New Jersey Nets
What went right:
They got some new blood.
Continuing a shakeup that began with last season's trade of Jason Kidd, GM Rod Thorn shipped Richard Jefferson to the Bucks for Yi Jianlian and Bobby Simmons. He also signed veteran free agents Jarvis Hayes, Eduardo Najera and Keyon Dooling. The new faces, along with point guard Devin Harris (who came over in the Kidd trade), should at least bring a jolt of much-needed energy to New Jersey.
They had a solid draft.
Few teams had a better draft night than did the Nets. First, 7-foot Stanford center Brook Lopez, projected as a possible top-five pick, slid down to the Nets at No. 10. Thorn then added two more quality prospects in 6-10 Cal forward Ryan Anderson (No. 21) and 6-7 Memphis guard Chris Douglas-Roberts (No. 40). All three were considered excellent picks for where they went on the board.
They paved the way for LBJ?
By shedding Jefferson's remaining contract (three years, $42.4 million), the Nets continued to clear cap space for the summer of 2010. That's when LeBron James, noted buddy of Nets part-owner Jay-Z, can become a free agent. If nothing else, it gives Jersey fans something to dream about while the rebuilding continues.
What went wrong:
They lost Nenad and Nachbar.
Nenad Krstic and Bostjan Nachbar left via free agency for better offers in Europe. Krstic's departure looks especially damaging, leaving the center duties to unproven Josh Boone and the rookie Lopez. The Nets had hoped to bring Krstic and Nachbar back for short-term deals that would not compromise that cap room in '10.
Their 'D' got weaker.
The loss of Jefferson cost New Jersey its best perimeter defender, a problem for a team that already features Vince Carter on the floor. Neither Simmons, Hayes nor Yi are known for their ability to stop people. It will be interesting to see how beleaguered coach Lawrence Frank, a stickler for defense, handles this problem.
The comp got better.
New Jersey's biggest problem this offseason was that so many other Atlantic foes made bigger moves. The Sixers (Brand) and Raptors (O'Neal) appeared to solidify themselves as the No. 2 and No. 3 teams in the division. Even the Knicks underwent a dramatic front office shakeup that should have them headed upward soon.
Grade: B-
The loss of Jefferson will hurt in the short term. Carter and Harris will need to stay healthy and have big seasons.