Tag: Summer of 2010 (Page 6 of 63)

Who holds the cards — Carmelo or the Nuggets?

Denver Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony scores against the Utah Jazz during the fourth quarter of the first round playoffs game two at the Pepsi Center on April 19, 2010 in Denver. Utah beat Denver 114-111 to even the series at 1-1.  UPI/Gary C. Caskey Photo via Newscom

Larry Coon, who developed the uber-valuable NBA Salary Cap FAQ, writes that the Denver Nuggets ultimately have control in the Carmelo situation.

So unlike Cleveland with James, Toronto with Bosh and the Phoenix Suns with Amare Stoudemire, the Nuggets have a trump card. They can leave their extension offer on the table, refuse to entertain trade offers and wait Anthony out. It would then be up to Anthony to choose between a bigger payday and playing for the team of his choosing.

But such a strategy would be very risky, so the Nuggets could decide to mitigate their risk and deal Anthony this season — which also avoids the chemistry issues that go with having an unhappy superstar on their roster.

In a vacuum, I’d agree with Coon that the Nuggets have control. However, if Carmelo officially requests a trade once a new GM is hired, and the Nuggets don’t move him, they’re going to have one very unhappy superstar. That can quickly poison the locker room and waste a perfectly good season of rebuilding.

Coon also discusses how Anthony put himself in position by signing a longer deal than LeBron and Wade did:

Anthony signed a four-year extension in 2006 that took effect in 2007 and runs through the 2010-11 season (he has the option of extending for one additional season, through 2011-12). In contrast, James, Bosh and Wade elected to sign shorter extensions so as to become free agents this summer rather than next.

The difference is potentially staggering — this summer marks the last free-agent market under the purview of the current collective bargaining agreement. When Anthony becomes a free agent, it will be under the terms of the next agreement.

This could represent very bad timing on Anthony’s part. The next agreement isn’t expected to do the players any favors; the owners are seeking significant changes such as some form of hard cap and a dramatic decrease in the percentage of revenues paid to the players. Should Anthony become a free agent in 2011, his chances of being paid commensurate to the extension he turned down might be nil.

Ouch. With the uncertainty of the new (more owner-friendly) collective bargaining agreement looming, Anthony has a difficult task — orchestrate a trade to a preferred team while at the same time signing the three-year extension that’s still on the table.

If this runs into the season, I don’t see the Nuggets trading Anthony by the deadline unless he starts to pout or the team is playing so bad in January and February that the writing is clearly on the wall. It’s more likely that the Nuggets will be somewhere in the Top 4 in the West and no one in Colorado will want the team to trade Melo away when there’s another playoff run on the horizon. I remember going around and around with Raptor fans who thought Chris Bosh was going to re-sign because the Raptors were playing decent ball and were sitting in the #6 spot in the East at the trade deadline. So much for that.

In the end, Anthony holds the cards because he can force a trade with grumpy play and/or mysterious injuries. Or he could accept the fact that he won’t get the extension but he’ll still know that he’ll have the opportunity to make more money in endorsements once he hits the New York market.

This is a player’s league and ultimately the players have control.

Should the Nuggets wait to trade Carmelo?

Denver Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony (R) and Kenyon Martin congratulate each other as Anthony left the game with seconds left before winning Game 1 of their NBA Western Conference playoff series against the Utah Jazz in Denver April 17, 2010. REUTERS/Rick Wilking (UNITED STATES - Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

Woody Paige says they should.

Karl, Anthony, Chauncey Billups, Nene and — I’ve decided, upon further review — Martin, Andersen and J.R. Smith have earned one more turn together.

Let’s find out if they can pick up where they left off six months ago and win again. If they can’t, six months from now, people can break up the Nuggets.

Carmelo can be traded.

At the end of the season, Martin and Smith’s contracts will expire; the Nuggets will have the option on Billups’ final year, and Anthony can walk away as a free agent if he’s not been traded by then. Let him go. Don’t burn jerseys. He will have given the Nuggets eight entertaining, controversial and winning seasons.

The Nuggets would be freed of almost $65 million in cap space (and Nene will have only one more season of an $11.6 mil salary) — and could start over, and go sign free agents and draft players in the first round once more. Besides, who knows what will become of the collective bargaining disagreement by then?

Sure, the Nuggets may be a 55-win team when everything goes their way, and maybe they have another Western Conference Finals run in them, but the big question is — are the Nuggets really a threat to the Lakers?

Because I know how this wait-and-see strategy is going to go. In February, the Nuggets are probably going to be somewhere in the #2-#4 range in the West, and they aren’t going to want to trade their best player away. Anthony will be happy because the team is winning and he’s resigned himself to another few months in Denver, and he won’t be talking about free agency.

But when the Nuggets inevitably lose in the playoffs, it will all start up again. At that point, the franchise will have lost whatever leverage they had. They will not be able to get anything (or much) in return because the Knicks will have the cap space to sign him.

So why not get the best deal you can now?

Want good young players? The Knicks have reportedly offered Danilo Gallinari and Eddy Curry’s expiring contract. Would they add Anthony Randolph to the deal if it meant they could lock up Carmelo long-term? I think they would.

Want draft picks? The Rockets could offer Kevin Martin and two first rounders that they got from the Knicks as part of the Tracy McGrady trade. If the Knicks don’t land Anthony, there’s a good chance that both of those will be lottery picks. If it all works out, there’s a chance the Nuggets could add three good players to a core that would presumably include Ty Lawson.

Knowing when to start the rebuilding process is one of the toughest things for a franchise to do and it’s often a painful, confusing process. If the Nuggets don’t trade Carmelo this summer, they may very well come to regret it.

Things are getting ugly for Rudy Fernandez and the Blazers

Feb. 23, 2010 - East Rutherford, NEW JERSEY, UNITED STATES - epa02051014 The Trailblazers' Rudy Fernandez (R), of Spain, looks to pass past the Nets' Devin Harris (L) during the second half of the game between the Portland Trailblazers and the New Jersey Nets at the Izod Center in East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA, on 23 February 2010. The Portland Trailblazers won, 102-93.

Months of trade speculation have gone by and now Rudy Fernandez is officially asking out of his contract so that he can return to Spain. His agent Andy Miller is making that perfectly clear. Per The Columbian

“There’s nothing to fix,” Miller said. “He does not want to come back to the NBA.”

“This is not a bluff,” Miller said. “In his mind, he’s not coming back.”

Miller said he has attempted to be fair and reasonable with the Blazers during negotiations. But after waiting

months for Portland to make a move, the “light is out.”

“In my mind, we’re at a very unnecessary juncture,” Miller said. “I’m certainly not happy as an NBA agent that this is happening.”

The Oregonian has more details…

Rudy Fernandez will not report to the Trail Blazers training camp in October and the disgruntled guard has no intention of playing for the Blazers for the remaining two years of his contract, his agent said Wednesday.

Fernandez, 25, is unhappy with his role and is frustrated with the offensive style of coach Nate McMillan, whom he says limits him to just a shooter, and not the playmaker he has shown he can be in international play.

Miller said new Blazers general manager Rich Cho has “overreached” in his attempt to trade Fernandez, turning down offers from Chicago, New York and Boston, leaving Miller and Fernandez with no option other than to hold firm that the former first-round pick will not report.

“All I can do now is stand on the roof top and scream ‘He’s not coming!’,” Miller said. “He’s just not coming back … I’ve made that clear.”

“Why would anyone want to hold anyone against their will?” Miller asked. “He’s not going to want to practice, he’s not going to want to be around his teammates. I mean, if they thought he was difficult when he was contributing, imagine how difficult he will be when he is not.”

Last week, I examined Fernandez’s case that he should get more playing time, and found that it wasn’t all that strong. He certainly hasn’t been the guy that we saw play so well in the 2008 Olympics, but then again, the NBA is a different animal. Fernandez has far more freedom when he plays for Spain than he does in Portland, and clearly he craves that kind of responsibility.

For his part, new Portland GM Rich Cho is taking a hard line with Fernandez and has said repeatedly that he’s not going to make a trade just to make a trade. But now Fernandez isn’t asking for a trade. He wants to leave the NBA altogether — will the Blazers let him out of his contract?

Magic, Rockets and Nets also on Carmelo’s short list?

Denver Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony (15) drives past Utah Jazz guard Deron Williams (L) and Wesley Matthews in game five of the NBA Western Conference quarter-final playoffs at the Pepsi Center on April 28, 2010 in Denver. Denver beats Utah 116-102 to avoid elimination.  UPI/Gary C. Caskey Photo via Newscom

We can add a few teams to the list of Carmelo Anthony’s ‘acceptable’ trade destinations.

Ken Berger of CBSSports reports:

Melo would accept other destinations as well, and the Magic are believed to be at the top of his list along with the Knicks, according to a person familiar with his strategy.

Chris Mannix of SI.com has a source that says Anthony is interested in being traded to the Rockets or the Nets, as well.

Multiple league sources familiar with his situation told SI.com that Anthony would also be open to signing a long-term deal with Houston or New Jersey should either of those teams offer the Nuggets an acceptable trade package.

Getting Anthony, 26, to agree to an extension is the key to any deal as he can become a free agent after the 2010-11 season.

The trade and the extension would probably have to happen simultaneously for any team other than the Knicks to risk trading for Melo. The Knicks on the other hand could probably trade for Anthony with the confidence that he’d want to re-up next summer. As a side note, the Knicks are reportedly offering Danilo Gallinari and Eddy Curry for Anthony, which is an Anthony Randolph short of the deal I suggested a few days ago.

I don’t think Denver is all that interested in financial relief, because they could just let Anthony’s deal expire next summer. They need to get a good young player or two and/or one or two first round draft picks. The Rockets have the the rights to the Knicks’ first-round draft picks in 2011 (Top 1 protected) and 2012 (Top 5 protected), but they just traded away Trevor Ariza, who could have been the key name in a possible package.

But how about Kevin Martin, Jared Jeffries’ expiring deal and one or both of those first round picks? That would give the Nuggets a youngish, reasonably-priced shooting guard to replace some of Melo’s scoring.

The Magic could offer Marcin Gortat, Mikael Pietrus and Brandon Bass for Anthony, though Gortat is probably the only quality starter in that offer. The Magic’s first-round picks aren’t as valuable as Houston’s since the Knicks still project to be worse than Orlando. The Magic do have the advantage that they are in the Eastern Conference, assuming the Nuggets would prefer to trade Anthony out of the conference.

LeBron would change ‘nothing at all’ about “The Decision”

GQ interviewed LeBron James before and after “The Decision,” and is publishing a story in the September issue chronicling those pressure-packed days surrounding that widely-panned ESPN special.

Moehringer had unprecedented inside access: a pair of face-to-face meetings shortly before The Decision and a follow-up phone call six days after the fact. During that postmortem interview, when Moehringer asked James what he’d change if he had a do-over, James replied, “Nothing at all.” Bottom line: LeBron doesn’t really care how it went down.

James on Cavs owner Dan Gilbert: “I don’t think he ever cared about LeBron. My mother always told me: ‘You will see the light of people when they hit adversity. You’ll get a good sense of their character.’ Me and my family have seen the character of that man.” He went on to say that Gilbert’s post-Decision screed “made me feel more comfortable that I made the right decision.”

Wow, he wouldn’t change a thing about “The Decision”? This guy really is living on another planet. How could someone be so pigheaded as to not admit that the hour-long special was a bad idea?

And while I agree with the sentiment about Dan Gilbert’s character, by preceding his wise little anecdote about his mother with a reference to himself in the third person, he loses all credibility.

The author of the piece, J.R. Moehringer, answered a few of TrueHoop’s questions. One thing he said was especially interesting:

…but it seems to me that [James] has one formula for success in his life and that comes out of his high school experience.

This really comes across when you watch the “More Than a Game” documentary about LeBron and the Akron Fab Five. He thrives, he’s happiest, he does his best when he is surrounded by friends. He just didn’t feel like that was happening in Cleveland. It seems pretty clear that Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh aren’t just the best talent he can surround himself with, but they’re a combination of talent and friends. He’s looking for camaraderie. That’s the formula that has worked for him — and the only one that has worked for him. And that comes out of his early childhood when he was completely alone in the apartment he shared with his mother, not knowing his father, not knowing when or if she’d come home. It seems to me these were formative scarring moments that created this need for constant intimate contact. It came across to me watching the documentary. It came across to me reading Buzz’s book. And it especially came across to me when he was introduced to the fans in Miami with Wade and Bosh by his side. He’s not just looking to win. He’s also looking to be happy, and he’s only happy when he’s surrounded by people he cares for and trusts. He’s at his best when he has his brothers in arms around him and he’s at his worst when he’s completely alone.

This puts his decision into a different context, especially when those rumors about Delonte West are thrown into the mix.

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