anyone got a subscription for the article on espn in - "Ford: Trades five NBA teams should consider "
2/20/2006 11:17:49 PM
2/20/2006 11:24:32 PM
[quote]Minnesota TimberwolvesThe Wolves have already made a couple of big moves this year, but neither is paying off. The Sam Cassell-for-Marko Jaric trade has backfired big time. And the Wolves haven't been appreciably better since they swapped Wally Szczerbiak and Michael Olowokandi for Ricky Davis, Mark Blount and Marcus Banks. So, what to do? The Wolves also have a couple of options. One is to try to leverage their remaining assets to bring one more talented veteran onto the team. Kevin McHale believes they are one piece away. Can a combo of Jaric and Eddie Griffin get them what they want? Option No. 1:Minnesota sends Jaric, Rashad McCants, Trenton Hassell and Griffin to New York. New York sends Stephon Marbury to Minnesota. • See this trade in the ESPN Trade Machine. Option No. 2:Minnesota sends Jaric, McCants, Mark Madsen and Griffin to Orlando. Orlando sends Steve Francis to Minnesota. • See this trade in the ESPN Trade Machine. Option No. 1 is a great trade for Minnesota if they can get it. Marbury thrived in Minnesota last time he was there and might be the piece that could put them in the playoffs. Where Marbury and Garnett would take them from there is anyone's guess, given the lack of playoff experience for both players. But would New York do this? I'm not sure what this would give them, other than a couple of nice young prospects in McCants and Griffin. Larry Brown would hate Jaric. And I have a hard time believing he'd like McCants or Griffin much either. That means he'd spend all of his time playing Hassell. That's just what New York fans are looking for. The Wolves could offer this same deal to Orlando for Francis. It works under the cap and Orlando may have more incentive to take it. Jaric would be a good fit in the backcourt with Jameer Nelson. Jaric would provide size and defense, unlike Nelson. McCants and Griffin are nice young players and Madsen would probably be a nice tutor for Darko on the front line. But is Francis a fit in Minnesota? Maybe. I think he's kind of a poor man's Marbury. Given that I'm no fan of Marbury, you get the picture. The third option is what I call the nuclear option, because it calls for the Timberwolves to trade Kevin Garnett. This has been talked about for years. The problem for Minnesota has been that it has never been in their best interest to pull the trigger on such a trade. Option No. 3:Minnesota sends Garnett and Jaric to Chicago. Chicago sends Luol Deng, Tim Thomas, Eric Piatkowski, Chris Duhon, Malik Allen and two 2006 first-round picks (New York's and Chicago's) to Minnesota. • See this trade in the ESPN Trade Machine. This is a great trade for Chicago. They add Garnett at the four and add a big guard, Jaric, in the backcourt. The cap space is gone this summer, but who cares when Garnett and Jaric are there to fill the void? Would Minnesota do it? Depends on whether McHale is ready to blow things up. Thomas, Allen and Piatkowski all come off the books this summer. Deng is a nice young piece and at least one of the picks, New York's, looks like it will be top three, and maybe even No. 1 overall. This is probably about as much as you can get for Garnett -- three young prospects (counting the draft picks) and cap space. However, Minnesota's trade for Davis and Blount makes a move like this unlikely. Clearly Minnesota is still trying to win. The question is how much longer you have to get it right.Boston CelticsGiven that Paul Pierce's face graced our Trade Machine debut, you can guess that the predominate opinion around our office in Bristol is that Pierce is going to be traded sooner or later. Fans and writers have been spawning Pierce trade rumors ever since Danny Ainge came aboard as the Celtics GM. Ainge has consistently denied that he wants to trade Pierce and reiterated that recently after the Celtics traded for Wally Szczerbiak. The Celtics are building around Pierce, Ainge said, not building over him. We'll see. Ainge has had two good opportunities to trade Pierce in the past year and passed on both. His first came last year at the trade deadline. After the deadline, I was told that the Celtics had a chance to get Andre Iguodala and Samuel Dalembert (very close to a trade I actually hypothetically proposed before the deadline) as part of a larger package for Pierce. The Celtics passed. The second was near the draft, when they had a chance to land Chris Paul and the nonguaranteed contract of Nick Van Exel in return for Pierce. Ainge called that one "ludicrous." So, when Ainge says he doesn't want to trade Pierce, history says you better believe him. Of course, part of the problem for the Celtics is getting equal value for a player that is playing the best basketball of his career. What's the best that they could probably do for Pierce? Option No. 1:Boston sends Paul Pierce and Raef LaFrentz to Chicago. Chicago sends Ben Gordon, Tim Thomas, Chris Duhon, Eric Piatkowski and a 2006 No. 1 (from New York) to Boston. • See this trade in the ESPN Trade Machine. The Celtics get a couple of things out of this. The biggest is cap relief from LaFrentz's terrible contract. With this move, the Celtics would be roughly $15 million under the cap, giving Ainge maximum flexibility to craft the roster however he likes. The second reward is a few nice young pieces for the future. Gordon would step in as the starting two and the pick from the Knicks could be as high as the No. 1 pick in the draft. That may not sound like equal value for Pierce. But what Ainge has to ask himself is whether Pierce will still be putting up these types of numbers when Al Jefferson, Kendrick Perkins and Delonte West are ready for a playoff run? Then, at that point, will Pierce be able to play that way for two or three more years as the Celtics learn how to win in the playoffs? It's doubtful. Danny's plan is perfect if Paul can keep sipping from the fountain of youth. But history says in another two years, Pierce will be on the decline. Without Pierce dominating, I'm not sure the other three will ever be able to win a championship. So, if a championship is Ainge's goal, I'm not sure the timing works. However, Option No. 1 has serious risks. First, young teams need veterans who can take the pressure off of them, allowing them to develop at a slower pace. With Pierce out of the picture, replaced by more young players, the Celtics would no longer have the veterans they need to balance out the roster. The Bulls have proven that having too many young, inexperienced players on a roster is a bad idea. Ainge doesn't want to fall into the same trap. The other option is much milder. Option No. 2:Boston sends Olowokandi to Charlotte. Charlotte sends Brevin Knight to Boston. In a separate deal, Boston sends Gerald Green to Charlotte for Bernard Robinson. • See these trades in the ESPN Trade Machine here and here. You have to break this trade up because Olowokandi can't be packaged with another player because of trade restrictions. Charlotte is far enough under the cap to absorb Green's salary. This trade would give the Celtics a veteran point guard to help out West. Knight could be the steadying force the Celtics need to push them into playoff contention. The cost would be high, given Green's potential. But if Ainge is sticking to his guns on Pierce and Szczerbiak, there isn't a big future for Green in Boston anytime soon.
2/20/2006 11:25:07 PM
2/20/2006 11:25:42 PM
wow
2/20/2006 11:31:58 PM
I like what the article said about Gerald Green to Charlotte. I was hoping the Bobcats were going to draft him or Grainger (sp?) with the 13th pick last year. Instead, we got lard ass.
2/21/2006 3:03:06 PM