Plus, he'll really help us on the boards (10 rpg). </div>
Since Jefferson is averaging 7 boards a game when healthy, an extra 3 isn't really all that great in my opinion. We gave up a lot of boards in that Cavs series, but which one of those games were we out of? All I saw were close games. We give up boards, but same time, it hasn't hurt us as much as people say.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Sure, he isn't a good defender, and a sub-par passer out of the post, too. But you can't say that he won't help this team next season more than Richard Jefferson and a rookie. </div>
Maybe not, but the extent of it is marginal at best.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Trading away a 1st round pick is not trading away the team's future. It's ONE player, and it's not like any of the guys who'll be left on the board by the 17th pick will be able to lead the Nets to a title in the future or anything.</div>
No but if you can tell me with a straight face that Zach Randolph can help us to a title, then ok. If not, I'll take my chances with a rookie and a proven winner in Richard Jefferson.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Losing a 17th pick in any draft, especially one this deep, is a blow, but it doesn't affect the team as much as many people believe. Looking back at the Nets' draft history since 2000, only Kenyon Martin (who was a #1 overall pick), Jefferson (who the Nets traded Eddie Griffin for) and Nenad Krstic have really helped this team out. And as a first overall pick, Martin was EXPECTED TO HELP LEAD THE TEAM. Anything less than near-all star status/great numbers/leading the team is considered dissapointing for a pick that high. </div>
That 2000 draft's best player is Michael Redd, who can't lead his team. So the 2000 draft isn't a good example. As for other draft pick of the Nets? Nenad, Jefferson, Collins (say what you want, but he's been a starter for us), Boone, Hassan Adams, Marcus Williams (three guys you praised earlier in this thread). All these guys have contributed. Even Antoine Wright to an extent. The draft is hit or miss like most teams, and considering the fact that we've hit more than we missed, I'll take my chances.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Krstic was a lucky pick (can you count the number of euro big men who were picked in the last decade and didn't turn out to be busts? The answer: very few). </div>
This is a very stupid comment. Cant you count the number of college players that were busts in the last decade? (The Answer: Very many). You can't just throw out a random generalization and expect that to be a point for you. It's like me saying "How many white lottery players have proven themselves?" The entire statement is egregious. Both the Suns and San Antonio coveted Krstic and we got him. It's not a lucky pick, it was a smart one.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">The other 1st round picks are Planinic (#22, out of the league), Khryapa (#22, traded to the Blazers and has done nothing), Wright (#15, done nothing so far expect good defense in this year's playoffs) and this year's crop (Boone and Williams) who I can't fairly rank yet. Basically, what I'm trying to say is that a 17th overall pick doesn't usually affect a team THAT much.</div>
Each year the draft is different. Who honestly has a great draft every year? The Spurs and whatever team has Don Nelson are the only teams that draft consistently good.
Even so, this point is moot. Whatever rookie we draft in this deep class + Jefferson > Zach Randolph. It's simple as that.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Obviously, getting KG for the trade you mentioned above is better for the present. But aren't you trading away your "future" right there too? </div>
Wow, you either don't read or live in a very pretentious world. I said the only trades we should make are the ones that puts us up and beyond the other competitors. Trading for KG would obviously make us finals contenders. That's worth sacrificing the future. Trading for Zach makes us ECF contenders at best, but probably still stuck in the 2nd round. Each trades' reward should be worth the risk involved. Trading for Zach has very little reward.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Your future center (Krstic), point guard (Williams) and the "oh so precious" 1st rounder. Is that what you want? "Ruining" the future without the promise that a lineup of Kidd, KG, Carter, Moore and Nachbar with a weak bench will get you a title in the next two seasons?</div>
Like I said, you need to start understanding my points before you go mouthing off some arbitrary assumptions. I don't care who starts at the 2 and 5, Kidd, Carter, KG will win 50 games and challenge teams for the finals. Look who represented the East this year in the finals. The Cleveland Cavaliers. LeBron + scrubs. It's even sadder to think that even with Zach we won't be able to beat LeBron...but having a strong bench is not necessary to get into the finals. But having an overwhelming starting line is able to erase that.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">I prefer keeping Krstic and Williams and trading "just" Jefferson and #17 for a 23 and 10 , 26 year old big man with an 18 foot jumper, good post moves and a knack for grabbing rebounds than Jefferson, #17, </div>
Then you must prefer losing.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">31 year old big man who can score about as much as Randolph, is slightly better than him at rebouding and gives better defense than him. </div>
It's funny you say this because the margin in which KG rebounds better than Randolph is smaller than the margin in which Randolph out rebounds Jefferson.
[qu[te]I have nothing against KG (in fact he's my fav. player), and I would be happy to see him in a Nets jersey, but if the oppurtunity arises to trade for a younger guy who can rebound and score on the same level as Garnett and who can be attained+a player+a 2nd round pick for just one player and one draft pick rather than 3 players and a draft pick for Garnett, I think that's just the better option for the Nets. </div>
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Why do you think Randolph is a loser? Because he's been stuck on a terrible team for his whole career? You can say the same about both Brand and Garnett. </div>
Randolph being stuck on terrible teams? He's had nothing but the best coaches in the NBA and talented teammates since he came into the league. Nate McMillian, Mauricie Cheeks, Dunleavy coupled with Scottie Pippen, Rasheed Wallace, Damon Stoudemire, Bonzi Wells, Rueben Patterson, etc. What NBA do you watch?
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Why ignore that fact when you propose to trade for them instead? You said there's a reason Randolph can't win. You're right: his team sucks.</div>
You've been touting Randolph as a top 10 big man player. When in fact the top 10 big men I've listed have all made the playoffs as the leader of their team. Even KG when his second best player was Terrell Brandon or Joe Smith. Top 10, Top 13, all those guys were leaders of their teams, good or bad, and made the playoffs. I guarantee you if the 10 I listed were swapped with Randolph they'd take those teams to the playoffs or as close as you can get.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">With Randolph, we'd be better than Miami (who are falling apart), Cleveland (who we would've beaten or at least taken to 7 games with Randolph instead of Jefferson) and on the same level as Detroit and Chicago, who aren't that amazing themselves. </div>
I don't know how long you've bandwagoned with the Nets, but any Shaq-led team destroys us. Dwyane Wade has our number in the playoffs and fact remains that the only guy who can half-defend him is Jefferson. Not Carter, not Boki, not even Kidd. Without Jefferson, Wade is going off for 40 a game.
Cleveland just made the playoffs and for anyone to think that Randolph can put us in contention with them as LeBron improves so much each year, is ridiculous. They're better than us. That's plain and simple.
Same level as Detroit and Chicago? Granted Chicago hasn't won in New Jersey since 2001, but that's going to change very soon with the way they mature. Detroit, I just don't believe. They've had their playoff troubles, but so have we. In a seven game series, they beat us.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Washington wouldn't even touch us. They are on our level WITHOUT Randloph, not with him. </div>
Washington's been catching up with us fast. If you haven't noticed there was point where they were #1 in the east. The fact that their team is young, well coached, and improving is far greater than anything Zach Randolph can offer. He makes us better, which I've said but you for some reason haven't registered yet, but the difference is only marginal.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Oh, and BTW, one #17 pick isn't "our future". On the other hand, that same pick, Marcus Williams and Krstic is a big chunk of it, but you don't mind losing that, do you?</div>
I really don't know how to describe the frustration I have with your ignorance. One last time, we trade "our future" if it's going to make us head and shoulders better. Trading for Zach Randolph makes us marginally better, not amazingly better. No one will look at our team and be "wow this is a finals contending team," as much as "they're better, but not great and they gave too many parts up."
For a guy who doesn't really follow draft picks as much as you do, I understand why you think he 17th pick isn't worth much. But I disagree, it's worth a lot. It's worth passing up Zach Randolph.
I'll support Rod for whatever he does, but end of the day, I will not like this trade. Many have disagreed with me in the past over my views, but I've been right more than wrong. Everyone on this board hated my view on trading Kenyon Martin as a good thing. Same when I said trading VanHorn for Deke was a bad trade. When I said Marcus Williams wasn't that great of a draft pick, I was slandered. End of the day, going against the grain has proven me right.
It's easy to look at statistical numbers and say "this is clearly better than the other," but truth of the matter is that making a team is multi-dimensional. You can't just say "oh well he averages 23/10 and plays power forward, an area of need and lets pick him up." Having coached basketball recreationally, I've come to discover that building a winning team takes the right parts, not what's available. We should pass this trade, it won't make us that much better. It won't make Kidd happy. It won't take us to the Finals.
Perhaps, I should clarify. With Kidd right now, the point is make moves that instantly improves us greatly. Not moves that look great on paper, but don't really know about. It's good to take risks (like the Kidd for Marbury trade), but now isn't the time. We know what Jefferson has gotten us and it really is speculative how far Randolph will get us. A healthy Jefferson and Nenad could've gotten us past the Cavs. Can we really say that with Randolph (who is equally injury prone as Jefferson) and Nenad? Probably not. Randolph is not the guy you can just insert into an offense and he'll shine. It takes time for him just like Portland. He'll have to get used to coming after Carter, a great wing player, a king of player he never played with before. He'll have to get used to really focusing on defense, things that coaches in the past let him get away with but Frank won't. Speculate all you want, but unless you're positive this makes us finals contenders, we have to pass on this trade.