wilecoyotesupergenius
(ACME Rep)
OK...by now most have seen the ESPN report:
(http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/columns/story?columnist=stein_marc&id=2120105&num=0)
...and I've read numerous posts with opinions ranging from "match the offer anyway" to "sign-and-trade him for Childress and Harrington" to "don't let the door hit him in the ass".
The fact is that basketball is a business. The players know it. The owners know it. As long as two opposing sides have different agendas, there will be conflict. The proletariat clashed with the bourgeois state... unions still clash with ownership....and players will always clash with management...as long as both sides are acting out of rational self interest (which is an inherent trait of human nature).
The solution? Leave the emotion out of it and treat it as a business decision. Sign and trade with Atlanta? For me, any discussion involving a sign-and-trade scenario to Atlanta would need to start with Marvin Williams and Josh Smith.......and end with an unprotected 1st rounder.......which simply isn't going to happen. Nothing else on their unachieving roster would be considered an equitable exchange of talent..
So....match the offer. Who cares if JJ likes it or not? Suns fans should get some degree of comfort by one of the paragraphs in the report:
"Johnson, though, insists that his play and commitment to the Suns wouldn't be affected if a signed Hawks offer sheet results in a return to the desert.
'I would come back and work as hard as I ever have,' Johnson said. 'If they match, all this stuff is behind me from that minute on. I hope everybody [in Phoenix] puts everything behind them, too'."
You can trust that BC won't let his emotions cloud his decision...he's simply doing what he can to improve the team (acting with rational self interest). You can be sure that JJ is doing the same. He may indeed like the Atlanta scenario best...but once the offer is matched, he'll play his best and fit in with the team (because it is in his best rational self interest to do so).
Besides.........come December 15th (when newly signed free agents can be traded)...........if the Suns ever get the urge to upgrade the lineup....or make a change for another "big"....you can be assured that JJ will be high on the list of potential departees.
Doing a sign and trade for less than equitable talent in return...or worse...letting JJ go for nothing....is simply an emotional response. Frankly, it just isn't good business.
(http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/columns/story?columnist=stein_marc&id=2120105&num=0)
...and I've read numerous posts with opinions ranging from "match the offer anyway" to "sign-and-trade him for Childress and Harrington" to "don't let the door hit him in the ass".
The fact is that basketball is a business. The players know it. The owners know it. As long as two opposing sides have different agendas, there will be conflict. The proletariat clashed with the bourgeois state... unions still clash with ownership....and players will always clash with management...as long as both sides are acting out of rational self interest (which is an inherent trait of human nature).
The solution? Leave the emotion out of it and treat it as a business decision. Sign and trade with Atlanta? For me, any discussion involving a sign-and-trade scenario to Atlanta would need to start with Marvin Williams and Josh Smith.......and end with an unprotected 1st rounder.......which simply isn't going to happen. Nothing else on their unachieving roster would be considered an equitable exchange of talent..
So....match the offer. Who cares if JJ likes it or not? Suns fans should get some degree of comfort by one of the paragraphs in the report:
"Johnson, though, insists that his play and commitment to the Suns wouldn't be affected if a signed Hawks offer sheet results in a return to the desert.
'I would come back and work as hard as I ever have,' Johnson said. 'If they match, all this stuff is behind me from that minute on. I hope everybody [in Phoenix] puts everything behind them, too'."
You can trust that BC won't let his emotions cloud his decision...he's simply doing what he can to improve the team (acting with rational self interest). You can be sure that JJ is doing the same. He may indeed like the Atlanta scenario best...but once the offer is matched, he'll play his best and fit in with the team (because it is in his best rational self interest to do so).
Besides.........come December 15th (when newly signed free agents can be traded)...........if the Suns ever get the urge to upgrade the lineup....or make a change for another "big"....you can be assured that JJ will be high on the list of potential departees.
Doing a sign and trade for less than equitable talent in return...or worse...letting JJ go for nothing....is simply an emotional response. Frankly, it just isn't good business.