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Au contraire, mon frere.
NO could clear enough salary under the LT to sign Plums, if that's what he wanted to do.
NO could clear enough salary under the LT to re-sign Noel, if that's what he wanted to do.
QFTWe didn't keep Plums because we traded him for a much better player.
Trading McCollum doesn't change much, unless they're dumping his salary which is obviously not going to happen. Presumably, if they trade McCollum, it'll be for similar value, either in another highly-paid star who fits better or else a couple of players who add up to about the same. I don't think it's plausible that the trade McCollum for, like, draft picks or unproven players. That would be tantamount to starting all over in building around Lillard and I don't see the team doing that.
So if they do end up trading McCollum for similar value and similar salary, Portland is still in the same financial situation in terms of building out the rest of their roster as they are now.
As I said, I doubt Portland is going to trade McCollum for an unproven player like Simmons. Nor do I think any team is going to trade a cheap, emerging star like Embiid for an expensive star in McCollum. Having a star that is currently cheap is a gigantic advantage, because it allows them the cap space to add more salaries around Embiid. They'd give up that advantage by trading him for someone like McCollum.
Conventional wisdom also states:Conventional wisdom states:
Guards who can shoot the three > centers who can pass the ball.
Plumlee is talented, but he's a weak defender and a poor scorer. He has no outside shot to speak of. He's not an exceptional rebounder so he doesn't really excel at any of the things that you want in a center.
Crabbe will always have a more marketable skill as a shooter. He's still young. He has good size. There is the illusion that he's a decent defender. If there's a team out there who wants a starting shooting guars, I think we can make a trade.
Conventional wisdom also states:
If two players are on the same team, and in very similar minutes one has significantly better advanced stats than the other (PER, WS, WS/48, BPM, VORP, Drtg), then that player is probably worth more.
Crabbe has a good TS%, but he really doesn't do anything else better than Plumlee. Positions be damned, Plumlee is simply a better player, and he had a more positive impact on the Blazers' performance than Crabbe did.
You're making my point.One was the starter, because who the hell else was going to play those minutes?
One is on the bench, because what chance does he have of playing more minutes than Dame or CJ?
Crabbe has never been given the opportunity to show what he can do. He's a shooting guard on a team that is jam packed with guards. Plumlee's primary competition was Meyers Leonard and Chris Kaman (last season.)
For several years Philly has followed your strategy, and for several years they've produced among the worst records in the league.
The pressure is on their management now to produce wins. They desperately need a wing scorer/shooter.
You're making my point.
On a team built around Dame/CJ, a player like Plumlee is going to be inherently more valuable than a player like Crabbe, and paying 18M+ to a player like Crabbe is going to make inherently less sense than paying 18M+ to a player like Plumlee.
You're making my point.
On a team built around Dame/CJ, a player like Plumlee is going to be inherently more valuable than a player like Crabbe, and paying 18M+ to a player like Crabbe is going to make inherently less sense than paying 18M+ to a player like Plumlee.
Who said anything about trading McCollum as a salary dump?
But if Plumlee doesn't have value at a higher number, why exactly do you believe he was going to get paid more than he's worth this coming summer? Crabbe got his insane offer as a 23-year-old bench player because Brooklyn didn't know what kind of player he might be as a starter, and was offering based on potential improvement upon receiving a starting job. Plumlee, however, will be a 26 year old 2 year starter. Teams know who he is, and his perceived ceiling isn't much higher than his current level of play. Any offers he gets this summer will be based on the actual value of what he produces rather than a perceived notion of potential. The idea that he'll be paid far more than what he's worth doesn't jibe with reality.But Plumlee only had value on his current contract. It's obvious that he was out of his depth. We needed an upgrade. Everyone knew it. Plumlee on a significantly higher contract was NOT more valuable, and not worth the risk of re-signing to hopefully trade later.
No one did, I was pointing out that absent that (which, as said, no one has or would suggest), it wouldn't help our financial situation in terms of building around Lillard+Whomever (right now, Whomever is McCollum). So unless you think that one McCollum deal to even out the roster is all the team needs, the team does need to make other moves. That's why the tradeability of those other guys matters.
But if Plumlee doesn't have value at a higher number, why exactly do you believe he was going to get paid more than he's worth this coming summer? Crabbe got his insane offer as a 23-year-old bench player because Brooklyn didn't know what kind of player he might be as a starter, and was offering based on potential improvement upon receiving a starting job. Plumlee, however, will be a 26 year old 2 year starter. Teams know who he is, and his perceived ceiling isn't much higher than his current level of play. Any offers he gets this summer will be based on the actual value of what he produces rather than a perceived notion of potential. The idea that he'll be paid far more than what he's worth doesn't jibe with reality.
