You don't have an answer yet, TJ?
Maybe another of your sophisms could delay things.
Hard to make good trades when you don't have assets. Spurs pick late every year, which denies them the chance to stockpile youth. They try and find late round gems and Euro talent. But that only works every once in a while. Furthermore, Spurs don't sign bad contracts, so they rarely have expiring contracts to get good players. Don't forget the Spurs had to trade three players to get Jefferson. That's part of their problem, they'd have to trade five of their young players on low paying contracts to get a quality player in return. That's too much to pay for most any player.
You don't have an answer yet, TJ?
Maybe another of your sophisms could delay things.
I'll be back in a few hours TJ. Maybe you will have googled something appropriate by then.
1. Talking Scola is working backwards through the equation. Hindsight is 20/20. Nobody knew Scola would be the player he is or we would have had a ton of people interested in trading for him.
2. LA may contend, but Phil isn't going to wait around to find out. His star is now on the downside. Time for him to go to Heat so he can keep his winning reputation.
3. By committee? Novak? He is way worse than Jefferson. If he gets major minutes, we wouldn't make the playoffs. I'm not a big fan of Jefferson, but we didn't and do not have many options. He is better than the scrubs you suggest we play. Anderson was injured, so he doesn't really factor into the conversation.
4. Splitter had good games. Splitter had bad games. He was inconsistent, which made him unreliable in Pop's eyes. Maybe he should have played more, or maybe playing him more would have showed he was still too young. Hard to say, but Pop is in the best position to know.
5. Last year we barely made the playoffs. This year, we were the number one seed. Richardson and Bonner were a big reason for the jump. Us losing in the playoffs? Well, we're a flawed team. We gave our best effort, but Memphis played better. Memphis defense was tremendous.
6. Bonner contract is exaggerated. He's not overpaid. Jefferson, while overpaid, will be servicable next year and tradable after that as his contract becomes more attractive to teams looking for expirables. I doubt he finishes his career as a Spur.
I'm bolding this portion of your post because in the end its the only thing that really matters. You can't win with a 1 dimensional chucker in the playoffs, its been proven 4 times in a row now. I don't care if the spurs go 82-0 and Bonner hits 82 game winners, I don't want him on the team if can't deliver anything come playoff time.
Peter Holt owns a franchise called the "San Antonio Spurs".. whose net worth is currently 404 million according to Hoopshype.
Obviously, taking a loss is a tough thing to swallow in any calendar year, but if it benefits the franchise' in the long term then its not "losing", its "winning".
Of course, this is all just business 101. And I should be getting paid for my time.
You understand that means he could [maybe] expect to get $404M if he sold it?
That does not mean that they have $404M sitting in the bank account. You get that, right?
Yes, so? It's still an asset. Would you trash and burn your house and property if someone gave you a hundred bucks? After all, you'd have that hundred bucks in your hand afterward, right?
I'm not sure what the debate is about. Bonner & Jefferson contracts are not good ones. It was mistake to sign those guys for the amount of years they were given. However, the front office is one of the best at finding young talent without having high draft picks. The Scola trade was dumb - every scout knew he was a very good player. His success in Europe & Argentina was not a secret. Pop was a stubborn asshole for not playing Splitter (& Anderson) more as the regular season wound down and for continuing to play Bonner all those minutes. I'm sure the off-season will be another good one but what really is going to matter is who Pop decides to play in the main rotation. This is the key if the Spurs have any chance of getting another le. Yes, they need another impact player. Yes, we need more Splitter, Blair, Anderson, Neal, & Hill (unless 1 or more are part of deal) to play impact minutes. The original core should never be traded. Loyalty is important for winning franchises. It's just not good if you always have to rely on the aging veterans for all the key plays. I'm not being naive either. Parker is the only one with real trade value but it would be a swap. The Lakers had a lot of "lucky" things go their way to build their team. Boston had a lot of lottery picks to move. We all know what Miami did. Dallas always makes trades and overpays every year. OKC has a lot of lottery talent and hasn't won the prize yet. They also don't have that great of a roster - Collison, D.Cook, Maynor, Mohammed aren't that great.
Last edited by lowdown; 05-12-2011 at 03:48 PM.
I really have no desire to venture into the head where that analogy makes sense...
The talk in Dallas is about they'd rather play OKC than Memphis. They played well against OKC in regular season and not so well against Memphis.
The Jefferson years may not even be much of an issue if rumors of another Allan Houston/Michael Finley amnesty rule are true.
You don't think that a player with this type of resume is worth $3m:
2000 Spanish League Rookie of the Year
2000 FIBA Americas Under-20 Championship MVP
2005 Spanish Supercup MVP
2× Spanish League MVP 2005, 2007
All-Euroleague Second Team 2005
2× All-Euroleague First Team 2006, 2007
2× FIBA Americas Championship MVP 2007
I'd take a chance on him especially as they gave about the same amount to Jackie Butler who had done squat. Everyone knew what Scola was going to be. For God sake, Manu - his national team mate for how many years - could have told them (just as he's been saying all season long about Splitter).
I think it's naive of you to think that they may contend - Kobe's got lots left in the tank. They are going to contend. They still have the best front line in the league, Kobe Bryant and an owner willing to spend to win rings. Kobe will never play with Lebron.
Yes, by committee, the way they played the last game vs MEM. The useless POS RJ was played only 10 mins. and the rest of the SF mins. were absorbed by other players. They could have picked up a vet for the min or imagine Peja and the wonderful job he's done on the Mavs.
Still too young? At 26 with what - 10 years of pro ball behind him? By finally playing Splitter (in desperation) in game 4 and benching Blair, Pop essentially admitted that he'd made a mistake in not integrating Splitter.
Even though we barely made the playoffs last year, we went further into the playoffs then than this year. It's the playoffs that matter after all - not the regular season. We're a flawed team because we have Bonner and RJ playing major minutes. And no we didn't give our best effort. Our second best defensive big was sitting on the bench for 3 games.
What starting SF plays for 10 minutes in a playoff elimination game? RJ's contract is for 4 years - there are still 3 years left of this useless POS.
Last edited by rmt; 05-12-2011 at 04:16 PM.
http://blogs.forbes.com/kurtbadenhau...ms-for-buck-2/
Let's see... lose a few million in 2010 .. or lose almost 300 million by turning the franchise into rubbish... tough choices... don't strain yourselves too hard with this..oh wait we can't withdraw the spurs from the bank.. never mind..Owner Peter Holt has seen the value of his team soar from $122 million to $404 million since Duncan arrived as the consistent winning helped get AT&T Center built mostly with public money.
You didn't respond to this, TJ. You just engaged in nonstop sophistry.You also confused Holt's personal net worth with the valuation of the San Antonio Spurs.
I'll let you know if you ever get anything right.
So why is his net worth you listed earlier so much lower, genius?
Sorry, winning on the court and profit do not go hand in hand.Obviously, taking a loss is a tough thing to swallow in any calendar year, but if it benefits the franchise' in the long term then its not "losing", its "winning".
Who would pay for this kind of bull ?Of course, this is all just business 101. And I should be getting paid for my time.
What I mean is Presti has a young franchise superstar and a talented young core surrounding him, which is really the harder part. He has done a good job of pulling the right deals and plugging good vets in that team.
We're conceptually in the opposite side of the spectrum. We have an aging core on the decline and we're trying to find talented young pieces on the cheap to try to extend the window.
If the Spurs are the type of organization to "backroom deal" then they should have had no problem going back on their unofficial word. A contract can't be binding if it is illegal.
If Rj came back to me looking for a long-term contract my reaction is.
Couldn't disagree with any comment on this thread more than this.
Agree with ChumpDumper. I think Bonner could easily get his contract from other teams.
I want a new owner.
And the Spurs could never work with an agent ever again.
Trying to convince them that they're comparing apples and oranges won't get you very far. They're convinced that the FO is broken, and there's no "unconvincing" them.
I don't know how Chumpo got an all star 2nd team from this site.
This guy offers nothing but to argue with people.
Pete's not worth that much. He's tied for lowest net worth out of every NBA owner.
Also, he is Chairman of the San Antonio Spurs. He's the principal guy but he doesn't own the team just by himself like say Paul Allen or Mickey Arison.
http://www.lipstickalley.com/f19/nba...owners-122150/
This list doesn't include Russian Billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov. Owner of the Nets.
Pete is tied with Les Alexander, owner of the Houston Rockets. And they have LESS than 100 Million. At the time of the list, they were both at $80M respectively.
http://www.forbes.com/2010/12/16/lak...lionaires.html
If you go by the Forbes list of Billionaire's in the NBA, Prokhorov has the most money now, followed by Paul Allen. Since that list is only of Billionaires, the last guy to get in was Herb Simon, at 1.25B. That means that the Spurs aren't as Cash Rich as some people think. They do it as best as they can, small market bootstrapping at it's finest.
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