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Could Kanter and Gobert have worked?

We will see who is champion of this debate on Saturday when our guys and LOUD boos from ESA make him feel real small chin po.
 
This is the reason why a Jazz fan should be pissed off with the Jazz management....they managed the Kanter situation in an amateurish way.

I dont think you are a Jazz man in reality anyways. Why do you like it here? I see you post on the Thunder boards all the time I know you!
 
Why do people here not understand that the decision to trade Kanter has nothing to do with whether he's a good player or not? The Jazz have hitched their cart to Favors and Gobert. If you want to argue about whether that was the right or wrong decision, feel free to make your points and back it up with data. But the bottom line is that there is no room for another player making max or close-to-max money in the backcourt.

Once the front office determined that Kanter was likely to command more than they were willing to pay him, the only smart move is to trade him for something. The trade was never about getting fair value for the player. It was about getting SOME value rather than waiting out the season and then letting him walk when the big offers came in.

If anything, it's a testament to the fact that he IS a good player and was likely to command more than we were willing to pay.

As a fan, I would have been pretty unhappy if they had let him go for nothing. Or worse, agree to pay him the big contract he wants when he is not going to be the starter on this team.

Also, it is not a foregone solution that OKC is going to be willing to pay him the contract he wants either. Why would they or any other team trade full value on a player that could be gone at the end of the year?

Anyway, it's fair game to argue or disagree with the decision to put Favors/Gobert ahead of Kanter. This will likely be debated for years to come. But you can't really argue with the decision to trade him once that decision had been made. They really got all they were ever going to get in that situation.
 
No doubt Kanter is putting up some great numbers right now, but there is little reason to believe it's sustainable. In fact, as CAKAR kindly pointed out waaaay back at the beginning of this thread, he got pouty and stopped playing hard for the Jazz because he was unhappy with his role here, which-- if true-- speaks volumes about his character. What happens when Durant and Ibaka are back, and Kanter is suddenly not getting as many touches? Because that's why he is doing so well right now. Will he have the professionalism and maturity to handle being the 4th or 5th option on offense? To me, this isn't even a conversation worth having right now-- come back to me after he's been with the team for a year or more, has a more established role in the system, and then there might be something to discuss. I will gladly eat crow if he's still averaging 20+ and 10+.

As for the idea that the Jazz would have been better off keeping Kanter over Favors, it's a moot point. The Jazz as an organization committed to building a franchise identity around defensive-mindedness, and Kanter simply doesn't fit into that model. It can't be argued-- for all of his prowess with his back to the basket and the ball in his hands, for all his talent as an offensive rebounder, he is not a defensive-minded player. As a fan I am grateful to the Jazz for choosing what most of us consider to be an exciting path, and then making hard decisions that show a commitment to it. What is annoying is how determined so many of you butt-hurt Kanter fans are to stick around this forum, resurrecting the topic of how great Kanter is and how badly he was mishandled. Go away, people. Just go away.
 
So explain me to why Exum is getting so many minutes and consideration in his rookie season despite playing very poorly.

Sorry-- a little late to the party, but one more point: Corbin vs. Quin. We unfortunately can't see what Quin might have done to better develop Kanter his rookie season, but nobody can deny that this man is a player development coach, through and through. Letting Exum take his lumps this season has been painful to watch, but I think I speak for all of us when I say I'm optimistic (or at least hopeful) it will pay big dividends by year three. I'm inclined to believe he would've done something similar with Kanter, if he'd been the coach his rookie year and there had been less of a logjam at PF/C.
 
I never visited the Thunder board and I'm not registered there so stop inventing things moron!

a member telling a senior member he's not a fan .....being a Jazz fan doesn't mean we have to always go with the flow
 
Sorry-- a little late to the party, but one more point: Corbin vs. Quin. We unfortunately can't see what Quin might have done to better develop Kanter his rookie season, but nobody can deny that this man is a player development coach, through and through. Letting Exum take his lumps this season has been painful to watch, but I think I speak for all of us when I say I'm optimistic (or at least hopeful) it will pay big dividends by year three. I'm inclined to believe he would've done something similar with Kanter, if he'd been the coach his rookie year and there had been less of a logjam at PF/C.

I agree with your point.

Corbin killed Kanter confidence several times benching him at every mistake. By the way most of the Jazzfanz posters were agree with the attitude Corbin showed to him. I guess they are the same posters that now support Snyder that is giving unlimited trust to Exum...

Anyway Kanter was the only young player that had to deserve his minutes in the last seasons.
 
Favors is a way better player than Kanter to begin with, so why are we having this argument?
 
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