Neither deals I mentioned meet all your requirements. Portland wasn't under a time pressure...they could have waited longer and "turned over more rocks" and it was a pretty crappy deal, IMO. The reason some "objective observers" might think it was fair is either because they're now counting the value of Rudy Fernandez who looks like he'll way exceed the expected value of his draft slot (something you don't believe is reasonable when it comes to Marc Gasol) or because they personally think Randolph is a tool and with pretty weak evidence believe he's a psychic cancer to his team.
Camby wasn't dealt out of conference, nor were the Nuggets to the point of "having turned over every rock."
The Clippers were the ONLY team with cap room willing to take Camby without sending a contract back, solving the owners sudden edict to get out of lux tax land. Ballgame.
Are you arguing that Randolph and Camby had similar value to Gasol?
Cause unless you are, your point doesn't resonate with me.
Effectively - for a variety of reasons - Randolph and Camby had very little trade value. Thus - their deals aren't all that crappy. They may not have been great, but that is not what I am arguing.
I am not arguing that every team should be able to cleverly dump their overhyped trash for good stuff.
Randolph and Camby were exposed players, known by the world not to be cornerstones of.... well of anything. They are both ballers, and have merit, but are essentially, just another player. Thus, their trade value has as much to do with their contract situations, attitude, team fit, age, injury history, PR value, etc. On most of those accounts Randolph and Camby score low.
See how easy that it to figure out. A player with an effective NET value that is low will tend to bring back little in return.
Thus, Randolph and Camby returning little for their teams means.....little. Because, you know, they weren't worth all that much.
Gasol was being booed by his home court fans, there were very few teams bidding on him and Memphis took the best offer available at the time. There's zero evidence that better deals were right around the corner. Had they waited two weeks and the Lakers opportunistically decided to lower their offer because now Memphis HAD to deal, Memphis would have gotten even less. That's at least as likely as a last-hour bounty.
So what? LA has crap offer on table. If nothing better comes along Memphis has to suck on a slightly more sour lemon? BFD. Lemon is lemon. Take the chance on sweetness arriving. That is what I say.
There is ZERO evidence that there were only two teams with offers, only two teams interested, and that a looming deadline for an excellent PRIME player would have flushed out NO OTHER OFFERS.
Despite that version of history being fairly implausable.
Laughable is putting any credence in "We could have have topped that." If they could have, they should have. Memphis didn't deal on the first day of the regular season. Almost all of the pre-deadline season had passed. It's incredibly flimsy to just assume that everything would have changed in the last two weeks. To that point, exactly two teams had offers on the table, and the other offer was even worse.
Also, your claims that the deal is "objectively" crummy is obviously nonsense. There's no such thing as "objective" merit to a trade. There's only opinion. I think the deal wasn't great but far from awful. Stating your opinion of the deal as objective fact doesn't strengthen your opinion.
Sure it does. I am Masbee.
In the past lots of trade deadline deals occur at the last moment. Wonder why?
Gasol was considered just as good a prospect as Rudy Fernandez, from draft profiles I read. He was one of the players with a claim to "best young player in Europe." He wasn't, and still isn't, an elite prospect. But it's not remotely hindsight to say he was a good prospect with plenty of value. IMO, he had, and still has, value equivalent to Rudy Fernandez.
Great. Pau gets you a prospect as good as we got with the far less valuable (for many reasons) Zach Randolph. Meaning what? That they didn't get all that much for Pau. Thank you.
And yes, Gasol is better than Camby and Randolph. And Memphis got more in return for Gasol than Portland did for Randolph and far more than Denver for for Camby.
Well sure they did. They still got hosed. Gasol at the time was worth far, far, far more than both those guys put together.
Trash + Trash in the NBA doesn't equal not trash.
Don't care if Gasol was getting booed. How are their ticket sales now in comparison? Did they help their team by making the trade they did? When they did?
Is it your contention that every trade made is the best trade that a GM could have made? That all GM's are roughly equal?
You are arguing that there were only two deals on the table and Wallace made the best deal.
If not, then why is it so hard to think that maybe, just maybe, Chris Wallace made a bad trade?