sue happy or threatens lawsuits . . . no thank you)
Of course I'm speculating. But I'm not the only one. Blog writers such as Canzano, on-air radio and TV, people supposedly "in the know" have brought this up since August. But 28 other teams didn't do what the Grizzlies did. Even if you accept the Celtics pre-season tryout as legit (even though Boston journalists and beat writers wrote that at the time that there was no way one of the guaranteed contracts was getting waived, so Miles wouldn't have a reason to be trying out), no one felt the need to sign Miles over the next 6 months. Until multiple offers to get Outlaw were shot down by the Blazers.It seems you're making a lot of stuff up there, man. Maybe you know more than I do, but I doubt that Wallace would be willing to blackmail the Blazers like that, given the capability of 28 other teams to do exactly what the Grizzlies have done.
I don't know, maybe because it opens the others up to litigation now, and they don't have the "we didn't know" excuse. (I'm not a lawyer, so I'll stop there) You are willing to say that perhaps I know more about you on the blackmail thing, but not willing to say that Miller potentially does? How do you know what leg the Blazers have to stand on? I sure don't. But we (the collective posting population) have gone from IKPIT to "the guy's an idiot who'll get us sued" in less than a week.The Blazers still don't have a leg to stand on. Why should the other teams bother to do that?
The report I originally read (since confirmed as false) did not have "cash considerations" in it. It said it was Livingston for a conditional 2nd. I agree, if MIA paid Livingston's salary, gave MEM their chunk of tax payment, and the diff b/w 1/23rd and 1/24th, it's fine. Going under the assumption I was, that they take Livingston's contract, lower the tax pool, and increase the # of teams divvying up that pool, it seemed to be a net loss.The math is pretty easy here.
It's perfectly reasonable for the Heat to pay Memphis enough to make up for the reduced luxury tax payment share that they were going to receive as a result of helping them.
The burden of the Heat's gain is spread across all of the teams that will receive luxury tax benefits, while the benefit for helping the Heat is split only between the Heat and the Grizzlies.
Wallace hasn't built a good team yet, so he's clearly not demonstrated he's good at his job. The rest just seems to be interpersonal speculation and misunderstanding of arithmetic on your part.
Ed O.
Of all my faults, I'd say "misunderstanding of arithmetic" would be one of the least. Change to "misunderstanding of what Wallace is trying to do", and "misguided ability to trust in what you read from the media", and I have no problems with it.I don't personally see a problem with it, but here's where I think Miller may have been smart...
They didn't send this email to Boston in August, or in October while everyone was filling their rosters. They didn't even send it after MEM picked him up the first time. NO ONE in 4 months (other than MEM now) even hinted they might be signing him. Some others that were signed (just in DEC):
Juwan Howard
Malik Hairston
Dee Brown
Fred Jones
Dikembe Mutombo
Jeremy Richardson
Not exactly a murderer's row of talent. If someone was looking for a cheap, low-risk high-reward SF project, I don't understand the logic that brings Miles as your answer. Boston, IMO, actually gave him a decent chance with a few decent minutes in preseason, and showed everyone the level Miles could play at. No one wanted to take a chance on him, even with a 10-day, until MEM. I think that the email just put into the minds of people that they'll have to either play him legitimately (which Miles and his agent should like) or be really prepared to defend why you didn't play him more than 1 minute in 2 games.
So now, he's either radioactive to those on the up-and-up (who didn't want him before, anyway) or a big "eff you, sue me" from those who would sign him. Since Wallace is the only one in the latter category, maybe the email paid off.
Personally, I hope the Blazers hire the meanest pitbull of an attorney that they can find and push this as hard as they can.
The whole "preseason games count" ruling strikes me as one hell of a smoking gun.
Would sitting out a preseason game have counted towards Miles' suspension? Would it count toward his pension rights? Do "T's" or fragrant fouls called during preseason count toward possible suspensions? NO. This is the first time in history that the NBA has recognized preseason games as more than glorified pick-up games or workouts. They are going against their own established business practice.
