[情報] 老喬:我才剛熱機完~!
Jordan: 'We're just getting started'
By Scott Fowler
sfowler@charlotteobserver.com
Posted: Tuesday, Jul. 13, 2010
f you remember what it is like to be a kid, you remember how much fun it is
to trade things.
For the current generation, it might be Silly Bandz. For the older
generation, it might be baseball cards.
Still, the appeal is universal. There's a certain feeling you get when you
can get rid of something you're tired of and acquire something you are
excited about.
The Charlotte Bobcats are addicted to that feeling.
There is a childlike enthusiasm about the way the Bobcats deal with their
roster, as owner Michael Jordan, general manager Rod Higgins and head coach
Larry Brown constantly make trades in search of a team that can actually win
a playoff game.
On Tuesday, they shipped Tyson Chandler to Dallas - Chandler had been shipped
in here less than a year ago. The Bobcats acquired Matt Carroll - who they
had traded away in 2009.
This was trade No.11, in case you're counting, in the two-year-old Larry
Brown Era.
Dallas also sent the Bobcats Eduardo Najera and, most valuably, the
non-guaranteed contract of Erick Dampier (as well as Dampier himself,
although he's just the velvet backdrop for that glittery contract that can
subtract $13 million off the payroll of any team that wants it bad enough).
Charlotte sent Alexis Ajinca to the Mavericks - it's a shame he couldn't take
Gana Diop with him.
And this trade is not it for Charlotte.
Far from it. It's little more than a bridge to the next deal. At least that's
what I'm sure the Bobcats hope. They figure that they can turn Dampier's
contract or possibly expendable forward Boris Diaw into a decent starting
point guard.
That's a necessity, because I believe Brown doesn't want D.J. Augustin to be
his starter at point guard if he can possibly help it.
And for all the trades the Bobcats make - and they are widely considered one
of the two or three trading-est teams in the league - about 95 percent of the
deals they talk about never come to fruition. That's what Higgins said
Tuesday.
"You envision these trades all the time," Higgins said. "But it's like Reggie
Miller or Ray Allen, taking thousands and thousands of shots just so that in
a game, when they have an opportunity to hit one or two shots that are
important, they can make those. We have conversation after conversation,
brainstorm after brainstorm, and then a real small amount of it actually gets
done."
A real small amount?
The Bobcats only have two players left on their roster since Brown got here
two years ago - Gerald Wallace and Nazr Mohammed. That's stunning. It's not
all because of trades, but most of it is. I guess Higgins has unlimited
minutes on his phone.
But give the Bobcats this. When they do have a chance to make a shot, they
have swished them far more often in trades (for players like Stephen Jackson
and Tyrus Thomas) than in drafts (Adam Morrison and Sean May).
So all these trades aren't a bad thing, which is a good thing since the
Bobcats have averaged almost one trade every two months since Brown has been
here. They once made two trades in a single day. They've never gone more than
five months during Brown's tenure without making a deal.
Jordan told me Friday, shortly after the LeBron hullabaloo: "We're not done.
We're just getting started."
So the Bobcats have.
And in a matter of weeks, if not hours, you're going to see their trigger
finger get itchy again.
(1) 球評酸了一下山貓隊的人事策略,總是不斷在一個recycle中消耗
像是收集棒球卡一樣,喜歡、買來把玩、然後賣出去
(2) DJ絕對不會是布朗爺PG的答案,所以絕對還會有交易動作
(3) 老喬: "我才剛剛熱機!"
--
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◆ From: 122.116.90.15
※ 編輯: Sakino 來自: 122.116.90.15 (07/14 18:46)
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