I'll judge this trade in 6 months. If this continued "flexibility" doesn't result in an impact free agent this offseason, this trade will be terrible, IMO.
This is my exact stance. Good to know I am not alone.
I'll judge this trade in 6 months. If this continued "flexibility" doesn't result in an impact free agent this offseason, this trade will be terrible, IMO.
I'll judge this trade in 6 months. If this continued "flexibility" doesn't result in an impact free agent this offseason, this trade will be terrible, IMO.
I'll judge this trade in 6 months. If this continued "flexibility" doesn't result in an impact free agent this offseason, this trade will be terrible, IMO.
This is my exact stance. Good to know I am not alone.
So, the Jazz would be better off holding a guy who does not fit and is unhappy, in the hope that the other 29 teams will come to their senses and realize that Kanter is as valuable as jazzfanz think he is, and not what a highly paid, experienced GM found his value to be by talking to other GMs? Got it. Addition through subtraction.
I've learned some stuff that I actually put into practice daily, as a business owner, and thats the principle that you should never have your hand forced. It's your responsibility (in this case, Dennis') to read the tea leaves and be proactive, rather than reactive.
I'm sure you already know this and deal with similar conundrums daily.
I've learned some stuff that I actually put into practice daily, as a business owner, and thats the principle that you should never have your hand forced. It's your responsibility (in this case, Dennis') to read the tea leaves and be proactive, rather than reactive.
I'm sure you already know this and deal with similar conundrums daily.
What about the principle of cut your losses? Don't throw good money after bad? Once you come to the conclusion that your team is better off with Kanter and that being rid of him sooner rather than later is the right path, you get what you can and move on.
It seems like a lot of guys here think Kanter was worth way more than what we got for him, even though most are glad to see him gone. They seem to think that we should have held him to eek a bit more value, even though that would be a negative for the team from here until he was gone.
They should have came to that conclusion before Kanter asked to be traded.