Nikolokolus
There's always next year
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That doesn't really make sense. Pritchard isn't looking for another GM to "do him a solid." Major trades aren't generally due to camaraderie and the desire to help a fellow GM out. A major trade happens because both teams feel it helps them.
You're viewing this in the wrong context, as if it is Pritchard against a unified front of all other GMs...like the NBA just wants anyone but Portland to win and individual teams don't care who wins so long as it isn't Portland. If a team feels it'll get a competitive advantage against everyone else, they'll do a trade with Pritchard. It's not like a GM is going to think, "Well, this trade would really help my team out...but wait! Pritchard only has 6 more months to use that cap space...I could really screw him by not doing a deal!"
Basically, Pritchard has about a year to find a deal that helps Portland and that another franchise feels helps themselves out. I don't think the chances of a deal go down with every passing day, beyond the obvious that he has one day less to find a deal. That is, I don't think there's a psychological element in the rest of the GMs at work over the "expiration date" on the cap space. They want to save money / add talent as quickly as possibly for their own purposes.
Actually I'm looking at in the context of KP probably feeling increasing pressure to get something done as the clock nears midnight, so I'm definitely assuming there is a psychological component (for both KP and for other GMs). I think we tend to assume that a lot of these deals exist in a kind of cold, logical business-like approach when in fact many teams are run like a rich man's hobby where many owners and GMs could be just as likely to make emotional decisions as they are to base their actions on the bottom line.
As for a rival GM "doing him a solid" I was being somewhat facetious. But I do believe that if the trade deadline approaches and then passes and then if the last days of June dwindle away with nothing having been done, KP would be much more likely to take something just to get some value out of his asset rather than let it evaporate into thin air.
The best way I can express what I'm thinking is through an analogy. Think of it as a man on a deserted island with a chest of gold and a limited supply of water. A boat comes along and offers to rescue the man if he'll part with some of his gold. Initially the man easily declines because he feels that if he holds out long enough another boat is likely to come by and offer him a rescue without demanding any of his treasure. Time passes, the water is starting to run out and the original boat returns to offer to pick him up again only this time they double their price, the man on the deserted island knows options are running out, the water is low and he's beginning to feel a pang of desperation that he's unlikely to get a better offer.
Now of course KP isn't going to die if he doesn't do a trade and the analogy isn't perfect because it's possible that there will be teams desperate to shed salary at some point in the next year, but after the firesale that occured with Vince Carter, Richard Jefferson and Shaq It seems like desperate sellers would have taken care of their business before July 1st not after. I guess we'll see what happens.

Sadly, my mind went to the exact same place.