TradeNurkicNow
piss
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Let's go on the record guys... not who you think we'll trade for, but who you want us to trade for. Assume it'll be RLEC + sergio + outlaw.
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Butler is not attainable, mine as well put LBJ up there. I chose Wallace.
Let's go on the record guys... not who you think we'll trade for, but who you want us to trade for. Assume it'll be RLEC + sergio + outlaw.
If that package gets you Butler, you take it.
That package won't get you Butler, so it is a false choice and a skewed poll.
That package - or something close - might get you Gerald Wallace - in which case I take that.
I would rather have this: Wallace for RLEC + sergio + outlaw
Compared to this: Butler for RLEC + Bayless + Batum + Bad contract coming back.
If that package gets you Butler, you take it.
That package won't get you Butler, so it is a false choice and a skewed poll.
That package - or something close - might get you Gerald Wallace - in which case I take that.
I would rather have this: Wallace for RLEC + sergio + outlaw
Compared to this: Butler for RLEC + Bayless + Batum + Bad contract coming back.
I'd be happy to take a bad contract, like Nazr Mohammed, to get Gerald Wallace. Team is going to be over the cap anyway.
Whether Allen would sign off is a different question, a question to which I have no idea of the answer.
I don't trust Allen based on his past to make rational decisions in this regard.
In years past I flinched when the extensions to Ratliff, Zach and Miles were made. I was told - as you are now - that it doesn't matter since Allen is the one writing the checks and if he wants to it won't matter to the fans.
It does matter and it did matter. Those dollars came back to bite the team in the ass.
I (think I) understand the cap and the situation. Because of the likehood the Blazers will want to give big, long extensions to Roy, Aldridge and Oden in the next 2 years, they will be over the cap for some time and unable to obtain a free agent for more than MLE without trading a similar big contract out. If Allen is willing to pay luxury tax (or extra lux tax) for this and/or future years; he has the option of converting LaFrentz's ending contract into a player he wants, or making a lopsided trade this summer, or by cutting Blake/Outlaw to create extra cap room to sign free agent(s). These options will be gone soon, and thus the easy opportunity to bring in an impact player without giving one up.There was a difference. In that case, he was committing the dollars to what was supposed to be the foundation. Spending poorly on the players who are supposed to be the main drivers of the team's success definitely hurts, because when they fail to win, you have no way to retool.
In this case, the foundations of the team are already in place and paying those players will move the team over the cap. Spending inefficiently to "gild the lily" and add the final piece in an effert push the team to championship-caliber is a very different proposition. In virtually all sports, there is often some inefficiency in getting from "good" to "great"...those last marginal "wins" are hard to acquire and nearly impossible to acquire efficiently.
I think the specific logic I am advancing here is sound: If the team will be over the cap anyway, going further over, even inefficiently, in order to squeeze that last bit of value out is worthwhile. This can't be compared to other business environments, because there is an artifical constraint here: the salary cap. If there were no cap, I'd advocate efficient spending, because every dollar spent carries an opportunity cost. But with a cap, that isn't true. If the team doesn't spend money now, it can never spend it because the team will go over the cap with extensions to current players and the cap will forbid future spending. So, there really is no opportunity cost to the dollars spent right now. There's a real cost to Allen's pocket book, of course, but within the environment of the NBA, it's either spend it now--and get some value--or don't spend it at all.
