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View Full Version : LeBron James: New Jersey Nets' Greatest Gamble



coachmac87
07-06-2008, 08:07 PM
After trading Jason Kidd for Devin Harris, the Nets made it clear that they were entering a stage of rebuilding. Then, by trading Richard Jefferson this summer, the stage has transformed into a risky gambit with the prize being Lebron James. The question is—will it pay off?

Shawn Carter is the mastermind, a shrewd businessman and known friend of Lebron, and this trade and direction is clearly his doing. Trading for Yi Jianlian gives the soon to be Brooklyn Nets a huge fan base, and a huge source of revenue in the future. If he blossoms into a star, even better, it will provide Bron-Bron with even more incentive to leave Cleveland.

Drafting Brook Lopez provides them with their center of the future, a low post player with an amazing skill set. All this being said, the key to the Nets future lies not in the hands of Jay-Z, but another Carter—Vince Carter.

At 31, if Vince is not careful, he will soon begin to decline as a player. He needs to remain a superstar and a leader of the Nets for another two years, showing that he is still a dominate force at 33, in the summer of 2010. He needs to show that he can still be the "franchise player," and lead New Jersey to two respectable seasons before Lebron gets there.

If the successfully signed Lebron, combined with steady draft choices in the next two summers, the year of 2010-2011 will be remarkable for the Brooklyn Nets. Picture a line-up of (with ages in 2010-2011):

C- Brook Lopez (21)

PF- Yi Jianlian (21)

SF- Lebron James (26)

SG- Vince Carter (33)

PG- Devin Harris (27)

Bench- Sean Williams (24) , Marcus Williams (25), Chris Douglas-Roberts (23)

This is a team that could compete with anyone in the East. If Lawrence Frank has the sense to play an uptempo offense, they’ll be unstoppable.

It ultimately comes down to Lebron—if they get him, the New Jersey Nets will be known for pulling off one of the greatest heists in NBA history. If not, they’ll be left with a single aging star, and no sure plan to rebuild. It was a bold move, but a gamble nonetheless, and everyone must wait two seasons to see if it will pay off.

Please_dont_ban_me
07-06-2008, 08:30 PM
Stupid gamble.

Unless Jay-Z has some inside info already from Lebron that he'll be coming to NJ. Which is very possible. Jay-Z isn't a idiot.

JamStone
07-06-2008, 08:36 PM
Not a stupid gamble. They weren't going to come close to a title anyway. Now, at least clearing cap space gives them options, even if it's not LeBron. Carmelo and Wade are both free agents that same summer. If they can't land LeBron, they probably will pursue Carmelo and/or Wade as well. And, clearing cap space to rebuild is not a gamble when the current team can't compete. RJ wasn't a franchise player that was going to put the Nets in title contention. It's a smart business move, not a gamble.

ShoogarBear
07-06-2008, 08:47 PM
Not to mention, there's a 50-50 chance they'll be a lottery team this year, so that will be one more high pick.

BRHornet45
07-06-2008, 09:08 PM
Stupid gamble.

Unless Jay-Z has some inside info already from Lebron that he'll be coming to NJ. Which is very possible. Jay-Z isn't a idiot.

jigga what???? jigga whooo????

Spuradicator
07-06-2008, 10:21 PM
^Amazing sig....I forgot what this thread is even about

baseline bum
07-06-2008, 11:33 PM
Not a stupid gamble. They weren't going to come close to a title anyway. Now, at least clearing cap space gives them options, even if it's not LeBron. Carmelo and Wade are both free agents that same summer. If they can't land LeBron, they probably will pursue Carmelo and/or Wade as well. And, clearing cap space to rebuild is not a gamble when the current team can't compete. RJ wasn't a franchise player that was going to put the Nets in title contention. It's a smart business move, not a gamble.

Stoudemire will be available too. The Nets absolutely did the right thing.

1. They moved Kidd's contract for a better player who is also young (Harris)
2. They got rid of Jefferson's bad contract to take a flyer on a talented big (Yi).
3. They have the capspace for two max free agents in 2010, when you have two franchise players (James and Wade) and two other likely Hall of Famers (Anthony and Stoudemire) available.
4. The Nets are moving to Brooklyn in 2010, and will therefore be a huge draw to prospective free agents.
5. LeBron is playing on a franchise that is capped out and in a hopeless situation with respect to improving his supporting cast.
6. They now have a young core to let grow while stockpiling lottery picks.
7. They can let Carter walk in 2011 and have another max cap slot.

There's no way anyone can think this is a gamble by the Nets. Kidd is finished (as was painfully clear all of last season). The New Jersey Nets were finished. If they stood pat, they were in a best case scenario a borderline Eastern Conference playoff team.

coachmac87
07-07-2008, 12:42 AM
Brooklyn Nets


will dominate basketball in 5 years...or sooner

Indazone
07-07-2008, 02:15 AM
Even if they don't get Lebron, there will be enough cap space to get another major NBA player. If it doesnt pan out with Lebron, they can get another NBA scoring leader. Not Kobe and not Lebron maybe hmmm someone else like Brand or B-Diddy

Tacker
07-07-2008, 07:52 AM
C- Brook Lopez (21) OK

PF- Yi Jianlian (21) Fail/Bust

SF- Lebron James (26) OK

SG- Vince Carter (33) Fail

PG- Devin Harris (27) OK

exstatic
07-07-2008, 07:12 PM
At 31, if Vince is not careful, he will soon begin to decline as a player.

Uh, that already happened like 3 years ago. By 2010, he's going to be a corpse.

Spur-Addict
07-07-2008, 07:15 PM
^Amazing sig....I forgot what this thread is even about

That's twice his sigs have done that to me.

baseline bum
07-07-2008, 07:45 PM
Uh, that already happened like 3 years ago. By 2010, he's going to be a corpse.

Carter's been in full decline mode since like 2000. Remember back in the day when everyone wondered who'd be better between him and Kobe? :lol

tlongII
07-07-2008, 08:46 PM
Half man, half a season.

Tully365
07-08-2008, 02:10 AM
Lopez and Yi haven't even proven that they can be NBA starters yet, so I think it's premature to say the Nets would "compete with anyone in the East" with that line up. But since rebuilding is obviously their plan now, I think they should trade Carter. He'll be 33 already and they'll be in their first year as a young team. Clearly, LeBron is the centerpiece and there's no point in confusing the issue by having a guy who is leaving his prime STILL not understanding that defense is necessary and wins championships on board to set a bad example for the young guys. Trade him now for a young defensive minded big, a young 3 pt shooter and a draft pick or two, and let LeBron lead the way.