Thee Jazz Fan
Well-Known Member
I’d agree with you if we WON the finals, but as a jazz fan that lives in Utah without that 1 million I probably don’t become a jazz fan. That 1 million $’s shaped who I am.
The NBA in general was WAY less popular back then, and few people in Utah cared about the Jazz. The owner at the time (I'm blanking on the name) wasn't as rich as Larry Miller (and Larry Miller obviously wasn't as rich as he later became), and if I recall correctly he ran the risk of going bankrupt due to his purchase of the Jazz. $1 million was a substantial fraction of the entire team's worth--Miller bought a 50% stake in the team in 1985 for $9.5 million. So in 1982 maybe the team would have been worth $16 million? So getting that cash infusion of $1 million is in some sense equivalent to getting $100 million cash today (1/16 of the current value of the Jazz).Was the economy in Utah in 1982 that poor, that Jazz needed that extra 1 million via trade and not via own money or sponsors (either other companies or state aid)? I guess that inflation (or value of a USD) is not that bad? Did Utah had a lot less really rich people or companies at that time compared to '90, 2000, 2010 or 2020 and compared to California or NY area?
Difference is the first 2 were unknowns until the worked out. They could just have easily not worked out. With the Clarkson trade we gave away a dead man for a proven scorer. A DEAD MAN! Simply cannot be beaten.Gobert was a great trade. It was for a late first that panned out wildly beyond expectations. Mitchell, we moved up much higher in the draft and grabbed someone we liked. It just seems like a slightly more creative move so I gave it the edge. Clarkson we won that trade hands down and it transformed our bench. Three great trades no matter what order you rank them.
It's hard to argue with that!The
Difference is the first 2 were unknowns until the worked out. They could just have easily not worked out. With the Clarkson trade we gave away a dead man for a proven scorer. A DEAD MAN! Simply cannot be beaten.