Interview of Lindsey. You can go find it if you'd like. I don't have the time to waste.
Neither do I. But if I were to look, where would I look?
Interview of Lindsey. You can go find it if you'd like. I don't have the time to waste.
Neither do I. But if I were to look, where would I look?
So we were supposed to hold on to him and let him walk for nothing instead of getting something for him? Because no way in hell were the Jazz ever going to give him half of what he just got.Fascinating thread. Not one, but two teams felt Kanter was a max player. Young too, drafted 3d overall, averaging 20 and 10 already. We got late first rounder for him in a terrible trade for the franchise. Yet people are still trying to start threads that he no one wants him, because he stinks.
Well, two teams offered max. Time to shut up and admit how valuable he actually is, and how pathetically our FO failed to get enough for his value.
Ask yourself this. Would Utah have matched a max offer? My answer is no ****ing way in hell. Therefore Utah got a good trade. They essentially traded nothing for a 1st round pick and other stuff as well.That's not the point.
Just ask yourself how many soon to be maxed players were traded for that little in the past?
I think the "Jazz traded Kanter for nothing" crowd needs to stop and ponder something for a second: Trading for a player a couple months before they become an RFA, especially with the looming cap increase, means that you're also very likely committing yourself to spending up the *** for that player to keep him long-term. It wasn't just a trade for Kanter, it was a trade for the right to ridiculously overpay Kanter. Not appealing for the majority of teams. OKC jumped on it because they were desperate to prove to KD they were all in.
Great point. Also, without Durant, OKC was not going to challenge for a title last season, but they did want to make the playoffs. So they weren't going to pay a ton for Enes. Kanter and his agent were smart; they knew a trade would have to happen after they went public. I'm sure they didn't care about the destination; they just didn't want Enes' value to drop by him being viewed as a 3rd big instead of a starter.
And for OKC, it was a no-brainer. Even had they decided NOT to pay Kanter a huge salary, they gave up very little for a legit chance at making the playoffs. Enes was able to fill in for injured players (I believe both Adams and Ibaka missed games). And they could either keep him by matching an offer, negotiate a new deal or have him come back for one more season for the QO.
Since when rumours is an indicator of interest? DWill got traded without any prior rumours. At least two teams were interested in giving Kanter max. Likely even more would consider matching max offer sheet for Kanter but didn't bother with producing ones for one reason or another. It means there was an interest in Kanter.Hypothetical trades by fans....lol. I guess DL should be fired because we didn't get Paul George. There was never a rumor of any team wanting Kanter, unlike what happened with players like 'Melo. And yes, everyone KNEW Utah would not give or match a huge offer for Enes. He had lost his starting spot to Gobert. Tell me, how many max players come off the bench? DL had two choices: keep a selfish, disgruntled ******* on the team, and try for a sign and trade in the summer, or risk losing him for nothing if he received any kind of high offer. Even worse would be to have him return on the qualifying offer. We both agree Utah didn't get much, but his public demands ended any chance DL had. And if you go back and read the news reports; DL had been trying since December to trade him.
As for the Malone example, that's irrelevant. Kanter didn't want to stay as a backup and the Jazz didn't want a selfish me-first player at his asking price.
The fact that the Jazz didn't see Kanter as part of the future had no affect on his market value.