Orlando RMF
Footballguy
Taking his talents to North Beach, Go Cavs!!
Seems pretty clear that the money is the issue. But I don't think the Knicks will agree to a sign-and-trade. I also don't think the Bulls will dump Taj (and Melo wants Taj to stay anyway). I still think Melo stays with the Knicks.Now that Lebron is back in CLE, I think Melo to the Bulls has some legs. Doubt he can actually turn down the money from NYC, but if he wants a ring, going to the Bulls puts him in the best position to reach the finals while still in his prime.
No way NYK are going anywhere for at least 2 years.
Exactly.Lakers were never in on LeBron or Bosh.So the Lakers missed out on Lebron and Carmelo and Bosh, Howard left, and now they are the grease trap for a laughably bad contract.
Gunz > still want to yap about their relevance?![]()
Exactly.Lakers were never in on LeBron or Bosh.So the Lakers missed out on Lebron and Carmelo and Bosh, Howard left, and now they are the grease trap for a laughably bad contract.
Gunz > still want to yap about their relevance?![]()
At least your town still has one elite team.I'm getting depressed here. The Lakers' success over the last 40-50 years or so has been a lot of luck: drafting Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Kobe Bryant; trading for Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Shaquille O' Neil, and Pau Gasol. These are the moves that got us all of the championships. The league has become more and more competitive in the meantime. The Knicks, which is just as much a "destination" team as the Lakers, haven't won a championship in 40 + years. Who knows how long it will take the Lakers now? Can we just expect to get lucky again?
You can tell yourself that they are a major destination, but all the important NBA players are telling you otherwise.The Lakers are still relevant long term- just not now. Jeremy Lin , Kobe and perhaps Isaiah Thomas does not a championship team make.Going to take a few years for the Lakers to return to competitiveness. They will, because they are still a major destination team with a lot of money. But it's probably not going to be with Kobe Bryant. (Although I can always hope.)So the Lakers missed out on Lebron and Carmelo and Bosh, Howard left, and now they are the grease trap for a laughably bad contract.
Gunz > still want to yap about their relevance?![]()
They didn't exactly draft Kobe.I'm getting depressed here. The Lakers' success over the last 40-50 years or so has been a lot of luck: drafting Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Kobe Bryant; trading for Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Shaquille O' Neil, and Pau Gasol. These are the moves that got us all of the championships. The league has become more and more competitive in the meantime. The Knicks, which is just as much a "destination" team as the Lakers, haven't won a championship in 40 + years. Who knows how long it will take the Lakers now? Can we just expect to get lucky again?
I'm kind of coming around on the idea that maybe the Cavs should keep Wiggins. I guess it comes down to what they could do with the added financial flexibility they'd have by not taking on another max contract guy in Love.I'd love to see Wiggins play with LeBron since I'm a fan of both and especially want to see Wiggins succeed as a pro. I get why CLE would give him up for Love, but Love strikes me as a bit of a diva, and his numbers have the scent of a looter.
Basketball is different than the other sports, as you need that STUD player. Without him, you are unlikely to build a winner. If David Robinson doesn't injure himself and amazingly lead to a horrible season for San Antonio, they never get Duncan and all the championships.I'm getting depressed here. The Lakers' success over the last 40-50 years or so has been a lot of luck: drafting Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Kobe Bryant; trading for Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Shaquille O' Neil, and Pau Gasol. These are the moves that got us all of the championships. The league has become more and more competitive in the meantime. The Knicks, which is just as much a "destination" team as the Lakers, haven't won a championship in 40 + years. Who knows how long it will take the Lakers now? Can we just expect to get lucky again?
Weren't most of you Laker fans adamantly defending the Kobe extension just 8 months ago?Because they screwed up:Why not?Lakers were never in on LeBron or Bosh.So the Lakers missed out on Lebron and Carmelo and Bosh, Howard left, and now they are the grease trap for a laughably bad contract.
Gunz > still want to yap about their relevance?![]()
1. The Chris Paul deal that was overturned.
2. Trading for Steve Nash.
3. Dwight Howard not staying (mostly because Jim Buss stubbornly hired the wrong coach.
4. Signing Kobe to a huge contract.
When you have a sport with very few elite players, it doesn't take much to bring your team crashing down. Essentially the Lakers failed to rebuild around Kobe Bryant, preferring to trade picks away for aging former stars. It didn't work.
Beyond stupid. You don't really believe this, do you?You can tell yourself that they are a major destination, but all the important NBA players are telling you otherwise.The Lakers are still relevant long term- just not now. Jeremy Lin , Kobe and perhaps Isaiah Thomas does not a championship team make.Going to take a few years for the Lakers to return to competitiveness. They will, because they are still a major destination team with a lot of money. But it's probably not going to be with Kobe Bryant. (Although I can always hope.)So the Lakers missed out on Lebron and Carmelo and Bosh, Howard left, and now they are the grease trap for a laughably bad contract.
Gunz > still want to yap about their relevance?![]()
They told CHA who to draftThey didn't exactly draft Kobe.I'm getting depressed here. The Lakers' success over the last 40-50 years or so has been a lot of luck: drafting Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Kobe Bryant; trading for Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Shaquille O' Neil, and Pau Gasol. These are the moves that got us all of the championships. The league has become more and more competitive in the meantime. The Knicks, which is just as much a "destination" team as the Lakers, haven't won a championship in 40 + years. Who knows how long it will take the Lakers now? Can we just expect to get lucky again?
That could change once Kobe is gone.You can tell yourself that they are a major destination, but all the important NBA players are telling you otherwise.The Lakers are still relevant long term- just not now. Jeremy Lin , Kobe and perhaps Isaiah Thomas does not a championship team make.Going to take a few years for the Lakers to return to competitiveness. They will, because they are still a major destination team with a lot of money. But it's probably not going to be with Kobe Bryant. (Although I can always hope.)So the Lakers missed out on Lebron and Carmelo and Bosh, Howard left, and now they are the grease trap for a laughably bad contract.
Gunz > still want to yap about their relevance?![]()
I don't remember defending it. I KNOW Groovus didn't defend it. He ripped it to shreds. Don't remember what tommy had to say...Weren't most of you Laker fans adamantly defending the Kobe extension just 8 months ago?Because they screwed up:Why not?Lakers were never in on LeBron or Bosh.So the Lakers missed out on Lebron and Carmelo and Bosh, Howard left, and now they are the grease trap for a laughably bad contract.
Gunz > still want to yap about their relevance?![]()
1. The Chris Paul deal that was overturned.
2. Trading for Steve Nash.
3. Dwight Howard not staying (mostly because Jim Buss stubbornly hired the wrong coach.
4. Signing Kobe to a huge contract.
When you have a sport with very few elite players, it doesn't take much to bring your team crashing down. Essentially the Lakers failed to rebuild around Kobe Bryant, preferring to trade picks away for aging former stars. It didn't work.
yeah, semantics I guess.They told CHA who to draftThey didn't exactly draft Kobe.I'm getting depressed here. The Lakers' success over the last 40-50 years or so has been a lot of luck: drafting Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Kobe Bryant; trading for Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Shaquille O' Neil, and Pau Gasol. These are the moves that got us all of the championships. The league has become more and more competitive in the meantime. The Knicks, which is just as much a "destination" team as the Lakers, haven't won a championship in 40 + years. Who knows how long it will take the Lakers now? Can we just expect to get lucky again?
Really? Then why are there so many responses to my post?Nobody cares, Tim.
Aside from resigning Bryant in '04, what major free agents have gone to the Lakers recently?Beyond stupid. You don't really believe this, do you?You can tell yourself that they are a major destination, but all the important NBA players are telling you otherwise.The Lakers are still relevant long term- just not now. Jeremy Lin , Kobe and perhaps Isaiah Thomas does not a championship team make.Going to take a few years for the Lakers to return to competitiveness. They will, because they are still a major destination team with a lot of money. But it's probably not going to be with Kobe Bryant. (Although I can always hope.)So the Lakers missed out on Lebron and Carmelo and Bosh, Howard left, and now they are the grease trap for a laughably bad contract.
Gunz > still want to yap about their relevance?![]()
The thing I keep coming back to is this...a major part of what got the Heat beat this past season was the lack of depth they could assemble around their Big 3. The Spurs just kept coming in waves and obliterated them. I think it'd be better overall for the Cavs to keep Wiggins and maintain as much depth and flexibility as they can.I'm kind of coming around on the idea that maybe the Cavs should keep Wiggins. I guess it comes down to what they could do with the added financial flexibility they'd have by not taking on another max contract guy in Love.I'd love to see Wiggins play with LeBron since I'm a fan of both and especially want to see Wiggins succeed as a pro. I get why CLE would give him up for Love, but Love strikes me as a bit of a diva, and his numbers have the scent of a looter.
That should be like a community signature at the bottom of every post...Nobody cares, Tim.
What happened to our common ground on Israel?That should be like a community signature at the bottom of every post...Nobody cares, Tim.
"We had five great years together and one terrible night," Gilbert told James, and so started the process of reconciliation on Sunday night in Miami. "I told him how sorry I was, expressed regret for how that night went and how I let all the emotion and passion for the situation carry me away. I told him I wish I had never done it, that I wish I could take it back."
That what, you and GunZ always talking about them means everyone is talking about the Lakers?And of course Cliff puts the Lakers back in the thread title, just to let us all know how "irrelevant" they are. Proving my point.
I think this is true. I think LeBron's return to Cleveland is portent of a huge change for the NBA in this regard. As a Lakers fan, I don't like it very much, but as an NBA fan, I have to admit that it bodes well for the league.The LAkers being a destination had a lot to do with throwing a #### ton of money at players and being a media town. the cap and the internet have nullified those advantages, to a large extent.
I'm getting depressed here. The Lakers' success over the last 40-50 years or so has been a lot of luck: drafting Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Kobe Bryant; trading for Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Shaquille O' Neil, and Pau Gasol. These are the moves that got us all of the championships. The league has become more and more competitive in the meantime. The Knicks, which is just as much a "destination" team as the Lakers, haven't won a championship in 40 + years. Who knows how long it will take the Lakers now? Can we just expect to get lucky again?
I'm simply astonished that nobody feels any sympathy for us Lakers fans. What a shocker!I'm getting depressed here. The Lakers' success over the last 40-50 years or so has been a lot of luck: drafting Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Kobe Bryant; trading for Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Shaquille O' Neil, and Pau Gasol. These are the moves that got us all of the championships. The league has become more and more competitive in the meantime. The Knicks, which is just as much a "destination" team as the Lakers, haven't won a championship in 40 + years. Who knows how long it will take the Lakers now? Can we just expect to get lucky again?![]()
The most important message that the league and its players should take away from this is that everyone loves the story of an NBA superstar who returns to his hometown in free agency. It's really the best choice that an MVP-caliber player can possibly make. Especially if there's already an all-star PG and a talented young wing in the fold there to support him.I think this is true. I think LeBron's return to Cleveland is portent of a huge change for the NBA in this regard. As a Lakers fan, I don't like it very much, but as an NBA fan, I have to admit that it bodes well for the league.The LAkers being a destination had a lot to do with throwing a #### ton of money at players and being a media town. the cap and the internet have nullified those advantages, to a large extent.
The trades for Wilt, Kareem, and Shaq weren't about luck; they were mostly about those players forcing their way to Los Angeles. (Same with Kobe, actually.)And Magic, Worthy and Gasol didn't arrive due to "luck", either -- they arrived because the Lakers preyed upon cash-poor bottom-feeding teams to steal their players and draft picks. That's not luck, it's skill. And money.I'm getting depressed here. The Lakers' success over the last 40-50 years or so has been a lot of luck: drafting Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Kobe Bryant; trading for Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Shaquille O' Neil, and Pau Gasol. These are the moves that got us all of the championships. The league has become more and more competitive in the meantime. The Knicks, which is just as much a "destination" team as the Lakers, haven't won a championship in 40 + years. Who knows how long it will take the Lakers now? Can we just expect to get lucky again?
shtick?The LAkers being a destination had a lot to do with throwing a #### ton of money at players and being a media town. the cap and the internet have nullified those advantages, to a large extent.
Yes the Lakers are just lucky and the Knicks not so much.I'm getting depressed here. The Lakers' success over the last 40-50 years or so has been a lot of luck: drafting Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Kobe Bryant; trading for Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Shaquille O' Neil, and Pau Gasol. These are the moves that got us all of the championships. The league has become more and more competitive in the meantime. The Knicks, which is just as much a "destination" team as the Lakers, haven't won a championship in 40 + years. Who knows how long it will take the Lakers now? Can we just expect to get lucky again?
What do you think the Heat do assuming Bosh leaves too? Give Wade a nice contract and tank? Give Wade a nice contract and try to bring in some guys to compete?The airwaves down here are thankful to Lebron. And they should be. The great thing is The Heat has always been a great franchise and no doubt will get back to a competitive stature. It's not if just when. So as any true fan of the team, I am looking forward to the future and look fondly on the past. Whether Lebron ever wins another title is not what led to his decision. Clearly an emotional family decision.
Lebron the moment he opted out in reality owed nothing to the Heat. If we want to be technical he fulfilled his contract. Would have it been nice if just let Micky, Pat and his teammates known his intentions a little sooner? Yeah I can see that. I root for the Heat. Not Lebron. It's about the jersey for me. I have seen it all from this team. From Alan Ogg (rest in peace) to what we just had.
So again and for the final time. Thank you Lebron and Chris (if he does indeed leave) all the best.
That they do, all it took was 5 straight days on their knees.The entire city of Cleveland sounds like an insane ex-girlfriend talking about LeBron coming back because he cares about them.
Dan doesn't care what you think."We had five great years together and one terrible night," Gilbert told James, and so started the process of reconciliation on Sunday night in Miami. "I told him how sorry I was, expressed regret for how that night went and how I let all the emotion and passion for the situation carry me away. I told him I wish I had never done it, that I wish I could take it back."
i still think he should have stood up and said that publicly
If Bosh ends up staying they can be pretty decent. But if he leaves as expected I think Wade gets his 4 year deal and we gear up for the next round of free agency. If we end up really being bad this year we have a great shot at a top 10 pick which is protected.What do you think the Heat do assuming Bosh leaves too? Give Wade a nice contract and tank? Give Wade a nice contract and try to bring in some guys to compete?The airwaves down here are thankful to Lebron. And they should be. The great thing is The Heat has always been a great franchise and no doubt will get back to a competitive stature. It's not if just when. So as any true fan of the team, I am looking forward to the future and look fondly on the past. Whether Lebron ever wins another title is not what led to his decision. Clearly an emotional family decision.
Lebron the moment he opted out in reality owed nothing to the Heat. If we want to be technical he fulfilled his contract. Would have it been nice if just let Micky, Pat and his teammates known his intentions a little sooner? Yeah I can see that. I root for the Heat. Not Lebron. It's about the jersey for me. I have seen it all from this team. From Alan Ogg (rest in peace) to what we just had.
So again and for the final time. Thank you Lebron and Chris (if he does indeed leave) all the best.
The NBA's changing, but we can't forget that it was a series of very unlikely things that led to this.I think this is true. I think LeBron's return to Cleveland is portent of a huge change for the NBA in this regard. As a Lakers fan, I don't like it very much, but as an NBA fan, I have to admit that it bodes well for the league.The LAkers being a destination had a lot to do with throwing a #### ton of money at players and being a media town. the cap and the internet have nullified those advantages, to a large extent.
Miami needs to do right by Wade, and pay him a big one-year contract, focus on the future, and get the cap ready to go after another big fish in the future. South Beach will be a popular destination again.If Bosh ends up staying they can be pretty decent. But if he leaves as expected I think Wade gets his 4 year deal and we gear up for the next round of free agency. If we end up really being bad this year we have a great shot at a top 10 pick which is protected.What do you think the Heat do assuming Bosh leaves too? Give Wade a nice contract and tank? Give Wade a nice contract and try to bring in some guys to compete?The airwaves down here are thankful to Lebron. And they should be. The great thing is The Heat has always been a great franchise and no doubt will get back to a competitive stature. It's not if just when. So as any true fan of the team, I am looking forward to the future and look fondly on the past. Whether Lebron ever wins another title is not what led to his decision. Clearly an emotional family decision.
Lebron the moment he opted out in reality owed nothing to the Heat. If we want to be technical he fulfilled his contract. Would have it been nice if just let Micky, Pat and his teammates known his intentions a little sooner? Yeah I can see that. I root for the Heat. Not Lebron. It's about the jersey for me. I have seen it all from this team. From Alan Ogg (rest in peace) to what we just had.
So again and for the final time. Thank you Lebron and Chris (if he does indeed leave) all the best.
It will take a while though to recover. This year is probably going to be very very ugly.
Alan Ogg died??!?!?!The airwaves down here are thankful to Lebron. And they should be. The great thing is The Heat has always been a great franchise and no doubt will get back to a competitive stature. It's not if just when. So as any true fan of the team, I am looking forward to the future and look fondly on the past. Whether Lebron ever wins another title is not what led to his decision. Clearly an emotional family decision.
Lebron the moment he opted out in reality owed nothing to the Heat. If we want to be technical he fulfilled his contract. Would have it been nice if just let Micky, Pat and his teammates known his intentions a little sooner? Yeah I can see that. I root for the Heat. Not Lebron. It's about the jersey for me. I have seen it all from this team. From Alan Ogg (rest in peace) to what we just had.
So again and for the final time. Thank you Lebron and Chris (if he does indeed leave) all the best.
Just give us the Candians! Maybe they'll actually stay in the frozen north.The Cavs should trade Wiggins, that Heat first rounder, Bennett, and Thompson for Love.
Yeah! Plus it'll be easier for them to leave for Toronto as soon as they can!Just give us the Candians! Maybe they'll actually stay in the frozen north.The Cavs should trade Wiggins, that Heat first rounder, Bennett, and Thompson for Love.