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*NBA THREAD* Abe will be missed (6 Viewers)

Reports already coming in that a Howard/Hedo for Bynum/Odom deal is close. Developing...
Now that would be a deal.Lakers would have a ton of money tied up for the next three years, but that's a much better team than they'd be left with in the CP3 trade.Very interested to see what happens. I just don't see how the CP3 decision won't be reversed. For the sake of the league's integrity, I hope it is. For the sake of myself as a non-Laker fan, I hope it is because I don't want to see Kobe/Pau/Howard teaming up.
there's always the chance that Kobe sees paul, or paul and howard, as stealing his limelight and turns into the little ##### we always knew he wasthat would be my hope
where's a link people? who's reporting this trade?
 
IMO the Lakers gave up more to get Paul than the Celts gave up to get Garnett.
Not sure about that. 2 first round picks, Al Jefferson, a huge expiring deal in Ratliff, a nice young rotation guy in Gomes, and some young guys that didnt pan out in Green, and Telfair.I think it just seems worse than it was because Kevin McHale screwed everything up after that deal.
 
As I mentioned earlier, this was a deal that should have improved all teams. And if a case can be made that one team made out worse then the others, it certainly isn't new Orleans.

Simmons had it right - the rockets have been working for three years to make some big moves. Whether or not these were great moves (scola and nene) isn't the issue - I've put up with literal mediocrity for three years in the hopes that we were going to make a big move.

Seriously, who is out there to go get if not gasol?

 
IMO the Lakers gave up more to get Paul than the Celts gave up to get Garnett.
Not sure about that. 2 first round picks, Al Jefferson, a huge expiring deal in Ratliff, a nice young rotation guy in Gomes, and some young guys that didnt pan out in Green, and Telfair.I think it just seems worse than it was because Kevin McHale screwed everything up after that deal.
Throw Green out of that equation. It was known, at least by the Celts, that the kid was not NBA material. They were teaching him basic fundamentals that ten year olds already understood.
 
Big news of the day: Raptors acquire Pietrus for a 2nd round pick.
Are we sure that Stern and Gilbert are going to approve it?
This joke is already old
For real.As is the thought that Gilbert and Stern did this all on their own. Gilbert was the voice of plenty of NBA owners.
This doesn't make him any less of a petulant, childish, whiny tool. I guess give him credit for putting his money grubbing jealousy out there in public instead of hiding behind Stern's skirts?
 
As I mentioned earlier, this was a deal that should have improved all teams. And if a case can be made that one team made out worse then the others, it certainly isn't new Orleans.

Simmons had it right - the rockets have been working for three years to make some big moves. Whether or not these were great moves (scola and nene) isn't the issue - I've put up with literal mediocrity for three years in the hopes that we were going to make a big move.

Seriously, who is out there to go get if not gasol?
Plenty of players out there but unfortunately they are all overpaid, whiny kids who think they should be able to decide where they want to play. The league is looking worse everyday. Pretty much every star player has demanded a trade at one point in time.

 
Cc - right.

Paul, Williams, Howard aren't coming to Houston. Maybe try and get Westbrook next year? Just a pain to be a fan of a team that isn't in la or ny.

 
'Gr00vus said:
'the moops said:
'TobiasFunke said:
:lmao:

I know this is a short-term PR disaster, but it's easily worth it for the laughs at the expense of Lakers fans.
:goodposting: I am quite sure they would be laughing like the rest of the world if this happened to the Heat or the Celtics or the Knicks.
Actually, I think it's a bad deal for the Lakers, so I'm hoping it doesn't go through. I have no idea how you put the pieces back together with all the players (besides Paul) who were getting shipped out though, so I'm not happy about that or the sophomoric way the league is being "run."
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. Any fan of the three teams in this deal should try knowing that his team could have had Brandon Phillips, Cliff Lee and Grady Sizemore if the league hadn't traded them away for a half-season of Bartolo Colon.

It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.

 
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'TobiasFunke said:
'pollardsvision said:
'B-Deep said:
'pollardsvision said:
'Zeff said:
Reports already coming in that a Howard/Hedo for Bynum/Odom deal is close. Developing...
Now that would be a deal.Lakers would have a ton of money tied up for the next three years, but that's a much better team than they'd be left with in the CP3 trade.

Very interested to see what happens. I just don't see how the CP3 decision won't be reversed.

For the sake of the league's integrity, I hope it is. For the sake of myself as a non-Laker fan, I hope it is because I don't want to see Kobe/Pau/Howard teaming up.
there's always the chance that Kobe sees paul, or paul and howard, as stealing his limelight and turns into the little ##### we always knew he wasthat would be my hope
I'm not a Laker fan, but I do like Kobe.That said, like many, I'd love to see a #### storm in LA. I could see Kobe having a much bigger problem with CP3.

Howard would take the limelight, but he won't take the ball.

CP3 to the Lakers just has all sorts of ways for it to be treat for Laker-haters.

Kobe/CP3 trying to find a way to share the ball.

The very real possibility of CP3 and his bum knee being an albatross of a contract in a couple of years.

Stern might've stolen that possibility from us. :angry:
I gotta admit, the idea of seeing what happens when the best crunch time player in the league is put on the floor with the worst crunch time player in the league would have been intriguing.
Stinky bait. You can do better.
 
'Abraham said:
Cc - right. Paul, Williams, Howard aren't coming to Houston. Maybe try and get Westbrook next year? Just a pain to be a fan of a team that isn't in la or ny.
Unless they have roots in Houston, why would they go? No stars to make them the next super-friends team. Only hope for the other 25 or so teams in the league is getting lucky in the draft (after being ####ty for multiple years) and then hope they can win a title in the 5 year window which they have a superstar. Cause if they don't :bye: Of course this is assuming that the year they do get lucky in the draft that the player isn't a snot-nosed brat and demands to play for a specific team before he is even in the league.
 
'B-Deep said:
'pollardsvision said:
'Zeff said:
Reports already coming in that a Howard/Hedo for Bynum/Odom deal is close. Developing...
Now that would be a deal.Lakers would have a ton of money tied up for the next three years, but that's a much better team than they'd be left with in the CP3 trade.Very interested to see what happens. I just don't see how the CP3 decision won't be reversed. For the sake of the league's integrity, I hope it is. For the sake of myself as a non-Laker fan, I hope it is because I don't want to see Kobe/Pau/Howard teaming up.
there's always the chance that Kobe sees paul, or paul and howard, as stealing his limelight and turns into the little ##### we always knew he wasthat would be my hope
why don't you hold that hope in one hand, and take a #### in the other, and see which one fills up first.
 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
 
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'Abraham said:
Cc - right. Paul, Williams, Howard aren't coming to Houston. Maybe try and get Westbrook next year? Just a pain to be a fan of a team that isn't in la or ny.
Unless they have roots in Houston, why would they go? No stars to make them the next super-friends team. Only hope for the other 25 or so teams in the league is getting lucky in the draft (after being ####ty for multiple years) and then hope they can win a title in the 5 year window which they have a superstar. Cause if they don't :bye: Of course this is assuming that the year they do get lucky in the draft that the player isn't a snot-nosed brat and demands to play for a specific team before he is even in the league.
It's the fourth largest tv market in the country and one of the two most popular teams in china (still). The potential tO be an international star in Houston is as high as it is anywhere else, new York and la included. I'm just pointing out that it makes no sense for houstOn to be a bad free agent spot like it is.
 
The 10K lb elephant in the room is NO having to endure a disasterous season with CP3 and then watch him walk out the door 5 months from now with NO compensation for the franchise.

How valuable will the Hornets be in May Mr. Stern and Mr. Gilbert? ####### idiots.

 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the very rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
And you don't think they have a cause for concern? When you build 3 super teams, what is the point of watching games for the fans of the other 27 teams? What is the point in having a couple franchises thriving when 90% are struggling?
 
'Abraham said:
Cc - right. Paul, Williams, Howard aren't coming to Houston. Maybe try and get Westbrook next year? Just a pain to be a fan of a team that isn't in la or ny.
Unless they have roots in Houston, why would they go? No stars to make them the next super-friends team. Only hope for the other 25 or so teams in the league is getting lucky in the draft (after being ####ty for multiple years) and then hope they can win a title in the 5 year window which they have a superstar. Cause if they don't :bye: Of course this is assuming that the year they do get lucky in the draft that the player isn't a snot-nosed brat and demands to play for a specific team before he is even in the league.
It's the fourth largest tv market in the country and one of the two most popular teams in china (still). The potential tO be an international star in Houston is as high as it is anywhere else, new York and la included. I'm just pointing out that it makes no sense for houstOn to be a bad free agent spot like it is.
Houston's not a great FA draw because it's a ####ty place to live. I spent six years there and don't ever want to go back unless I absolutely have to.
 
a snot-nosed brat and demands to play for a specific team before he is even in the league.
Yeah, #### those guys for wanting to decide where they work/live and who they want to work with!You're being ridiculous here.
:lol:You're right. Lets get rid of the draft and just let players go where they want. May as well get rid of contracts since they don't mean a whole hell of a lot anymore.
 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
:confused: What rules were circumvented?
 
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'Abraham said:
Cc - right.

Paul, Williams, Howard aren't coming to Houston. Maybe try and get Westbrook next year? Just a pain to be a fan of a team that isn't in la or ny.
Unless they have roots in Houston, why would they go? No stars to make them the next super-friends team. Only hope for the other 25 or so teams in the league is getting lucky in the draft (after being ####ty for multiple years) and then hope they can win a title in the 5 year window which they have a superstar. Cause if they don't :bye: Of course this is assuming that the year they do get lucky in the draft that the player isn't a snot-nosed brat and demands to play for a specific team before he is even in the league.
It's the fourth largest tv market in the country and one of the two most popular teams in china (still). The potential tO be an international star in Houston is as high as it is anywhere else, new York and la included. I'm just pointing out that it makes no sense for houstOn to be a bad free agent spot like it is.
Houston's not a great FA draw because it's a ####ty place to live. I spent six years there and don't ever want to go back unless I absolutely have to.
You must have lived outside the loop
 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
It's a league issue in the sense that everything is a league issue, but ultimately this comes down to whether the league's owners were acting fairly as the collective owners of what was for all of them their second team. I don't think it's fair to say "Stern vetoed the trade." I think the ownership of the Hornets rejected it- which is a pretty normal thing- but being in a position to veto it as owners of other teams in the league is the unusual thing. And Stern is the one who created a scenario that allowed them to do that. That's the problem. It's a pretty basic principle that having someone with an ownership stake in two teams in the same sports league is a conflict of interest. Something like this was virtually inevitable. It just happens to be high-profile because it involves the Lakers and Chris Paul, but everything they do can be called into question if you look hard enough.
 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the very rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
And you don't think they have a cause for concern? When you build 3 super teams, what is the point of watching games for the fans of the other 27 teams? What is the point in having a couple franchises thriving when 90% are struggling?
The same as it's been for the last 32 years. The Bucks are my 2nd favorite NBA team, and have been since the late 70's Marques Johnson era. I still root for them and try to catch their games whenever I can knowing they have little to no chance of winning it all unless they get a magic lottery ball. I guess, according to you, I have no reason to follow/watch them, yet I do.The reality is, there will never be enough franchise players to go around in a 30 team league. In fact you're lucky if there's even half that number. So whether they're spread out over 15 teams, or 10 teams, or 5 teams is basically inconsequential. Half the league is still going to be out in the cold. Parity in a 5 man game is a stupid premise to complain about/try to legislate.

 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
:confused: What rules were circumvented?
Salary cap, how to conduct trades, etc. etc. As far as I can tell there was nothing wrong with the trade, so on what grounds did it get vetoed by Stern after it had been agreed to by the people who were (supposedly) empowered to conduct trades?
 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the very rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
And you don't think they have a cause for concern? When you build 3 super teams, what is the point of watching games for the fans of the other 27 teams? What is the point in having a couple franchises thriving when 90% are struggling?
The same as it's been for the last 32 years. The Bucks are my 2nd favorite NBA team, and have been since the late 70's Marques Johnson era. I still root for them and try to catch their games whenever I can knowing they have little to no chance of winning it all unless they get a magic lottery ball. I guess, according to you, I have no reason to follow/watch them, yet I do.The reality is, there will never be enough franchise players to go around in a 30 team league. In fact you're lucky if there's even half that number. So whether they're spread out over 15 teams, or 10 teams, or 5 teams is basically inconsequential. Half the league is still going to be out in the cold. Parity in a 5 man game is a stupid premise to complain about/try to legislate.
And the popularity of the league didn't expand exponentially worldwide in the 80's because of parity. It grew because of star power, great teams, and great rivalries that were national obsessions.
 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
:confused: What rules were circumvented?
Salary cap, how to conduct trades, etc. etc. As far as I can tell there was nothing wrong with the trade, so on what grounds did it get vetoed by Stern after it had been agreed to by the people who were (supposedly) empowered to conduct trades?
"basketball reasons"
 
a snot-nosed brat and demands to play for a specific team before he is even in the league.
Yeah, #### those guys for wanting to decide where they work/live and who they want to work with!You're being ridiculous here.
:lol:You're right. Lets get rid of the draft and just let players go where they want. May as well get rid of contracts since they don't mean a whole hell of a lot anymore.
Go for it. I'm serious. At will seems to work in every other industry, let's open it up. Can't be any worse than what they have now according to you, right?
 
The same as it's been for the last 32 years. The Bucks are my 2nd favorite NBA team, and have been since the late 70's Marques Johnson era. I still root for them and try to catch their games whenever I can knowing they have little to no chance of winning it all unless they get a magic lottery ball. I guess, according to you, I have no reason to follow/watch them, yet I do.

The reality is, there will never be enough franchise players to go around in a 30 team league. In fact you're lucky if there's even half that number. So whether they're spread out over 15 teams, or 10 teams, or 5 teams is basically inconsequential. Half the league is still going to be out in the cold. Parity in a 5 man game is a stupid premise to complain about/try to legislate.
I haven't been following the league for that long but I really don't remember players demanding trades every year. Seems to me that it is a more recent phenomenon.
 
a snot-nosed brat and demands to play for a specific team before he is even in the league.
Yeah, #### those guys for wanting to decide where they work/live and who they want to work with!You're being ridiculous here.
:lol:You're right. Lets get rid of the draft and just let players go where they want. May as well get rid of contracts since they don't mean a whole hell of a lot anymore.
Go for it. I'm serious. At will seems to work in every other industry, let's open it up. Can't be any worse than what they have now according to you, right?
Nope, can't get much worse. At least now, there might be fleeting hope for a couple years but that is more a pipe dream than anything else.
 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
:confused: What rules were circumvented?
Salary cap, how to conduct trades, etc. etc. As far as I can tell there was nothing wrong with the trade, so on what grounds did it get vetoed by Stern after it had been agreed to by the people who were (supposedly) empowered to conduct trades?
You can view it in the form of like a closed corporation. NO has 29 shareholders who each have a vote. Shareholders have to authorize fundamental changes, owners and Stern are viewing the trading of Paul as a fundamental change to the franchise and therefore require majority approval from the 29 other owners and they didn't get it.Same way as if Danny Ainge is authorized to make FA offers, proposals and conditionally accept trades on behalf of the Celtics but final approval lies in the owner. If the owner doesn't approve the trade than it won't be made. Just so happens NO has 29 equal owners who happen to own other teams.

 
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Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the very rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
And you don't think they have a cause for concern? When you build 3 super teams, what is the point of watching games for the fans of the other 27 teams? What is the point in having a couple franchises thriving when 90% are struggling?
The same as it's been for the last 32 years. The Bucks are my 2nd favorite NBA team, and have been since the late 70's Marques Johnson era. I still root for them and try to catch their games whenever I can knowing they have little to no chance of winning it all unless they get a magic lottery ball. I guess, according to you, I have no reason to follow/watch them, yet I do.The reality is, there will never be enough franchise players to go around in a 30 team league. In fact you're lucky if there's even half that number. So whether they're spread out over 15 teams, or 10 teams, or 5 teams is basically inconsequential. Half the league is still going to be out in the cold. Parity in a 5 man game is a stupid premise to complain about/try to legislate.
You're missing the point. It's one thing if there's parity. It's another if there's hope.

Take me for example. I can accept that there's no parity and support the league if there's hope that my team, which recently lucked into John Wall, could become one of the fortunate teams some time in the next few years. But if all the John Walls are going to end up going to one of the same group of 5-6 teams once they hit free agency, why would anyone bother to follow and support the Wizards and other teams like them? There's other professional sports leagues in my city with much fairer models in place, and I'm not made of money.

ETA: Obviously I can't speak for you, but I would hazard a guess that your ability to tolerate supporting the Bucks as your second favorite team is palatable only because you support the Lakers as your favorite team. My guess is that if you lived in Milwaukee and supported only one team (as most season ticket holders do), your feelings on this would be a little different.

 
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The same as it's been for the last 32 years. The Bucks are my 2nd favorite NBA team, and have been since the late 70's Marques Johnson era. I still root for them and try to catch their games whenever I can knowing they have little to no chance of winning it all unless they get a magic lottery ball. I guess, according to you, I have no reason to follow/watch them, yet I do.

The reality is, there will never be enough franchise players to go around in a 30 team league. In fact you're lucky if there's even half that number. So whether they're spread out over 15 teams, or 10 teams, or 5 teams is basically inconsequential. Half the league is still going to be out in the cold. Parity in a 5 man game is a stupid premise to complain about/try to legislate.
I haven't been following the league for that long but I really don't remember players demanding trades every year. Seems to me that it is a more recent phenomenon.
What a snot nosed punk Oscar Robertson was.

 
The 10K lb elephant in the room is NO having to endure a disasterous season with CP3 and then watch him walk out the door 5 months from now with NO compensation for the franchise.How valuable will the Hornets be in May Mr. Stern and Mr. Gilbert? ####### idiots.
Funny they expect people to believe that someone would consider paying more for the Hornets because CP3 is on the roster for the 2011-12 season. Like there's some dip#### billionaire that can't comprehend that there is zero chance that CP3 will be on the Hornets roster next season and should have absolutely no impact on the team's value.
 
Whether or not a rational Lakers fan thinks it's a bad deal is interesting but it doesn't really impact my ability to laugh at the other Lakers fans. Have you seen Tim's posts over the last few pages?
Nothing's ever impacted your ability to laugh at other Laker fans. And Tim is always laughable, Lakers or no. (I kid because I love).
Anyway, the issue here IMO is with the way the league is running a team, not with the way the league is being run generally. Any owner obviously has the authority to veto a trade; the issue is whether the owners are somehow harming the best interests of a team it runs in order to protect what they see as their own best interests. But that is always a question when a league's owners collectively run a team; believe me, as a die-hard Washington Nationals fan, I know. It's inherently a conflict of interest and you're asking for trouble when you do it, this just happens to be how the trouble has manifested itself in this particular instance of a league's owners running a team.
It is a league issue because, as Gilbert's letter so eloquently illustrates, this isn't about the Hornets, this is about the owners of non supermarket teams being jealous of the supermarket teams. The Hornets situation is just a lever for them to push their agenda. Instead of addressing the obvious reality that there are probably several teams that aren't viable and contracting in this last deal, they tried to level the playing field for the suckwads at the expense of the lucky/successful teams. Apparently they didn't do that well enough so they have to circumvent the rules they friggin signed the very same day to get even more life support. It's pathetic.
:confused: What rules were circumvented?
Salary cap, how to conduct trades, etc. etc. As far as I can tell there was nothing wrong with the trade, so on what grounds did it get vetoed by Stern after it had been agreed to by the people who were (supposedly) empowered to conduct trades?
According to the commish/owners, Paul's continued presense in NO was greater than the trade. :shrug: I don't care either way...I just don't see what rules were broken. I still think the trade is going to happen in some fashion.

On a side note...how did the money work out in the deal anyways? Were the Hornets using some trade exception or is that why Houston had to be involved?

 
'Cliff Clavin said:
Plenty of players out there but unfortunately they are all overpaid, whiny kids who think they should be able to decide where they want to play. The league is looking worse everyday. Pretty much every star player has demanded a trade at one point in time.
Paul didn't threaten to hold out. He simply said he wouldn't sign an extension. How is that bratty? New Orleans has the right to expect Paul to honor his current contract. They have no right to demand that he sign a new contract. Nor does any team that he is traded to. Chris Paul has the contractual right to be a free agent at the end of the season and to pick what team he wants to play for. Why would he possibly be expected to give up that right for nothing?
 
If it were up to Bill Simmons and the other goofy NBA fans left, the NBA would just be contracted to the Knicks, Celtics, and Lakers. Let's just go back to the good old days when there were 10 teams in the league and the Celtics and Lakers won every championship. Oh wait, that still happens. It's hilarious that in Simmons's latest Grantland column he rips Stern for being too old and clinging to the past, when it invokes "history" as the reason to screw over all the small market teams or just wipe them off the face of the earth. Should the NBA contract a few teams? Sure. But it seems like what Simmons and a lot of guys in here really want is exactly what Gilbert is ranting about: a league of a few Globetrotter teams with everyone else playing the role of the Generals. Like their past success entitles those teams to future championships and more benefits than the ones already created from their past legacies. Screw the NBA. I'm done.

Good luck with your 15 team barnstorming league you'll have by 2020 NBA. Maybe you can have your games televised on Versus with the NHL.

 
You're missing the point. It's one thing if there's parity. It's another if there's hope. Take me for example. I can accept that there's no parity and support the league if there's hope that my team, which recently lucked into John Wall, could become one of the fortunate teams some time in the next few years. But if all the John Walls are going to end up going to one of the same group of 5-6 teams once they hit free agency, why would anyone bother to follow and support the Wizards and other teams like them? There's other professional sports leagues in my city with much fairer models in place, and I'm not made of money.
:confused:Again, that's how it's been for about 30 years now. It's up to management to make those guys want to stay. Obviously money isn't the only carrot - so the owners need to learn some new tricks, namely putting a full, competitive roster together. Money helps there, but so does player evaluation. The players are basically holding the owners accountable here - if I'm a superstar and you can't put enough players around me such that we're contenders over the course of 5 to 7 years, why the #### should I want to hang around?
 
Is it possible that the CP3 trade would make it possible for the Lakers to just sign Howard in the off-season? (if the CP3 somehow happens and Howard doesn't do a sign and trade this season).

Just curious. I'm not sure of the salary and cap/tax issues involved.

 
According to the commish/owners, Paul's continued presense in NO was greater than the trade. :shrug: I don't care either way...I just don't see what rules were broken. I still think the trade is going to happen in some fashion.On a side note...how did the money work out in the deal anyways? Were the Hornets using some trade exception or is that why Houston had to be involved?
Members of a voluntary association, like the NBA, are governed by its bylaws. They also may have a fiduciary duty to one another. If Stern represented that the league would not control the internal business decisions of the Grizzlies and members of the association relied upon that promise, they can argue that Stern breached a fiduciary duty to them or acted outside of the authority vested in him by the bylaws (I don't have a copy of the bylaws).
 
'Cliff Clavin said:
Plenty of players out there but unfortunately they are all overpaid, whiny kids who think they should be able to decide where they want to play. The league is looking worse everyday. Pretty much every star player has demanded a trade at one point in time.
Paul didn't threaten to hold out. He simply said he wouldn't sign an extension. How is that bratty? New Orleans has the right to expect Paul to honor his current contract. They have no right to demand that he sign a new contract. Nor does any team that he is traded to. Chris Paul has the contractual right to be a free agent at the end of the season and to pick what team he wants to play for. Why would he possibly be expected to give up that right for nothing?
Maybe he didn't threaten to hold out...but he's likely going to now...and he'll look pretty bad in my eyes doing so.
 
I just don't see what rules were broken.
I'm not saying rules were broken. I'm saying they just signed a set of rules into being that apparently didn't accomplish what they seem to actually have needed to accomplish, so they just exerted their will arbitrarily by fiat. I'm just highlighting another aspect of the silliness of the whole league fiasco.
 
'Cliff Clavin said:
Plenty of players out there but unfortunately they are all overpaid, whiny kids who think they should be able to decide where they want to play. The league is looking worse everyday. Pretty much every star player has demanded a trade at one point in time.
Paul didn't threaten to hold out. He simply said he wouldn't sign an extension. How is that bratty? New Orleans has the right to expect Paul to honor his current contract. They have no right to demand that he sign a new contract. Nor does any team that he is traded to. Chris Paul has the contractual right to be a free agent at the end of the season and to pick what team he wants to play for. Why would he possibly be expected to give up that right for nothing?
Making it public that you not only won't sign an extension with your current team but that there's only a very very small handful of teams for whom you'd consider signing an extension devalues you as a trade asset. Look at Boston- the Hornets may well have been able to acquire Rondo and some other pieces if he hadn't come out and said he won't sign an extension, because Boston being Boston I'm sure they would have convinced themselves that he could be talked into it if he hadn't been so adamant. That's somewhat bratty, because it hurts the New Orleans fans who have supported him his entire career.
 
According to the commish/owners, Paul's continued presense in NO was greater than the trade. :shrug: I don't care either way...I just don't see what rules were broken. I still think the trade is going to happen in some fashion.On a side note...how did the money work out in the deal anyways? Were the Hornets using some trade exception or is that why Houston had to be involved?
Members of a voluntary association, like the NBA, are governed by its bylaws. They also may have a fiduciary duty to one another. If Stern represented that the league would not control the internal business decisions of the Grizzlies and members of the association relied upon that promise, they can argue that Stern breached a fiduciary duty to them or acted outside of the authority vested in him by the bylaws (I don't have a copy of the bylaws).
If I understood what you wrote, and why you wrote it, I'd have a better reply.
 

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