<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (ghoti @ Jan 5 2008, 11:16 PM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>This kind of thinking is why I didn't like the idea of blowing up the team.
It's too late to maximize the return for their best players, so why not just wait it out and see if the best case scenario happens?
If Krstic comes back healthy and rested and works off the rust by March, the Nets are a playoff opponent
nobody wants to see.</div>
I am someone who favored blowing up the team previously, but I agree with this.
People cannot say this is the same team that upset the Raptors in the first round and pushed the defending champs to six. This team on paper is actually better. We essentially replaced Mikki Moore with Sean Williams and Josh Boone. Suddendly, our points in the paint production is up, and we're finally in a position where we can bring Jason Collins off the bench and bring him in in certain situations to gaurd a Chris Bosh or a Shaquille O'Neal.
Finally we have more than one big in the lineup that not only can defend, but can block shots and finish passes from Kidd. It's a great feeling. It's why we've started to turn it around. And when you throw Nenad when and if he finally gets back to form this season, that's a whole 'nother level.
Maybe we are going nowhere. Maybe it is time to blow it up. But the fact is that ThornKiki is not going to blow up this team this season. They probably think it's worth it to give it one (final) run, and go into Brooklyn with a winning team and with Kidd and Carter in tact. And they just may be right.