Honestly, I think he's a worse version of Bonner. New Orleans is making moves almost as stupid as last year when they tried to trade CP3 for Scola, Odom, and Martin.
Damn, Ayon is a great get in a sign-and-trade. I don't think Anderson is even that much better than Ayon.
I don't really understand this trade from the Hornets end. Anderson is useful in spacing the floor but who is he spacing the court for in N.O.? Unibrow doesn't seem like he'll become a dominant post player anytime soon. I'd think Ayon fits better next to Davis, especially as a rookie.
I wonder if the Hornets did this with the idea of letting Phoenix have Gordon. I guess this would be one way to replace his scoring...
Honestly, I think he's a worse version of Bonner. New Orleans is making moves almost as stupid as last year when they tried to trade CP3 for Scola, Odom, and Martin.
Can't wait to see the contract details. Will almost certainly start north of 8M per.
So it's a double whammy: not only do you get shameful playoff production, but also get a worse draft pick.
Sure - but purely from a skillset/production standpoint - they got him cheaper than "the market" would normally be.
Most of us know that from a value/impact perspective, Anderson isn't great, but that is not how the NBA works. NO got him for a good deal in a bubble.
$8 million a year long-term for Bonner.
The Angels/Spirit/Voodoo would be better off with the Heineken Looter as GM over Demps.
First of all, I love it every time you do that bubble thing.
Second, even in your bubble, how can say it was a good deal until you know the contract details?
Ha...I was just thinking about how much he uses that reference.
I wasn't talking about the contract details - I was talking about the assets they had to give up in the trade (probably was not clear about that) to get him and nothing else (hence the "bubble").
I said I like the deal for ORL regardless first - I was just doing an aside that he was pretty cheap (from an asset perspective) for NO initially.
Don't burst my bubble fools (don't know why I am doing that more -it's something I never used to say).
To me, it's all about the contract. Anderson was a free agent and Orlando was unlikely to match a rich offer sheet. Ayon was the price they paid to remove all doubt. The real price of acquiring Anderson will be his contract. And when we see 4/32 or 4/40 then it will be a very bad deal for the Hornets, IMO.
I agree - for me to assess the deal entirely, we need to see the contract.
But I was speaking more to the point that if we all were sitting around and discussing packages to ORL for a S&T, most of us would have put the initial price (taking the contract details out of it) to more than just Ayon (although I like Ayon a lot). That's all I was referring to.
But, ya, he is about to get vastly overpaid (he should be no more than a 5-6m a year player from an impact perspective, but will get at least what you mentioned).
sources say that trade talks with the Magic have progressed quickly once Orlando officials decided that they would not want to match an offer to Anderson expected to pay him an annual salary in the $8 million range.
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/81...ic-sources-say
Makes sense - his regular season numbers, plus his age put him in at least that range when you look at the contracts for other bigs right now (which is silly and the price of big men is way out of line for the talent in the league).
Adrian Wojnarowski @WojYahooNBA
The New Orleans Hornets agreement with Ryan Anderson is four years, approximately $36 million, league sources tell Y! Sports.
Approx 36, means it's more like 30-32 with bonuses to get him to 36. So even if it's 8M a year guaranteed, that is still a hefty contract. Better hope he continues to rebound at least at the level he has been, because that is what keeps his value north of Bonner.
Oh my god, $9 million a year for one the worst postseason performers of my lifetime. All of a sudden the Rockets' deal with Asik sounds really reasonable.
Jeff Green got $10M per year. So much for the owners not being as stupid with the new CBA. Same as it ever was.
You can fix the rules but you can't fix intelligence.
Bonner, at more than twice the price.
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