Whew. It’s been a whirlwind trade year and it’s been exciting for the fans. Some of the trades looked good, some looked ok and some were just head-scratchers. Here’s my view on all of this year’s major trades…
Trevor Ariza to the Lakers
Maurice Evans, Brian Cook to the Magic
A pretty good trade for both sides. Lakers got rid of Brian Cook who was wearing out his welcome with his passive defense and one-dimensional offense. Hey, they already have Vladamir Radmonovic to do that. They had to give up Maurice Evans who was well liked and a decent contributor, but they got back a young, athletic, defensive minded swingman to fill the 3 spot, which they desperately needed. His age (21) was a huge factor as he fit in the plan to have Bynum (20), Farmar (20), Vujacic (23), and Turiaf (24) all develop together. Meanwhile, the Magic needed veteran presences, and Mo Evans is a great teammate as well as a good, athletic, rebounding guard. Cook spreads the floor for Howard to operate. Ariza couldn’t get time behind Turkoglu and Rashard Lewis, so it was better to trade him.
Lakers: A
Magic: A-
Nazr Mohammed to the Bobcats
Primoz Brezec, Walter Herrmann to the Pistons
I didn’t really get this trade from the Pistons’ perspective. Brezec and Herrmann aren’t the kind of guys they generally like to play. I like Herrmann and think he can do well, but my doubts as to whether he would actually see time on the court has been confirmed. I liked this trade a lot more for the Bobcats. I’ve always felt Mohammed was a little underrated. Yeah, he can be spacey and yeah his defense needs work. But he’s an above-average big man, and those are difficult to find. Consider yourselves lucky Bobcats.
Bobcats: B+
Detroit: C-
Kyle Korver to the Jazz
Gordon Giricek to the 76ers
This is one of the few trades that totally made sense for BOTH sides. 76ers get the cap space they want and rid themselves of Korver’s large contract. I think the 76ers are actually doing things right this time around. Meanwhile, the Jazz get the outside shooter they desperately needed and then proceed to rip off 17 wins in 20 games. They would have sealed the deal for me if they could have somehow stolen an athletic shot-blocking big man, but those are hard to come by, so you can’t blame them. Regardless, I think the Jazz are WAY overlooked right now.
Jazz: A+
76ers: A
Pau Gasol and a second rounder to the Lakers
Javaris Crittenton, Kwame Brown and 2 Future First-Rounders to the Grizzlies
The most laughable of all the trades. L.A. was flooded for a day because all Lakers fans collectively pissed themselves when they heard about this trade. Don’t get me wrong – Javaris is supposed to be a very good prospect, one of whom the coaching staff (especially Tex Winters) thought highly and hated to see go. And Kwame’s $9 mil coming off the books is huge. But they already have 2 young point guards and those draft picks are going to be in the 26-30 range. Meanwhile, the Lakers 2nd rounder is probably going to be in the 31-35 range overall. There’s barely a difference except the Lakers don’t need to guarantee the second rounder’s contract. In the meantime, Pau and his new buddies rip of 7 wins in 8 games (7 on the road), including one over the Suns. Just laughable. Unless you're the rest of the league.
Lakers: A+
Grizzlies: D-
Stromile Swift to the Nets
Jason Collins to the Grizzlies
Eh, who cares? It doesn’t make either team significantly better or worse.
Nets: C
Grizzlies: C
Shaquille O’Neal to the Suns
Shawn Marion and Marcus Banks to the Heat
I absolutely HATED this trade for the Suns at first, but it’s growing on me. I think they did need to make this gamble. Don’t get me wrong; it’s a gamble all right. But if Shaq can give them the kind of game he showed last night against the Lakers every night, they’re going to be better than they were. Of course, that’s assuming his energy level is always going to be that high and that his 36 year-old body won’t #### out at any minute, but still, it’s not as galactically stupid as I thought it was at the outset. Still, his individual defense is seriously suspect and the Suns are about to see a stream of pick and rolls until the cows come home. Plus, Marion was kind of their glue guy. As for the Heat, this trade was an absolute coup. I never thought they could get someone to take Shaq off their hands. They got rid o####uy who was not motivated to do anything but sit and collect his checks and rid themselves of his hefty salary. They also get the ever-underrated Shawn Marion and also underrated Marcus Banks. I think Marcus Banks might be able to shine a little more in Miami. Of course, they might lose Marion after this season or the next, but Shaq was never going to do for the Heat what he might be willing to do for the Suns, so they needed him to go.
Suns: INC. (Their final exam counts for 90% of their grade meaning it could be an A or an F by season’s end.)
Heat: A
Mike Bibby to the Hawks
Tyronne Lue, Anthony Johnson, Shelden Williams, Lorenzen Wright to the Kings
I honestly didn’t really like this trade for either side. I think Atlanta did better because the Kings should have gotten more than the package they got: 2 below-average point guards, a below-average undersized center and a bust. But at the same time, Bibby just isn’t the same guy he was 3 or 4 seasons ago. The Kings just traded him too late. I still think Bibby does address some needs that the Hawks have, notably, outside shooting and a steady hand at the PG position. But I’m not convinced he’s the right piece to put them over the hump. Yeah, he’s a veteran, but he’s hardly a leader.
Hawks: C
Kings: D
Jason Kidd, Malik Allen, Antoine Wright to the Mavs
Devin Harris, DeSanga Diop, Maurice Ager, Keith van Horn and Trenton Hassell to the Nets
Thank God this trade finally went through, because if it didn’t, it was going to be awkward for both teams the rest of the season. I still think it was a stupid deal on the Mavs part. Kidd is overrated right now. The fact that he gets triple-doubles (12-10-11 triple doubles at that, not 30-14-12 triple doubles like LeBron) overshadows the fact that he’s become a turnover machine and is shooting 36% from the field. Furthermore, Devin Harris is a blossoming star. His +/- rating was the best on the team and the Mavs were clearly better with him on the court. When he got injured, the Mavs played poorly. Ironically, they traded away the guy they needed most. Furthermore, in the beefed up Western Conference one needs MORE size, not less. Trading Sanga leaves them with Dampier as their only option at C. Good luck with that, guys. The good news is that Malik Allen and Antoine Wright are good role players, and that Kidd, for what he has lost over the years on the court, he has gained over the years in the locker room. The Mavs definitely needed a guy with balls. At least they have that now. The Nets, on the other hand, weren’t going anywhere as they were constructed. In the end, they get rid of Kidd’s monstrous contract and in return get a young star, expiring contracts, and a good backup center. You can’t ask for much more (are you taking notes Sonics?)
Nets: A
Mavs: C-
Kurt Thomas to the Spurs
Brent Barry, Francisco Elson, cash, 1st round pick to the Sonics
I simply cannot for the life of me understand this trade for the Sonics. All these wink-wink, behind-the-scenes, ball-washing deals are getting ridiculous. Presti and Carlisimo, old buddies of Buford and Popovich, should be ashamed of themselves. As a Lakers fan, this was the one trade that made me say, “@$*%!” because this is a ridiculous steal for the Spurs. Just when you think you’ve gotten a leg up on the champs, they get a guy like Kurt Thomas who is PERFECT for their team. The Sonics basically received a low first round pick. That’s it. Yeah, Barry and Elson are expiring contracts. BUT SO IS KURT THOMAS!! And he can actually play! Geez, this one just made me want to slap someone.
Spurs: A+
Sonics: F-
Gerald Green to the Rockets
Kirk Snyder, 2nd Round pick to the T-Wolves
Has Gerald Green’s stock really fallen this far? Yikes. I think this was a good pickup for the Rockets. He may never pan out, but if all you’re sacrificing is Kirk Snyder and a 2nd rounder, it’s totally worth it. Meanwhile, the T-Wolves dive further into cost-cutting mode.
Rockets: B+
T-Wolves: C
Bobby Jackson, Adam Haluska to the Rockets
Mike James, Bonzi Wells to the Hornets
Yeah, I know this was a three team trade, but essentially it was these two teams. I think it was an decent trade from both sides. Bonzi Wells I think has the best chance to make the biggest impact. He also has the best chance to do something totally stupid. But he ate the Spurs for breakfast, lunch and dinner in the playoffs only 2 years ago (figuratively speaking). But looking at his frame, he may have wanted to do it literally as well. But he and Mike James aren’t just talented; they’re head cases as well. I mean, if Adelman couldn’t Bonzi’s best, who can? Anyway, the Hornets at least shored up their pathetic bench and gave Chris Paul more guys to hit for open shots. As for the Rockets, Bobby Jackson might actually be able to provide the occasional spark. Not bad all around.
Hornets: B
Rockets: B-
Ben Wallace, Joe Smith, Wally Szczerbiak, Delonte West to the Cavs
Larry Hughes, Drew Gooden, Shannon Brown, Cedric Simmons to the Bulls
Ira Newble, Donyell Marshall, Adrian Griffin to the Sonics
Wow, lots to discuss here. I like this trade best for the Bulls. The contracts of Ben Wallace and Larry Hughes effectively cancel each other out, but I think the Bulls are getting the better player. Hughes has really shown signs of life lately, even erupting for 41 points recently. I also think getting Drew Gooden is a good pickup. He doesn’t play defense, but he rebounds and is a decent low-post scorer, which they’ve been dying for now for years. Plus, Joakim Noah is doing what Wallace does, only better and for a fraction of the price. They’ve been better with Noah on the floor. Shannon Brown and Cedric Simmons are insignificant fillers. What the Cavs got from the Bulls I’m not too wild about. Wallace is totally washed up. He’s hardly recognizable on the defensive end, although you could recognize him on the offensive end because he’s just as bad as he’s always been. These have been career low numbers for him, and unfortunately, that’s not a fluke. His numbers have been declining for years now. Luckily, the rest of the trade looks promising for the Cavs. Joe Smith, I’ve felt, has always been underrated, only because people have looked at him as a bad #1 pick, not as a good player. He’s had a good season, although he’s tapered off a bit as of late. What the Cavs really should be happy about is what they got from the Sonics. Szczerbiak could hit jumpers falling out of bed. He won’t give you great defense, but he’ll give you good effort and good efficiency and that’ll be huge for LeBron. Delonte West is highly underrated. He’s not your classic point guard. In fact, he’s kind of a miniature combo guard. But he’s a good one. I think these two guys will complement LeBron nicely. As for the Sonics, well, what can you say? I guess if your only goal is cutting cost, then they’ve achieved it. But they didn’t receive one draft pick in all of that? How did that happen?
Bulls: A-
Cavs: B+
Sonics: C-
Juan Dixon to the Pistons
Primoz Brezec to the Raptors
Poor Brezec. Traded twice in two months. Tough luck dude. The Raptors needed more size and they got it. Brezec was a pretty good player as recently as 3 seasons ago. Too bad his injury has set him back so badly. The Raptors are gambling that he’ll can recover his form, but it’s a good gamble. Juan Dixon is a shoot first, shoot second and shoot third kind of guy. But when he’s hot, he’s hot. He can be a useful guy off the pine when the Pistons are struggling to put the ball in the hoop. Good trade all around.
Pistons: A-
Raptors: B+
Whew. Are there more to come? Trade announcements always trickle in past the deadline so there might be more surprises to come. As if we haven’t been spoiled enough already…
With All-Star Weekend upon us, I needed to
vent about the current state of what has become a nearly unwatchable debacle.
As a basketball fan – moreover, as an NBA fan – it hurts to watch the NBA shoot
itself in the foot every year with ridiculous events, meaningless games and
stupid selection processes. I want to see change because I want to see the NBA
succeed. I want it to showcase itself for what it is – the greatest game on
earth – and I want the fans to be able to get excited every year for intriguing
matchups and renewed rivalries. Instead, it fails to draw in even the most
passionate of its fans (such as myself) and turns into a forgettable mess that
is as ostentatious as it is boring (which is hard to do simultaneously). Here
two things the NBA could do that would make me watch it again…
Give the players incentive to win
the game: switch up the Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference format.
Problem: Players don’t really
care that much if they’re representing the Eastern Conference or the
Western Conference. This keeps them from being competitive and
competition is what makes basketball such a great game. The fans see the
same thing every year and pretty much know before hand what matchups
they’re going to see year after year – matador defense and highlight
dunks.
Suggested solution: Do a rotating
cycle of different matchups. Keep the East vs. West, but only do it every
4 years. The other three years you do something like American vs. International
(kind of like hockey), 28+ vs. 27- (old guys vs. young guys), and Westerners
vs. Easterners (Players who were raised west of the Mississippi, Western
Europe, S. America and Pacific Islands vs. players who grew up east of the
Mississippi, in Eastern Europe, Africa, the Caribbean and Asia). This way
you get different mixups of different lineups and its not the same
lineups every freakin’ year. These could have been this year’s matchups –
it’s a fan’s dream…
Internationals vs. Americans
Steve Nash Chris Paul
Manu Ginobili Kobe Bryant
Dirk Nowitzki LeBron James
Tim Duncan Kevin Garnett
Yao Ming Dwight
Howard
Tony Parker Baron Davis
Leandro Barbosa Allen Iverson
Hedo Turkoglu Caron Butler
Pau Gasol Chris
Bosh
Zydrunas Ilgauskas Amare Stoudemire
Jose Calderon Chauncey Billups
Andrei Kirilenko Paul Pierce
Old Guys vs. Young Guys
Steve Nash Chris Paul
Kobe Bryant Gilbert
Arenas
Paul Pierce LeBron James
Kevin Garnett Amare Stoudemire
Tim Duncan Yao Ming
Baron Davis Deron Williams
Allen Iverson Dwyane Wade
Tracy McGrady Caron
Butler
Dirk Nowitzki Chris Bosh
Marcus Camby Dwight Howard
Manu Ginobili Carmelo Anthony
Chauncey Billups Carlos Boozer
Westerners vs. Easterners
Steve Nash Chris Paul
Manu Ginobili Kobe Bryant
Paul Pierce LeBron James
Dirk Nowitzki Kevin Garnett
Al Jefferson Tim Duncan
Baron Davis Devin
Harris
Gilbert Arenas Allen Iverson
Antawn Jamison Carmelo Anthony
Chris Bosh Amare Stoudemire
Pau
Gasol Yao Ming
Chauncey Billups Dwyane
Wade
Joe Johnson Dwight Howard
(this last one made me realize how many good point guards
came from the west of the Mississippi or from Western Europe – Tony Parker,
T.J. Ford, Deron Williams, Jose Calderon, Andre Miller, Jason Terry, Jason Kidd…
it’s crazy. I had to choose between Devin Harris (Wisconson) and Mo Williams (Alabama) who both barely
make it as well)
Allow more freedom in the dunk
contest.
Problem: We’re getting close to
having seen all the dunks that can possibly be done – without props that
is. Every year a guy does a jump from the free throw line or between the
legs dunk that everyone has seen 100 times. Guys like Tyrus Thomas show
up only for the cash and don’t put any originality into it. Hell, when a
guy shows creativity (Dwight Howard, Andre Iguodala), they don’t get any
love.
Solution: I don’t think you get rid of the dunk contest entirely – it’s a
classic part of All-Star weekend – but I think you need to let the
players be as creative as they want. Dwight Howard was denied in his
request to raise the rim to 12 feet. Why?? Every NBA fan would love to
see that. They’ve outlawed props of any kind (no blindfolds, chairs,
etc.) but I think you let them do as they please, as long as it’s part of
the actual dunk, not some pre-dunk nonsense like pumping up your shoes or
doing a back flip. Let a guy bring a cell phone and actually dial it in
the air before dunking. Guys could be really creative and it could be fun
for the fans.
Get rid of the Rookie-Sophomore
game, the Shooting Stars, and the Skills Challenge.
Problem: These events suck and
everyone knows it. The attempts at getting the WNBA off its feet have
failed and will continue to fail, so just let the WNBA go do its own
thing somewhere where it won’t damage our retinas.
Solution: Let the fans come up
with the ideas for new events. The NBA League Office can choose its top
10; then the fans can vote on the top 3.
Beyond these points, I also think the All-Star voting process could stand
to be changed and the half-time shows could be artists NBA fans would actually
want to hear, but these aren’t as important as the other things I listed. But is Stern too entrenched in the current format to
make drastic changes? My best guess is yes, but I hope that I’m wrong. If Stern
wants to keep it the way it is, well, at least this isn’t the Pro Bowl.
Born and raised in Moorpark, CA - a suburb of Los Angeles - I have been a sports fan since 1994, when, as a 10-year-old boy, I discovered my own aptitude for basketball and soccer, and admired the intensity and skill of Alonzo Mourning. I became a Charlotte Hornets fan, but renounced my allegiance to the franchise when it traded my beloved 'Zo in 1995. I switched my allegiances to my hometown Los Angeles Lakers that same year, and still to this day, take perverse pleasure that the Hornets provided us with two integral pieces to the 2000 Championship squad (Kobe Bryant and Glen Rice). Recently cultivated has been my love for the Los Angeles Dodgers. I have a passing interest in the Los Angeles Kings, UCLA Bruins and Green Bay Packers.