Chaplin
Better off silent
Nobody. Wants. Shawn. Marion.
Where'd you come up with that gem of information?
Nobody. Wants. Shawn. Marion.
Where'd you come up with that gem of information?
Where'd you come up with that gem of information?
Common sense. A max player who can't create his own shot, would be poor without Nash and is exposed on defense when it matters. Oh, and disappears in the playoffs with an inconsistency that makes Lamar Odom look like Tim Duncan. No thanks.
Shawn Marion was at an all-star level before Steve Nash was around.
Damn fickle Suns fans treat him like he's a leper. And that isn't deserved, however much you hate the guy.
It's not him as much as it's his contract. Marion would be a great 8-9 mil a year guy, but that's too much cap space for a guy who leaves a lot to be desired.
Why are people keep insisting on Marions contract. He is likely going to opt out next offseason and worst case you get 16M$ capspace or you resign him for 10M$ a year for 4-5 years and get 6M$ capspace out of it.
I can't see how any other team on the FA market could or would offer anything more..
You are wrong. Marion has only 2 years left on his contract and can opt out after this season which he would surely do if he is smart, to sign his last big contract.
Kobe Has $9.5 Million Trade Kicker
30th May, 2007 - 5:21 pm
Los Angeles Times -
Kobe Bryant has a trade kicker in his contract that will add $9.5 million to his total contract value, a cost to be absorbed by any team that acquires him.
The money would be paid like a signing bonus and would be spread out over several seasons toward the new team's salary cap. The Lakers had to pay a similar fee to Lamar Odom when they acquired him from Miami three years ago, paying him about $8 million.
The Lakers, meanwhile, are waiting to hear from Bryant.
"We are aware of the media reports," Lakers owner Jerry Buss said in a statement. "However, Kobe has not told us directly that he wants to be traded. We have made it very clear that we are building our team around Kobe and that we intend for him to be a Laker his entire career. We will speak directly to Kobe and until we do that, we will not comment publicly about this."
But, not more than a couple of hours later, Bryant went on AM 570 and seemed to soften his demand to be traded. "I can only hope that they do something because I don't want to go no place else. I don't want to," het said. "I want to stay here. I hope they can do something."
Bryant said he had been soothed by a call from Lakers Coach Phil Jackson. The two discussed a passage from a story in Tuesday's editions of the Los Angeles Times that read, "Nevertheless, as a Lakers insider notes, it was Bryant's insistence on getting away from Shaquille O'Neal that got them in this mess."
From the outside, the conversation dripped with irony: The coach and his player, ex-adversaries a few years back, now propping each other up.
"He stayed optimistic and said you know what, 'I can't blame you for feeling this way,' " Bryant said. "I've just got to be optimistic. We want our players who are playing for this team to feel comfortable, to feel that they can trust the people that they're around. He said, 'Let us try to work that out, let us try to figure things out and I'm confident that we can do that.'
"That made me feel a lot better because Phil is a guy that I lean on a lot. I lean on him all season for clarity, I lean on him for, like, hope."
Despite Bryant's initial trade declaration, it will not be as easy as it appears for the Lakers to move him to another team.
Bryant will obviously waive his no-trade clause, but he has a trade kicker in his contract that will add $9.5 million to his total contract value, a cost to be absorbed by any team that acquires him. The money would be paid like a signing bonus and would be spread out over several seasons toward the new team's salary cap. The Lakers had to pay a similar fee to Lamar Odom when they acquired him from Miami three years ago, paying him about $8 million.
Bryant was acquired as a fresh-faced teenager in 1996 and the Lakers had the nucleus of a three-championship run when Shaquille O'Neal was signed a week later as a free agent. Together, at the best of times, O'Neal and Bryant were an unbeatable tandem. But, at their worst, they bickered incessantly and brought an end to what could have been a long-running dynasty.
The Lakers have not won a playoff series since O'Neal was traded in July 2004. Most recently, Bryant was seething after the Lakers were eliminated by the Suns, saying they had to make changes as quickly as possible.
he might be able to opt-out next year (does anyone know if this is even true?) but why would he give up more money the next year when that's his HIGHEST salaried year, considering he will never see that kind of scratch for a year ever again.
If he can get 5 years/50M$ after next season he would be smart to opt out of the final 16M$ year because he might not get 5yrs/50M$ at 32 again.
No, but he'd need only 4 yrs/$38M to come out ahead.
No, but he'd need only 4 yrs/$38M to come out ahead.