Chaplin
Better off silent
Definitely not reddit, but I don’t remember where I saw it. Sorry.Is that people on this board or rumors?
Definitely not reddit, but I don’t remember where I saw it. Sorry.Is that people on this board or rumors?
Why not?
I guess I am the opposite on this one. Dinwiddie is a back up point guard. Warren is a stretch 3 or stretch 4. Those guys are supposed to be what everyone is looking for.I just don’t see Marks doing us a favor for the hell of it. Dinwiddie has more value than Warren.
I don’t know that I’ve stated my preference of one over the other. But I suppose I’d push cones to shove I think I go rose. Maybe decency bias with rose having played 50+ to 12 games last season and rose having put up 18pts/game with pretty good percentages.
Yeah, Dinwiddie's trade value starts to fall precipitously the moment the Nets sign Irving (assuming that happens, of course).
I'll take Dinwiddie starting at point guard 100 times out of 100 over Tyler Johnson.
A player's trade value is set by the market for him, not his status with his current team.
Except when everyone knows a team has to move a guy because there is no spot for him and/or he is disgruntled.
Eric Bledsoe, just for one example.
Man auto “correct” really did a number on that post.I don’t know that I’ve stated my preference of one over the other. But I suppose I’d push cones to shove I think I go rose. Maybe decency bias with rose having played 50+ to 12 games last season and rose having put up 18pts/game with pretty good percentages.
Man auto “correct” really did a number on that post.
I’d push cones to shove. Any day of the week, baby!I especially liked the "decency bias".
Except when everyone knows a team has to move a guy because there is no spot for him and/or he is disgruntled.
Eric Bledsoe, just for one example.
Agree 100%. People on the cards board didn’t get this either when Rosen was being shopped. If two teams want a player it becomes a bidding war up to the point one team says “not worth more than my last bid.” It’s nit like two teams want a player and make an agreement with each other not to bid higher bc the seller has a surplus.No, if multiple teams want the player, the price will set itself. Bledsoe got a poor return because he isn't very good, and the other 29 teams in the league knew that.
If a player isn't getting along with his current team because he has attitude issues in general, that lowers his value. Bledsoe fell into that category, as would Cousins. But a player's trade value does not change just because a personnel move on his own team makes him redundant. Teams willing to compete for his services before are still competing against one another to make a deal happen, not against the player's current team.
Agree 100%. People on the cards board didn’t get this either when Rosen was being shopped. If two teams want a player it becomes a bidding war up to the point one team says “not worth more than my last bid.” It’s nit like two teams want a player and make an agreement with each other not to bid higher bc the seller has a surplus.
It was about timing too. Bledsoe forced a trade AFTER most teams had already solidified their roster for the year. He basically forced an after Christmas sale. Market value is determined by how many buyers are looking AT THE TIME and how willing the seller is to part with his product.What may confuse people is that a team is more willing to move a player for his value once it's clear that they no longer need or want him. In the Bledsoe case, this board had an absurdly exaggerated opinion of him, and it's possible that the Suns themselves were similarly overrating him. So any possible attempts to trade him would have failed for the lack of a partner willing to pay the Suns' price. Once they had to move him, they traded him at market value -- which looked like a discount only because the previous price had been unrealistically high.