That's a pretty substantial benefit. This is a business. A bankrupt franchise usually ends up in a different market. Think Seattle is eager to have a team again?Originally Posted by NIH
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That's a pretty substantial benefit. This is a business. A bankrupt franchise usually ends up in a different market. Think Seattle is eager to have a team again?Originally Posted by NIH
"Bower helped rebuild the Hornets, despite the troubles Hurricane Katrina placed on the club and the city of New Orleans in general. He took a giant step in re-writing Hornets history by trading franchise piece Baron Davis to the Warriors, then selecting guard Chris Paul fourth overall in the 2005 NBA Draft."Originally Posted by NIH
They liked the Jason Kidd trade too...Originally Posted by say-what
Tyson would have been back by the time Wilcox gets significant PT.
Originally Posted by NIH
well that and security of knowing the owner of the franchise wont be moving the team to a bigger market.
Why are you supplying facts? They mean nothing today!Originally Posted by cjjr72984
Thats what I want to know....seriouslyOriginally Posted by NIH
I understand that, the Hornets said they were looking to improve the team on the court as well. This was being sold as a move to benefit us on the court as well as off.Originally Posted by Saints Fan in A
Again, why didn't we aquire a 1st round pick? OKC has them stockpiled. We were took to the woodshed and the basketball world knows it.
CP and Tyson were great on the alley-oop too. Wilcox better be able to jump.
There's a big difference. One of them could rebound and hold their own in the West. The other one has no proof in doing so. One had chemistry with the team...one's going to screw it up. Take Chandler out of the equation last year and we're lucky to get into the 8th seed. His numbers offensively won't jump out at you, but Paul and him had that ally oop down to a science. Hope you enjoyed it because you won't see that timing again. He was great at getting rebounds. More and more it seems like this organization wants to put more and more pressure on CP3 rather than keeping a good core of players with him.Originally Posted by UNO Gracias
How would San Antonio have faired if they split up their big 4 that's been there since god knows when?
All 4 are pieces to the puzzle. One goes down...the team suffers. No Bowen...you lost your lockdown defender and the guy that slowly drifts into the corner. Duncan is Duncan. Ginobili...numbers go just a bit down.
My point being is you have to keep the main corps around. What are we really getting from Mo Pete or to this point Stojachvich?
I wish we landed a 1st rounder or 2, but so be it. we have a lot of flexibility unlike other teams still fighting to get under the luxury.
no they are glad we did a bad tradeOriginally Posted by ChrispaulCP3
Originally Posted by NIH
You should go talk to Harvey Hornet. That guy could tell you a thing or 5 about this team.
I do not understand the problem. Tyson's main offensive production was alley-oops from Paul. How hard is it to catch and dunk a ball off a easy lob? Tyson had zero offensive game when he got here and developed zilch since.
He was a decent defender that got into foul trouble just about every game. He was our best rebounder, so that IMO is the area we will have to replace.
Lmao!Originally Posted by Saints Fan in A
Originally Posted by Cp3superman12
Some laughs about how people are spelling his name?
In all honesty your saying it's better to be getting pimped, than to be raped in prison. Neither is a pretty thing.
I still see the same 20-10 finish (Final record 50-32) I was looking at before the trade.
I'd like to know where he got that considering Bower took over in October of 2005.Originally Posted by Saints Fan in A
http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baske...-bristow_x.htmBristow resigns as Hornets' GM; Bower named as replacement
By Jeff Latzke, The Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY — Allan Bristow resigned as general manager of the New Orleans Hornets on Saturday, citing health concerns.
Bristow, 52, took over as the Hornets' general manager in June, when Bob Bass retired. He helped oversee the Hornets' temporary move to Oklahoma City, which was prompted by Hurricane Katrina.
"The stress and strain of the last month took a serious toll on various health problems that I was already facing before the hurricane," Bristow said in a statement. "After consulting with my physician, it became clear that stepping down was the only decision that made sense for me and my family."
Gotta love facts, huh SFIA?
Yeah but that fact didn't happened overnight, they must have realized a long time ago that we weren't in the biggest market so why did we kept overpaying aging FAs that would go nowhere but downhill at that point of their respective careers. With that strategy we gave ourselves no margin of error, no cushion whatsover. That is my biggest complaint with our FO.Originally Posted by UNO Gracias
And you know Wilcox is going to screw up because???Originally Posted by Cp3superman12
Paul and Chandler had the alley hoop down to a science but teams had that play figured out this year.
I'm saying we should've kept Chandler until the end of the season. All we did now is throw in the towel. We might as well just tank the rest of the season...oh yes...by this trade's standard's...we just did.Originally Posted by UNO Gracias
Yeah, but it still worked.Originally Posted by cjjr72984
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