Spurs Dynasty 21 will be all over this.
Deserving of it's own thread!
http://www.hoopsvibe.com/nba-blog/s...ts-ar47567.html
San Antonio Screw Up: Spurs Made Mistake Trading Luis Scola to Rival Houston Rockets
The AM Take: The San Antonio Spurs are a model of excellence. They win NBA les, turn a tidy profit, and their players avoid trouble.
However, they’re not perfect and mistakes happen. Last summer, the Spurs dealt international superstar Luis Scola to the Rockets. Teams in the same conference often exchange assets. But cross-state rivals in the same division hook up for a trade about as frequently as David Stern and Mark Cuban sitting down for a friendly social.
Division rivals typically avoid trading with each other to limit risk. For example, Scola has solidified the four-spot for the red-hot Rockets, helping Houston rattle off nineteen straight wins.
San Antonio’s junk is clearly Houston’s treasure. And the Argentine forward could help the surprising Rockets win the first overall seed in the Western Conference and challenge the Spurs in a seven game playoff series.
Why would the defending champions trade a talent like Scola? And why would they trade him to their Texas rival, the Rockets?
A lack of minutes and cap space forced the Spurs to move Scola. Coach Gregg Popovich felt there weren’t enough opportunities in his front-court to keep the forward happy. Also, signing Scola and paying his buyout fee would be expensive for the cap-conscious club.
San Antonio employed a different philosophy when trading Scola. Once they made the decision to move him, they focused only on getting back the best compensation possible. Where those assets came from didn’t matter.
While I understand why San Antonio traded Scola, it doesn’t excuse helping a rival like Houston. Like I said, even the great Spurs make mistakes. Of course, this mistake could be costly come playoff time.
No , we all knew it was a horrible ing trade when it went down. Nothing we can do now...
I just realized the Spurs have actually let a lot of players go that have blossomed elsewhere.
Steven Jackson, Scola, Turkolgu, Udrih
Yeah and Shaq won a 'ship in Miami. happens you know.
No team is perfect...
The Spurs passed on JHo...
and got rid of Barbosa...
I'll go on the record. Scola would have been a much better pickup than Bonner.
Let mop boy spread the floor.
The only thing that comes to mind when I hear Red Rocket....
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I think they picked Barbosa for Phoenix since you can't trade picks.
Technicality...
Cut me some slack...I'm still trying to learn the Spurs history being a new fan and all...
But it was their pick, and they could have had him had they kept the pick.
Scola Duncan would have been better than Thomas Duncan
But if they hadn't made the trade, there's no saying that's the pick they would have made for themselves. The Mavericks picked Robert Traylor, but they'd have picked Dirk if they hadn't had the intention of trading the pick.
But not better than Splitter/Duncan
OR
Splitter/Parker in the next 5 years.
That's a bit of a stretch since Splitter isn't known to be any kind of offensive threat. Might be a good defensive player though.
Every team has the story of the one that got away. This will always happen.
Spurs could have had all three.
The claim is false that the Spurs traded Scola because they could not afford him when they gave Bonner more than Scola got.
Happens all the time in the NBA, how many teams passed on Tony Parker? Ginobili?
You can't be perfect all of the time.
I don't think you are correct. At the time, Scola had a prohibitively expensive buyout, right? The Spurs already had money invested in Bonner by the time Scola was affordable. The bottom line is that if Scola hadn't signed that stupid thousand year contract because his agent was in a huff then he'd be a Spur today.
If a rookie backup power forward who can't play defense was going to be the difference the Spurs needed to repeat, then they were screwed all along.
For the Suns: Luol Deng, Andre Iguodala, Rajon Rondo...
There was an inside deal between the Rockets and the Spurs, to allow the Spurs to aquire Tiago in the 2007 Draft. In return, the Spurs and Rockets would work out a deal involving Scola. In the minds of the FO an athletic, defensive C was a greater need than an intellegent, but undersized PF. It would have been difficult (not improbible) for Scola to get significant playing time. I think it worked out well for both parties, the Spurs and Scola. The Spurs saved money this season, and added a long-term prospect to their franchise. Scola recieved the opportunity to be a significant contributor on a team desperately trying to get out of the 1st round.
In all reality, Scola would've been a younger Fab. That's nice, but we've got the original. I'll take Splitter gladly.
Cept Big Manu is light years ahead of Oberto who is his backup on the Argentine National Team.
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