Trade Deadline Predictions

Welcome to our community

Be a part of something great, join today!

Meh. You think he gives 2 shits what we think? He's gonna go wherever he wants to.

Exactly. I think the only way he doesn't end up going to the Lakers is if he miraculously ends up someplace where he thinks he can seriously contend for a title - like GSW, or maybe BOS, CLE or HOU, depending on where LeBron ends up.

I doubt if OKC trades him anyway. After all, @HCP says "they'll figure it out".

The only way PG13 makes POR anything close to a contender is if we could have added him to Dame, C.J. and Nurk, but that ship has sailed. Swapping C.J. for PG13 makes us incrementally better, but doesn't make us contenders.

It would make our defense better, but we'd still be looking for a reliable 3rd scorer.

BNM
 
Exactly. I think the only way he doesn't end up going to the Lakers is if he miraculously ends up someplace where he thinks he can seriously contend for a title - like GSW, or maybe BOS, CLE or HOU, depending on where LeBron ends up.

I doubt if OKC trades him anyway. After all, @HCP says "they'll figure it out".

BNM

Don't be surprised if he goes East to Philly... Think about that squad for a bit with PG added.
 
You have absolutely no way of knowing this, or any reason whatsoever to believe it. However, there are plenty on these boards that agree with you.

No way of knowing, sure, but to believe that he wouldn’t have considering trading CJ this past offseason? I think that’s a safe bet.
 
Don't be surprised if he goes East to Philly... Think about that squad for a bit with PG added.

Can you imagine how good BOS would be with PG13 at the 4? Too bad he hates playing the 4. You think it wouldn't, matter in today's positionless NBA. He's the guy that would be guarding LeBron/Durant, regardless of what you call him/them.

PG - Kyrie
SG - Hayward
SF - Tatum
PF - PG13
C - Horford

BNM
 
Bleacher Report LOL. In before @BlazerWookee shoots it full of buckshot:

NBA Trade Deadline 2018: 10 Trade Targets Who Could Shape Playoff Picture

  1. Do you have any idea who's going to win the 2018 NBA title?

    OK, fine, that was an easy one. Smart money is still on a healthy version of the Golden State Warriors, even if the Houston Rockets, Toronto Raptors, Cleveland Cavaliers and Boston Celtics could all pose significant threats. So let's take a step even further back.

    Do you have any idea who's going to fill each and every one of the league's 16 playoff spots and how they'll stack up for the postseason's opening round?

    Of course you don't. That's an impossible question when so many prominent players, like these 10, are bouncing around the trade block and waiting to provide a playoff contender with a sudden infusion of offensive and/or defensive production.

    Each of these 10 men, assuming they're moved before the Feb. 8 deadline at 3 p.m. ET, will have something to say about the currently inscrutable picture that extends beyond the season's 82nd game.
Kent Bazemore, SG/SF, Atlanta Hawks
1 OF 10

  1. 9a1a9995c61822bb9948735c3269a462_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 28

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 12.5 points, 4.4 rebounds, 3.7 assists, 1.8 steals, 0.7 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 14.8 PER, 1.82 RPM, 21.18 TPA

    Need an injection of defensive energy? Call the Atlanta Hawks and see if they—more eager to get his contract off the books than to recoup an equal asset—are willing to take a menial return for Kent Bazemore. Though they may demand a first-round pick for the swingman's services, trying never hurt anyone (and that's a fair price tag anyway).

    Bazemore might have been viewed as an unmovable player last season, largely because of his putrid percentages. But he's become a more palatable offensive commodity during the 2017-18 campaign, shooting 41.5 percent from the field, 38.7 percent from downtown (on 4.1 attempts per game) and 79.8 percent from the charity stripe.

    Now, he's worth acquiring.

    A playoff contender or title hopeful isn't looking to Bazemore for a scoring boost. But his hounding defense is made far more valuable when the opposition is at least forced to respect his jumper, or else his team is left playing four-on-five whenever he's logging minutes. Right now, that respect must be present, and it's even better news that the scoring strides haven't come at the expense of his point-preventing prowess.

    Thanks to his long arms and relentless energy, Bazemore has a score of 1.36 in ESPN.com's defensive real plus/minus, which leaves him behind only Andre Roberson, Danny Green, Victor Oladipo, Jaylen Brown and Jimmy Butler among the 105 men qualified at his position.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Cleveland Cavaliers
Tyreke Evans, SG/SF, Memphis Grizzlies
2 OF 10

  1. 8480b27e22a6a42a10ee525878c26807_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 28

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 19.9 points, 5.1 rebounds, 4.6 assists, 1.1 steals, 0.4 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 22.9 PER, 3.20 RPM, 107.89 TPA

    Though no one saw a massive breakout from Tyreke Evans coming when he signed a meager one-year deal with the Memphis Grizzlies, his strides should be viewed more as legitimate progress than a fluky hot streak. The 28-year-old swingman is finally healthy and playing with unmitigated confidence, freed to handle the rock and shoot from all over the floor.

    Evans is dominant in isolation, scoring 1.14 points per possession to sit in the 91.1 percentile. He's thriving as a pick-and-roll ball-handler (86.4 percentile). He's hitting his pull-up jumpers well enough to post a 53.3 effective field-goal percentage—the league average on these shots is 43.0 percent—and scoring 1.11 points per possession in spot-up situations (75.1 percentile).

    His overall three-point success rate of 41.3 percent has opened the door for even wider driving lanes toward the hoop, where he can use his physicality and touch to finish 55 percent of his looks within three feet.

    Everything is clicking.

    All those individual aspects of his offensive profile should stand out on their own. But put together, he's been an unstoppable scoring force who can also find open teammates and hold his ground defensively.

    But the best news of all? Because he's on an expiring deal with a team sinking to the bottom of the Western Conference standings (and his Bird rights aren't on the table), he can likely be had for a fairly cheap price.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Philadelphia 76ers
Marc Gasol, C, Memphis Grizzlies
3 OF 10

  1. c3544db388e92ab55bf6bbeeddcfc93a_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 32

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 18.4 points, 8.6 rebounds, 4.0 assists, 0.7 steals, 1.6 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 17.8 PER, 0.89 RPM, 35.04 TPA

    The Memphis Grizzlies may elect to hang on to the face of their franchise for a while longer, hoping better luck with injuries will allow them to be more competitive in the future. Along those lines, as ESPN.com's Adrian Wojnarowski reported, "Teams are curious to study Memphis' plans with center Marc Gasol, but so far, the Grizzlies say they're planning to keep him."

    That's the wrong decision for multiple reasons.

    Gasol is quite clearly on the decline, looking slower of foot on the defensive end and struggling to impact the offensive proceedings with regularity. As he continues to move deeper into his 30s, his value is only going to diminish further—that's troublesome if the Grizzlies want to move on eventually. Secondly, this Memphis squad isn't suddenly bursting into the playoff picture, and it doesn't have many ways of rebuilding with a veteran-laden, expensive roster and a 2019 first-round pick already departed from its coffers.

    To be clear, the Spanish center is still an impressive contributor. A slower version of Gasol remains an impact defender who can anchor the interior of schemes (so long as he's surrounded by a bit more perimeter talent), and his deep bag of tricks lets him remain effective on offense. He'd just ideally be used in smaller doses on a more competitive team.

    Strike while the iron is at least lukewarm, and you might get back the pieces necessary to begin a legitimate rebuild with enduring hope.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Cleveland Cavaliers
George Hill, PG, Sacramento Kings
4 OF 10

  1. 47e5b88037e32aeef30bb0b884c18816_crop_exact.jpg

    Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images
    Age: 31

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 10.4 points, 3.0 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 0.9 steals, 0.3 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 13.5 PER, minus-1.57 RPM, minus-20.16 TPA

    George Hill's tenure with the Sacramento Kings has been disastrous to the point that he "has already been shopped" mere months after signing a three-year deal with the organization, per Sean Deveney of Sporting News. The fit has just been...off, leading Hill to frequently appear disengaged and discombobulated.

    Nevertheless, the 31-year-old floor general should retain some value on the trade market—enough to tempt a playoff contender such as the Denver Nuggets or Philadelphia 76ers. Put him in a more advantageous system that allows him to handle the rock like he did in previous locations, and he could begin resembling the 2016-17 iteration who averaged 16.9 points and 4.2 assists per game for the Utah Jazz.

    Hill isn't a lost cause. Even while he's passively waited for plays to develop and ceded touches to his younger teammates, he's established himself as an enduringly excellent shooter. This might be shocking for a player with a downward-spiraling reputation universally billed as a disappointment, but he's hitting 45.1 percent of his three-point attempts while taking an even three per contest.

    For context, that's a career high (in efficiency, not volume). And among the 127 qualified players taking at least three triples per game, only Nikola Mirotic, Jayson Tatum, Trey Lyles and Klay Thompson have been more accurate.

    The skills are still there. And at this juncture, they shouldn't be particularly expensive to acquire.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Denver Nuggets
DeAndre Jordan, C, Los Angeles Clippers
5 OF 10

  1. 453636ec414b5a70263188037bd6aa48_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 29

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 11.8 points, 14.9 rebounds, 1.2 assists, 0.5 steals, 1.0 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 20.1 PER, 0.85 RPM, 53.61 TPA

    The Los Angeles Clippers might be more hesitant to trade DeAndre Jordan if they keep winning games and remain in the Western Conference playoff hunt, but they also have to consider the future. The 29-year-old center is already moving past his athletic prime, and he can opt out of his contract this summer to become an unrestricted free agent, effectively sacrificing $24.1 million in 2018-19 to pursue a long-term deal that guarantees his finances for a lengthier duration.

    At this point, why wouldn't he?

    "Spare a thought for DJ: He loves Los Angeles, but the Clippers... OK, 'hates' is a bit much, but the ebullience that used to characterize his game is gone," Chris Ryan recently penned for The Ringer. "He is still a double-double machine, but it feels perfunctory rather than emphatic and domineering."

    Imagine what might happen if he were reinvigorated in a new location. Think about what he could do if he had a new point guard throwing him lobs when he wasn't protecting the interior of a defense on the other end.

    The Clippers have actually been better defensively without Jordan on the floor, but there's good reason to believe that narrative could reverse if he were surrounded by more defensive talent and motivated to give 100 percent for a contender. Plus, he's still scoring 1.2 points per possession as a roll man out of the PnR game, which lands in the 70.8 percentile.

    Expect the Cleveland Cavaliers and Milwaukee Bucks—both of whom could use consistent play at the 5 and a true rim-protecting presence—to come calling and offer the Clippers far more than they'd receive if Jordan chose to walk this summer (i.e. nothing).

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Milwaukee Bucks
Nikola Mirotic, PF, Chicago Bulls
6 OF 10

  1. 20b45232324756a0e72c865b2b8d75af_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 26

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 17.4 points, 7.0 rebounds, 1.5 assists, 0.5 steals, 0.4 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 23.0 PER, 1.45 RPM, 13.88 TPA

    Since returning from the injury suffered at the hands (well, hand) of his own teammate, Nikola Mirotic has been a man on a mission. Not only has he submitted the per-game line you can see above, but he's done so while shooting 48.6 percent from the field, a league-best 46.5 percent from distance and 75.0 percent at the stripe.

    Even more importantly, he's transformed the Chicago Bulls.

    Without Mirotic on the floor, the Windy City natives have been outscored by a whopping 9.6 points per 100 possessions, which would beat out only the season-long mark of the Sacramento Kings (minus-9.8). But when he plays, that net rating skyrockets to 3.5, which would trail just the Golden State Warriors (10.5), Toronto Raptors (8.0), Houston Rockets (7.6), Boston Celtics (5.4) and Minnesota Timberwolves (4.0). And that impact isn't just coming on offense, since Mirotic has also played strong on-ball defense and posted the best rebounding season of his career.

    Whichever team acquires him will primarily be doing so for floor-spacing purposes. He demands constant attention from foes on the perimeter, and that's not likely to change anytime soon, even as his success rate from beyond the rainbow falls to a more reasonable level.

    That won't be the only benefit the 26-year-old provides.

    At this point, we basically know Mirotic is going to be on the move before the February deadline. The man himself has continued to say he wants out, according to Joe Cowley of the Chicago Sun-Times.

    Whether the Detroit Pistons—who should be willing to offer the most, given their need for bench scoring and floor-spacing volume—Utah Jazz or someone else gets their hands on him first is the only remaining question.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Detroit Pistons
Kyle O'Quinn, C, New York Knicks
7 OF 10

  1. hi-res-65cdc97f4502d3ae04b4d8902b57f7bd_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 27

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 6.9 points, 6.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists, 0.5 steals, 1.0 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 20.0 PER, 2.63 RPM, 69.56 TPA

    Kyle O'Quinn may only be playing 17 minutes per game for the New York Knicks, but he's quietly served as one of the team's most valuable pieces.

    The big man never takes a bad shot and has become a knockdown mid-range marksman. He's connecting on 55.2 percent of his shots between 10 and 16 feet, as well as 46.4 percent of even longer twos, which has helped him post a 58.4 field-goal percentage. He's a devastatingly effective rebounder on both ends, capable of boxing out players of all shapes and sizes to prevent offensive boards before squirming around others to create second-chance opportunities of his own.

    And best of all? The 27-year-old has become a defensive monster.

    NBA Math's defensive points saved, which accounts for both per-possession efficiency and volume, places only nine players ahead of O'Quinn. The Norfolk State product also sits at No. 12 among centers and No. 23 overall in ESPN.com's DRPM. New York allows three fewer points per 100 possessions with him on the floor, largely because only Kristaps Porzingis is making a bigger impact around the rim among those who see regular time while wearing a Knicks uniform.

    Ask O'Quinn to step into the starting lineup and play 30 minutes per game, and you won't see him find nearly as much success. His energy is best used in these smaller doses.

    But not every team has a second center upon whom it can consistently rely. Hence, multiple playoff teams are already calling the Knicks to express interest in acquiring this man's services, per Marc Berman of the New York Post.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Oklahoma City Thunder
Julius Randle, PF, Los Angeles Lakers
8 OF 10

  1. hi-res-4dee480e0384e0a2a3a823565c356633_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 23

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 13.1 points, 7.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists, 0.5 steals, 0.7 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 18.2 PER, 0.06 RPM, minus-7.89 RPM

    As Los Angeles Lakers head coach Luke Walton recently highlighted, per Harrison Faigen of Lakers Nation, Julius Randle has made significant defensive strides:

    "Defensively, we asked him just to mainly do switching in the second unit. In my opinion, he's one of the top bigs in our league at switching and guarding every position on the floor. In the starting lineup, we need him to play more traditional coverages and schemes.

    "He's gotten a lot better at that in the short amount of time that we've switched him into the starting lineup, as far as recognizing and calling out coverages. He's been great for us and he's continuing to improve."

    Randle's creative scoring—so long as he's moving to his left—has been tantalizing throughout his NBA career. Ditto for his rebounding, as he's consistently been able to parlay his physicality and inexhaustible energy reserves (buoyed, of course, by more limited playing time) into success on the glass. But these defensive strides have made him an ideal fit on a contender's bench.

    The numbers back it up, even if we only look at ESPN.com's DRPM over the course of his career:
    No one should mistake Randle for a defensive stud. But this newfound switchability and the corresponding discipline to play within schemes should make him a more versatile option, as well as a better fit with any team in search of a high-energy bench big.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Detroit Pistons
Kemba Walker, PG, Charlotte Hornets
9 OF 10

  1. hi-res-de2d3ef32d86c5c178546dc2e3137b75_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 27

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 21.8 points, 3.4 rebounds, 5.8 assists, 1.3 steals, 0.3 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 20.7 PER, 3.78 RPM, 99.89 TPA

    The Charlotte Hornets have won just 15 of their first 39 games, which leaves them equidistant to the No. 8 seed and the bottom rung of the Eastern Conference ladder. That's not a fluke either. Their net rating (minus-0.9) places them at No. 19 in the league.

    Eventually, the Hornets will have to pull the plug.

    Moving Nicolas Batum would be tough, given the enormous expenditures remaining. Shipping off someone like Jeremy Lamb would be pointless, since he's a youthful piece just coming into his own. And that leaves Charlotte toying with the idea of a trade centered around Kemba Walker, as dealing the All-Star point guard would A) clear up the ledgers a bit, B) facilitate a drop further down the lottery standings and C) bring back a sizable return that would help the team invest in the future.

    To be clear, the Hornets haven't yet given any indication they're willing to part with their best player. No substantiated rumors exist at this stage of the season, and everything on this topic remains purely speculative.

    But...it just makes sense, so long as the Hornets are willing to test the patience of their fanbase with more rebuilding seasons.

    Charlotte won't just get a youthful piece in return. It wouldn't receive only a single first-round pick. Instead, it would bring back a significant haul geared toward the future for a floor general still capable of running the pick-and-roll with the best of 'em.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Denver Nuggets
Lou Williams, PG/SG, Los Angeles Clippers
10 OF 10

  1. 86b76fc2345db0e4ed74d66ad4071916_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 31

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 23.1 points, 2.6 rebounds, 5.0 assists, 0.8 steals, 0.2 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 22.5 PER, 0.11 RPM, 61.64 TPA

    Thirty-four points against the Atlanta Hawks. A 50-burger against the Golden State Warriors. Another 30-spot, this time at the expense of the Sacramento Kings.

    Lou Williams is playing like a man possessed, averaging a mind-numbing 30.5 points, 2.1 rebounds and 5.1 assists per contest while slashing 46.2/44.6/92.3 since a brief one-game absence near the end of December. He can't miss from anywhere on the court, throwing up nearly 10 triples per game and constantly working his way to the charity stripe. Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey might be swooning. Hell, James Harden might be jealous.

    On the season as a whole, Williams is averaging 23.1 points per game with a true shooting percentage of 60.8—numbers matched by only 10 other players during the last decade of NBA action. He's been an offensive genius for the Los Angeles Clippers, sitting at No. 5 overall in ESPN.com's offensive real plus/minus and No. 7 in NBA Math's offensive points added.

    The only issue here? He might be playing so well that the Clippers are hesitant to trade him. Even if he'd return a first-round pick for a half-season of play from the Philadelphia 76ers, Cleveland Cavaliers, Utah Jazz or any other squad looking for a reliable bench scorer, the two sides are discussing an extension that would take him off the market, per The Vertical's Shams Charania.

    Williams' worth to a playoff hopeful is obvious. What's more obfuscated—for the time being, at least, since a cold streak could push the Clippers too far back of the Western Conference's No. 8 seed—is whether Los Angeles will actually be willing to shop him.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Philadelphia 76ers
 
Boom. Here I was about to challenge this notion that someone's "belief" (read: opinion) need be "provable" in order to be reasonable or valid. And here you come, proving the validity of your opinion.

Well, I guess I have nothing to add...

Loll yeah I just think if Olshey is going down, he’s going down with Dame and CJ. I’d be shocked if he broke that pair up, even though many can agree that it might be for the best. We’ll see what he does this deadline/offseason. I think it’s his last year in Portland if the squad doesn’t make a jump. He should be the first to go.
 
The odds of anything ever coming up of commensurate value is so hard to even fathom. I could give you the trite answer that nobody is untradable, but clearly they are.
by Neil Olshey

In some of the fantasy trades on here, we get more than "commensurate value," so based on your Olshey quote, he would indeed make the deal. However, he doesn't think all of S2's "deals" are even fathomable.
 
Last edited:
Kyle O'Quinn, C, New York Knicks
7 OF 10

  1. hi-res-65cdc97f4502d3ae04b4d8902b57f7bd_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 27

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 6.9 points, 6.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists, 0.5 steals, 1.0 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 20.0 PER, 2.63 RPM, 69.56 TPA

    Kyle O'Quinn may only be playing 17 minutes per game for the New York Knicks, but he's quietly served as one of the team's most valuable pieces.

    The big man never takes a bad shot and has become a knockdown mid-range marksman. He's connecting on 55.2 percent of his shots between 10 and 16 feet, as well as 46.4 percent of even longer twos, which has helped him post a 58.4 field-goal percentage. He's a devastatingly effective rebounder on both ends, capable of boxing out players of all shapes and sizes to prevent offensive boards before squirming around others to create second-chance opportunities of his own.

    And best of all? The 27-year-old has become a defensive monster.

    NBA Math's defensive points saved, which accounts for both per-possession efficiency and volume, places only nine players ahead of O'Quinn. The Norfolk State product also sits at No. 12 among centers and No. 23 overall in ESPN.com's DRPM. New York allows three fewer points per 100 possessions with him on the floor, largely because only Kristaps Porzingis is making a bigger impact around the rim among those who see regular time while wearing a Knicks uniform.

    Ask O'Quinn to step into the starting lineup and play 30 minutes per game, and you won't see him find nearly as much success. His energy is best used in these smaller doses.

    But not every team has a second center upon whom it can consistently rely. Hence, multiple playoff teams are already calling the Knicks to express interest in acquiring this man's services, per Marc Berman of the New York Post.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Oklahoma City Thunder
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!

I've been on the O'Quinn to POR bandwagon for well over a year, for exactly the same reasons the author mentions (plus his a VERY under rated passer - his AST% of 17.5 would be second on our team, better than both C.J. and Napier). He would be a GREAT fit next to Nurk at PF and can also back him up at center.

If we don't get him, I won't lose much sleep over it, but Olshey needs to pull a Bob Whitsitt and cock block the Thunder. He can't let a division rival improve their biggest weakness - no bench. OKC has to crash and burn, so PG13 will leave for nothing, Melo will stay for another year, eating up 28 million in cap space, and then leave for nothing and they have to tear it down and started over depleted of all the assets they used to assemble their current "Big 3".

BNM
 
George Hill, PG, Sacramento Kings
4 OF 10

  1. 47e5b88037e32aeef30bb0b884c18816_crop_exact.jpg

    Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images
    Age: 31

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 10.4 points, 3.0 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 0.9 steals, 0.3 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 13.5 PER, minus-1.57 RPM, minus-20.16 TPA

    George Hill's tenure with the Sacramento Kings has been disastrous to the point that he "has already been shopped" mere months after signing a three-year deal with the organization, per Sean Deveney of Sporting News. The fit has just been...off, leading Hill to frequently appear disengaged and discombobulated.

    Nevertheless, the 31-year-old floor general should retain some value on the trade market—enough to tempt a playoff contender such as the Denver Nuggets or Philadelphia 76ers. Put him in a more advantageous system that allows him to handle the rock like he did in previous locations, and he could begin resembling the 2016-17 iteration who averaged 16.9 points and 4.2 assists per game for the Utah Jazz.

    Hill isn't a lost cause. Even while he's passively waited for plays to develop and ceded touches to his younger teammates, he's established himself as an enduringly excellent shooter. This might be shocking for a player with a downward-spiraling reputation universally billed as a disappointment, but he's hitting 45.1 percent of his three-point attempts while taking an even three per contest.

    For context, that's a career high (in efficiency, not volume). And among the 127 qualified players taking at least three triples per game, only Nikola Mirotic, Jayson Tatum, Trey Lyles and Klay Thompson have been more accurate.

    The skills are still there. And at this juncture, they shouldn't be particularly expensive to acquire.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Denver Nuggets
Kemba Walker, PG, Charlotte Hornets
9 OF 10

  1. hi-res-de2d3ef32d86c5c178546dc2e3137b75_crop_exact.jpg

    Age: 27

    2017-18 Per-Game Stats: 21.8 points, 3.4 rebounds, 5.8 assists, 1.3 steals, 0.3 blocks

    2017-18 Advanced Metrics: 20.7 PER, 3.78 RPM, 99.89 TPA

    The Charlotte Hornets have won just 15 of their first 39 games, which leaves them equidistant to the No. 8 seed and the bottom rung of the Eastern Conference ladder. That's not a fluke either. Their net rating (minus-0.9) places them at No. 19 in the league.

    Eventually, the Hornets will have to pull the plug.

    Moving Nicolas Batum would be tough, given the enormous expenditures remaining. Shipping off someone like Jeremy Lamb would be pointless, since he's a youthful piece just coming into his own. And that leaves Charlotte toying with the idea of a trade centered around Kemba Walker, as dealing the All-Star point guard would A) clear up the ledgers a bit, B) facilitate a drop further down the lottery standings and C) bring back a sizable return that would help the team invest in the future.

    To be clear, the Hornets haven't yet given any indication they're willing to part with their best player. No substantiated rumors exist at this stage of the season, and everything on this topic remains purely speculative.

    But...it just makes sense, so long as the Hornets are willing to test the patience of their fanbase with more rebuilding seasons.

    Charlotte won't just get a youthful piece in return. It wouldn't receive only a single first-round pick. Instead, it would bring back a significant haul geared toward the future for a floor general still capable of running the pick-and-roll with the best of 'em.

    Who Should Show Most Interest: Denver Nuggets
No, and no! If DEN gets a PG, we're fucked. It's their biggest weakness, by far. It's why I picked us to finish ahead of them in my preseason predictions. Both Hill and Walker would be a HUGE upgrade for DEN. Walker is a better player, but Hill might be a better fit and will command a much lower price on the trade market. They won't have to gut their team to get him. SAC management are such idiots. Signing the 31-year old Hill made no sense for a rebuilding team, and now they will end up giving him away for practically nothing - hopefully not to a division rival.

BNM
 
Utah fans booed Rodney Hood tonight, something tells me if he was a well spoken white guy they would give him some slack. He had 15 pts in 21 mins of play, shot a little under 50%. They can boo his ass all the way to Portland. I really think he will be traded before the dead line.
 
Utah fans booed Rodney Hood tonight, something tells me if he was a well spoken white guy they would give him some slack.

I missed this situation. Why is Hood disliked by Utahns?
 
I missed this situation. Why is Hood disliked by Utahns?

Hood smacked the phone out of a fans hand the other day and that rubbed a lot people the wrong way. But mostly Hood has been the one fans chose to blame this year because they’re ‘underperforming’. Although he’s having one of his best yrs in the league, they just expected him to step up and largely fill Hayward’s void and he’s just not that guy.
 
Hood smacked the phone out of a fans hand the other day and that rubbed a lot people the wrong way. But mostly Hood has been the one fans chose to blame this year because they’re ‘underperforming’. Although he’s having one of his best yrs in the league, they just expected him to step up and largely fill Hayward’s void and he’s just not that guy.

Is there video of this?
 
If we don't get him, I won't lose much sleep over it, but Olshey needs to pull a Bob Whitsitt and cock block the Thunder.

Who hacked Boob's account??

This is like the Hawaii nuclear bomb emergency. Some clerk must have pushed the wrong button. But I thank her for warming the cockles of my cold dead heart.
 
Who hacked Boob's account??

This is like the Hawaii nuclear bomb emergency. Some clerk must have pushed the wrong button. But I thank her for warming the cockles of my cold dead heart.

Cock blocking a division rival is a total Whitsitt move. Unfortunately, it sometimes backfires.

See Rod Strickland - The Sequel. We didn't need a third PG. We already had Damon, who was already insecure and whining about losing playing time to Greg Anthony.

The Lakers were the front runners to land Strickland, but Whitsitt swooped and and signed him at the last minute to specifically prevent him going to LA.

It was the straw that broke the camel's back on that locker room. We were already two, in some cases three, deep at every position with guys who all thought they should be starting.

Adding Strickland to that roster sent a team that hadn't lost more than two games on a row all season into an immediate tailspin. They immediately lost five in a row, and 14 of their last 20 games. In five weeks, they fell from the #1 seed to #7, lost home court advantage and were swept in the first round by the same Laker team they nearly defeated in the Western Conference Finals the year before.

Be careful. Sometimes being a cock blocking asshole comes back to bite you in the ass.

This case is different. We can actually use O'Quinn. He's not redundant and unnecessary, like 34-year old Rod Strickland was. We're not two deep with starter quality players at every position. In fact, we're not even one deep with quality starters at either forward position.

O'Quinn would clearly be the second best big man on our roster behind Nurkic. He'd be a natural backing up Nurk and also playing next to him for stretches.

He would make our team better. We wouldn't just be getting him to cock block OKC. That would just be a pleasant side effect.

BNM
 
Last edited:
New York dollars are pesos in Portland. After the Knicks traded us Jared Jeffries and Channing Frye, the stats of each were cut in half as Blazers. Therefore, O'Quinn's 60% shooting and 1 rebound every 3 minutes would become 30% and 1 every 6 here.

More seriously, 1) As a former #49 pick, his grand total of 0 for 6 3 point shots in 44 games this season would mean that Stotts would have to hit the road, and 2) Carmelo's PER dropped in 1 year from 17.9 to 13.9, need I say more.
 
Rodney Hood is being booed in Utah for missing shots.

Could use a change of scenery, and we could use his scoring -- (doesn't bring much else, though). I'd like to see him rebound the ball a bit better.
 
Rodney Hood is being booed in Utah for missing shots.

Could use a change of scenery, and we could use his scoring -- (doesn't bring much else, though). I'd like to see him rebound the ball a bit better.
yeah, no thanks
 
Rodney Hood’s per 36 is pretty much exactly what we need at the wing. 21 pts and 38% from 3 and that’s in that ugly offense at Utah. He needs to improve his rebounding and assists numbers but I bet put in the right role and system that would be easy.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top