Think back for a moment to the recent playoffs without Amare, where we beat both the Lakers and Clippers before succumbing to Dallas...
...and how over-the-moon we ended up that we were able to sign Barbosa as cheaply as we did. We were touting him as the greatest bargain in the NBA, and his game seemed to have nowhere to go but up. He single-handedly decimated the Lakers, putting a lifetime of wear on Deavan George's ankles in one game. His decision-making had improved tremedously. His three-point shot was deadly. He was routinely called the fastest player in the league. Dan D'Antoni was being hailed as a genius. He was routinely scoring 20 ppg off the bench.
And then Diaw... we practically set this board on fire demanding that the Suns sign him to a long term deal. He was playing like an absolute magician, flirting with triple doubles, bearing the scoring load in the post, always finding the open man when double-teamed, hitting the baseline turnaround to beat the Mavs, DUNKING over Nowitzki at the rim.
Now - in what seems like the blink of the eye - we're practically falling all overselves to fire-sell these guys. I'm not necessarily saying we should keep them, I'm just pointing out how suddenly and shockingly things seemed to turn around on us. I mean, what the hell?! It's hard to find many other examples of players regressing so thoroughly and depressingly.
The bummer to me is that if we do deal them now, we will have made the classic mistake of buying high and selling low.
I can understand Diaw's collapse more than I can Barbs'. Diaw always wore the tag of passive, that's why the Hawks didn't warm up to him. And once he landed the contract, it was croissant city. But Barbs... man, I'm just devastated. It's like Tim Duncan singlehandedly robbed him of his confidence to the point where he has no idea how to make a good decision on the court.
Argh.
...and how over-the-moon we ended up that we were able to sign Barbosa as cheaply as we did. We were touting him as the greatest bargain in the NBA, and his game seemed to have nowhere to go but up. He single-handedly decimated the Lakers, putting a lifetime of wear on Deavan George's ankles in one game. His decision-making had improved tremedously. His three-point shot was deadly. He was routinely called the fastest player in the league. Dan D'Antoni was being hailed as a genius. He was routinely scoring 20 ppg off the bench.
And then Diaw... we practically set this board on fire demanding that the Suns sign him to a long term deal. He was playing like an absolute magician, flirting with triple doubles, bearing the scoring load in the post, always finding the open man when double-teamed, hitting the baseline turnaround to beat the Mavs, DUNKING over Nowitzki at the rim.
Now - in what seems like the blink of the eye - we're practically falling all overselves to fire-sell these guys. I'm not necessarily saying we should keep them, I'm just pointing out how suddenly and shockingly things seemed to turn around on us. I mean, what the hell?! It's hard to find many other examples of players regressing so thoroughly and depressingly.
The bummer to me is that if we do deal them now, we will have made the classic mistake of buying high and selling low.
I can understand Diaw's collapse more than I can Barbs'. Diaw always wore the tag of passive, that's why the Hawks didn't warm up to him. And once he landed the contract, it was croissant city. But Barbs... man, I'm just devastated. It's like Tim Duncan singlehandedly robbed him of his confidence to the point where he has no idea how to make a good decision on the court.
Argh.