Knicks · Rumor: Courtney Lee to Detroit for #12 (page 3)
fishmike wrote:lets look at the reverse. If you need a guy who shoots the 3 with the best in the league, is a solid defender, has a history of making teams better he's traded too, good lockerroom guy, moves the ball, plays mistake free basketball... I mean if you need a vet and your Det who do you target? Afflalo? A guy like Evan Turner? Allan Crabbe? Those guys make Lee's deal look awesome. Look at this draft... who in the #12 range is going to help them right away? Lee may not be a star but he's a very good NBA player.
You overrate Lee. He makes teams better yet gets traded by every team he plays for almost. He shoots the 3 great but doesn't shoot it enough. His defense is getting worse and he doesn't get close defensive possessions with steals or rebounds. Lee is a mediocre aging vet that teams date but never fall in loves with.
yellowboy90 wrote:fishmike wrote:lets look at the reverse. If you need a guy who shoots the 3 with the best in the league, is a solid defender, has a history of making teams better he's traded too, good lockerroom guy, moves the ball, plays mistake free basketball... I mean if you need a vet and your Det who do you target? Afflalo? A guy like Evan Turner? Allan Crabbe? Those guys make Lee's deal look awesome. Look at this draft... who in the #12 range is going to help them right away? Lee may not be a star but he's a very good NBA player.You overrate Lee. He makes teams better yet gets traded by every team he plays for almost. He shoots the 3 great but doesn't shoot it enough. His defense is getting worse and he doesn't get close defensive possessions with steals or rebounds. Lee is a mediocre aging vet that teams date but never fall in loves with.
Lee played better than your assesment of him this season considering the cluster fuck that was the offense and the defense. Whatever flaws Lee may or may not have in his game, he is still good enough of a two way player to start, and shoots the 3 well enough to boost a team's average.
That's what teams are looking for, especially on a reasonable contract. No one is going to beat down doors for Lee, at the same time, he's good enough to offer for a draft pick to a team that needs a deeper bench for a playoff run. Lee would make a good addition.
fishmike wrote:lets look at the reverse. If you need a guy who shoots the 3 with the best in the league, is a solid defender, has a history of making teams better he's traded too, good lockerroom guy, moves the ball, plays mistake free basketball... I mean if you need a vet and your Det who do you target? Afflalo? A guy like Evan Turner? Allan Crabbe? Those guys make Lee's deal look awesome. Look at this draft... who in the #12 range is going to help them right away? Lee may not be a star but he's a very good NBA player.
Trade a 31yr old for the 12th pick in a very deep draft. NO F'in Brainer. You do what you can to make this deal go down. You could look back in 5 yrs and can't believe this trade. Lee out of the league and this draft pick a star. Could very well happen
newyorker4ever wrote:EnySpree wrote:Makes sense for Detroit.... Makes sense for the Knicks.The reason why Knicks fans are always let down with whatever trade the Knicks make is because we come on here months before the draft coming up with trade scenarios we'd like the Knicks to do and every trade that's come up with on here is favoring the Knicks so much that any realistic trade never comes off looking good to Knicks fans.
So true, we then get mad at our GM for not doing rumored deals.
CrushAlot wrote:newyorker4ever wrote:I think it would be hard to find many positives in the Tyson, Rose, and JR/Shump trades. When Phil has been done with an asset, he has made it known and given it away for pennies on the dollar. Maybe he will change his approach but he seems to be following that pattern with Melo.EnySpree wrote:Makes sense for Detroit.... Makes sense for the Knicks.The reason why Knicks fans are always let down with whatever trade the Knicks make is because we come on here months before the draft coming up with trade scenarios we'd like the Knicks to do and every trade that's come up with on here is favoring the Knicks so much that any realistic trade never comes off looking good to Knicks fans.
Yes, he does this for his own personal pleasure. That, or he just can't help himself! All that video and scouting by other teams have no idea the value of our players!!!! Then Phil opens his big mouth and loses all leverage!!!
yellowboy90 wrote:fishmike wrote:lets look at the reverse. If you need a guy who shoots the 3 with the best in the league, is a solid defender, has a history of making teams better he's traded too, good lockerroom guy, moves the ball, plays mistake free basketball... I mean if you need a vet and your Det who do you target? Afflalo? A guy like Evan Turner? Allan Crabbe? Those guys make Lee's deal look awesome. Look at this draft... who in the #12 range is going to help them right away? Lee may not be a star but he's a very good NBA player.You overrate Lee. He makes teams better yet gets traded by every team he plays for almost. He shoots the 3 great but doesn't shoot it enough. His defense is getting worse and he doesn't get close defensive possessions with steals or rebounds. Lee is a mediocre aging vet that teams date but never fall in loves with.
Agreed. He'd be a nice role player on a $6 mil per year salary. You can't give him 8 figures though. He doesn't bring enough. Detroit's not good enough to have the kind of short-term mindset Fish was suggesting anyway. I really don't think any team is giving up a lottery pick for Lee unless we're taking back something terrible or giving up more.
Bonn1997 wrote:yellowboy90 wrote:fishmike wrote:lets look at the reverse. If you need a guy who shoots the 3 with the best in the league, is a solid defender, has a history of making teams better he's traded too, good lockerroom guy, moves the ball, plays mistake free basketball... I mean if you need a vet and your Det who do you target? Afflalo? A guy like Evan Turner? Allan Crabbe? Those guys make Lee's deal look awesome. Look at this draft... who in the #12 range is going to help them right away? Lee may not be a star but he's a very good NBA player.You overrate Lee. He makes teams better yet gets traded by every team he plays for almost. He shoots the 3 great but doesn't shoot it enough. His defense is getting worse and he doesn't get close defensive possessions with steals or rebounds. Lee is a mediocre aging vet that teams date but never fall in loves with.
Agreed. He'd be a nice role player on a $6 mil per year salary. You can't give him 8 figures though. He doesn't bring enough. Detroit's not good enough to have the kind of short-term mindset Fish was suggesting anyway. I really don't think any team is giving up a lottery pick for Lee unless we're taking back something terrible or giving up more.
Hey, if he can do it more power to him. I definitely think he should try to attack other coaches/GMs because they seem to bad decision makers when it comes to personnel and trades.
meloshouldgo wrote:Lee is the only Knick so far drawing any interest even in rumors
We don't know who teams are talking about. The media just talk about they that they supposedly hear from "unnamed sources" but we don't know how much truth is to these rumors that come out. I'm sure teams have asked about KOQ, Willy, C.Lee and of course draft picks and who knows who else.
Nalod wrote:newyorker4ever wrote:EnySpree wrote:Makes sense for Detroit.... Makes sense for the Knicks.The reason why Knicks fans are always let down with whatever trade the Knicks make is because we come on here months before the draft coming up with trade scenarios we'd like the Knicks to do and every trade that's come up with on here is favoring the Knicks so much that any realistic trade never comes off looking good to Knicks fans.
So true, we then get mad at our GM for not doing rumored deals.
Exactly. People act like they know what teams think are good deals and who they would trade for what, but we have no idea what these teams see their players or other teams players are worth. You hardly ever see a trade scenario brought up on here that doesn't look good for the Knicks but every trade the Knicks make isn't gonna look good to fans on paper. I understand that this is a message board and we just come up with these trade we think the Knicks should do for fun but some people actually believe the scenarios they come up with are the trades the Knicks should make and if they don't they're morons...lol
GustavBahler wrote:Lee played better than your assesment of him this season considering the cluster fuck that was the offense and the defense. Whatever flaws Lee may or may not have in his game, he is still good enough of a two way player to start, and shoots the 3 well enough to boost a team's average.That's what teams are looking for, especially on a reasonable contract. No one is going to beat down doors for Lee, at the same time, he's good enough to offer for a draft pick to a team that needs a deeper bench for a playoff run. Lee would make a good addition.
The enduring question for the non Knicks franchise in any trades is the VORP question ( Value Over Replacement Player)
Lee has 3 years and 36 million left on his contract. He's 31 years old right now.
Can the Pistons drafted someone at 12 who will give them 50 percent of what Lee would give them this year? 75 percent? 80 percent? 40 percent? Is this a value at the difference in the salary for this year ( the salary difference is pretty huge for a cost control rookie at that level of slotting and Lee's contract)
This question needs to be asked, not just this year, BUT FOR EVERY SINGLE YEAR OF LEE'S CONTRACT.
Maybe the rookie at 12 gives you just 40 percent of Lee's possible production. Then it jumps to 55 next year, and 75 the year after, factoring in Lee's likely further decline with age.
Here's the other factor, the money you save by not trading for Lee, can you use that money elsewhere and improve the team?
This is not just the value of Lee alone, it's the value of THE OUTGOING ASSET ( the 12th pick here at cost control) and the VALUE OF THE CAP SPACE IMPLIED.
A) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 1 ( Age 31/32)
B) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 2 ( Age 32/33)
C) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 3 ( Age 33/34)
Here's a base problem with the few bad trades that really happen in the real NBA. The ones that violate basic marketplace values and trends and conventions, they start to make other bad potential trades look entirely possible. A bad trade can happen because the owner overrules everyone and is an idiot. A bad trade can happen because the GM in place fears for his job and thinks about the next 6 months, not the 4 years down the road. A bad trade can happen because it's a marketing/PR decision, and not solely a basketball/winning related decision.
The problem with being on the winning side of a bad trade is YOU CANNOT RELY ON THEM TO EVER BE THERE.
Some people say "No no, this trade makes so MUCH SENSE!" Against the NBA marketplace and current trends, actually it does not make sense. What would make sense if someone said, Stan Van Gundy is on the edge of being fired and his owner DEMANDS he make the playoffs next year or everyone is going to get clipped. The ticket sales are horrible and whatever personnel move would spike that ( like the Grizzlies signing Iverson at the end) maybe that's worth it. That kind of reasoning makes sense. Saying, no no, this is purely a good value for the other team, when nothing in NBA draft and trade history suggests that a reasonable and functionally run NBA franchise would ever make the deal.
The "mirror test" applies here.
Anyone who thinks this is a good value trade for the Pistons, ask yourself if the rosters and teams and situations were completely reversed. Every single aspect of it. You just slap a Knicks name on the Pistons franchise, would you want your beloved Knicks and your team runner in Van Gundy to trade the 12th pick PLUS the opportunity cost in the cap space difference that can be used elsewhere to get Courtney Lee on the roster?
A) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 1 ( Age 31/32)
B) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 2 ( Age 32/33)
C) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 3 ( Age 33/34)
Would this add up for you as a Knicks fan?
And if YOU WOULD NOT, WHY WOULD OR SHOULD THE PISTONS?
Would the Pistons make this trade? Technically, anything is possible. Technically, the sun might not rise up tomorrow. Technically, Ariana Grande might knock on your door right now and give you the sloppiest wettest blowjob of your entire life. Technically, the can of Coke in your fridge might magically turn to Pepsi. Anything is possible.
BUT IS IT LIKELY?
Well run teams take advantage of poor market based decisions of other teams, but they DO NOT RELY ON THEM. THEY DO NO ASSUME IT IS THE DEFAULT SETTING AND BEHAVIOR OF OTHER TEAMS.
So, yes, if it makes some folks here feel better, as the can of Coke in your hand morphs into Pepsi, yes, this trade is entirely possible. It is just so unlikely that Ariana Grande is pretending she can sing somewhere and not on her knees in front of you right now.
TripleThreat wrote:GustavBahler wrote:Lee played better than your assesment of him this season considering the cluster fuck that was the offense and the defense. Whatever flaws Lee may or may not have in his game, he is still good enough of a two way player to start, and shoots the 3 well enough to boost a team's average.That's what teams are looking for, especially on a reasonable contract. No one is going to beat down doors for Lee, at the same time, he's good enough to offer for a draft pick to a team that needs a deeper bench for a playoff run. Lee would make a good addition.
The enduring question for the non Knicks franchise in any trades is the VORP question ( Value Over Replacement Player)Lee has 3 years and 36 million left on his contract. He's 31 years old right now.
Can the Pistons drafted someone at 12 who will give them 50 percent of what Lee would give them this year? 75 percent? 80 percent? 40 percent? Is this a value at the difference in the salary for this year ( the salary difference is pretty huge for a cost control rookie at that level of slotting and Lee's contract)
This question needs to be asked, not just this year, BUT FOR EVERY SINGLE YEAR OF LEE'S CONTRACT.
Maybe the rookie at 12 gives you just 40 percent of Lee's possible production. Then it jumps to 55 next year, and 75 the year after, factoring in Lee's likely further decline with age.
Here's the other factor, the money you save by not trading for Lee, can you use that money elsewhere and improve the team?
This is not just the value of Lee alone, it's the value of THE OUTGOING ASSET ( the 12th pick here at cost control) and the VALUE OF THE CAP SPACE IMPLIED.
A) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 1 ( Age 31/32)
B) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 2 ( Age 32/33)
C) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 3 ( Age 33/34)
Here's a base problem with the few bad trades that really happen in the real NBA. The ones that violate basic marketplace values and trends and conventions, they start to make other bad potential trades look entirely possible. A bad trade can happen because the owner overrules everyone and is an idiot. A bad trade can happen because the GM in place fears for his job and thinks about the next 6 months, not the 4 years down the road. A bad trade can happen because it's a marketing/PR decision, and not solely a basketball/winning related decision.
The problem with being on the winning side of a bad trade is YOU CANNOT RELY ON THEM TO EVER BE THERE.
Some people say "No no, this trade makes so MUCH SENSE!" Against the NBA marketplace and current trends, actually it does not make sense. What would make sense if someone said, Stan Van Gundy is on the edge of being fired and his owner DEMANDS he make the playoffs next year or everyone is going to get clipped. The ticket sales are horrible and whatever personnel move would spike that ( like the Grizzlies signing Iverson at the end) maybe that's worth it. That kind of reasoning makes sense. Saying, no no, this is purely a good value for the other team, when nothing in NBA draft and trade history suggests that a reasonable and functionally run NBA franchise would ever make the deal.
The "mirror test" applies here.
Anyone who thinks this is a good value trade for the Pistons, ask yourself if the rosters and teams and situations were completely reversed. Every single aspect of it. You just slap a Knicks name on the Pistons franchise, would you want your beloved Knicks and your team runner in Van Gundy to trade the 12th pick PLUS the opportunity cost in the cap space difference that can be used elsewhere to get Courtney Lee on the roster?
A) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 1 ( Age 31/32)
B) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 2 ( Age 32/33)
C) Will the production of the 12th pick AND the opportunity cost of the difference in the cap space give you more than Lee would in Year 3 ( Age 33/34)
Would this add up for you as a Knicks fan?
And if YOU WOULD NOT, WHY WOULD OR SHOULD THE PISTONS?
Would the Pistons make this trade? Technically, anything is possible. Technically, the sun might not rise up tomorrow. Technically, Ariana Grande might knock on your door right now and give you the sloppiest wettest blowjob of your entire life. Technically, the can of Coke in your fridge might magically turn to Pepsi. Anything is possible.
BUT IS IT LIKELY?
Well run teams take advantage of poor market based decisions of other teams, but they DO NOT RELY ON THEM. THEY DO NO ASSUME IT IS THE DEFAULT SETTING AND BEHAVIOR OF OTHER TEAMS.
So, yes, if it makes some folks here feel better, as the can of Coke in your hand morphs into Pepsi, yes, this trade is entirely possible. It is just so unlikely that Ariana Grande is pretending she can sing somewhere and not on her knees in front of you right now.
Could of saved yourself the time writing all that stuff if you had noticed that I never mentioned a specific draft pick. Only said that Lee brought enough to the table to offer in a trade for a pick.
BigRedDog wrote:fishmike wrote:lets look at the reverse. If you need a guy who shoots the 3 with the best in the league, is a solid defender, has a history of making teams better he's traded too, good lockerroom guy, moves the ball, plays mistake free basketball... I mean if you need a vet and your Det who do you target? Afflalo? A guy like Evan Turner? Allan Crabbe? Those guys make Lee's deal look awesome. Look at this draft... who in the #12 range is going to help them right away? Lee may not be a star but he's a very good NBA player.
Trade a 31yr old for the 12th pick in a very deep draft. NO F'in Brainer. You do what you can to make this deal go down. You could look back in 5 yrs and can't believe this trade. Lee out of the league and this draft pick a star. Could very well happen
Co-sign
Sinix wrote:I would be absolutely amazed if the pistons were interested in this deal. I'll take a late first for Lee. 12 would be insane value. Doesn't seem realistic.
Lee is maybe worth a pick in the 25-30 range not the 12th. What im seeing from Golden State I see no reason the Knicks should have players like Lee on the roster. The Knicks should be building for 3 years from now. Hopefully we can compete with Boston. We should be looking to take on bad contracts for draft picks thats it. Trade the malcontnt KP and reset the clock, its going to take that long this team is a frickin mess.
Jmpasq wrote:Sinix wrote:I would be absolutely amazed if the pistons were interested in this deal. I'll take a late first for Lee. 12 would be insane value. Doesn't seem realistic.
Lee is maybe worth a pick in the 25-30 range not the 12th. What im seeing from Golden State I see no reason the Knicks should have players like Lee on the roster. The Knicks should be building for 3 years from now. Hopefully we can compete with Boston. We should be looking to take on bad contracts for draft picks thats it. Trade the malcontnt KP and reset the clock, its going to take that long this team is a frickin mess.
Even that is iffy to me though it's possible. If I were a GM, I'd expect to get more production out of pick 25 and $11 mil per year in players I signed than $12 mil per year on Lee. Maybe a win-now team with no chance of cap space any time soon would do your trade though.
If we can get 12 and say 20 from Portland-- I see a path to a solid draft
8-12-20-44
Don't care about 58. At that point if we did have 4 picks we should trade it for another years pick
Jmpasq wrote:Sinix wrote:I would be absolutely amazed if the pistons were interested in this deal. I'll take a late first for Lee. 12 would be insane value. Doesn't seem realistic.
Lee is maybe worth a pick in the 25-30 range not the 12th. What im seeing from Golden State I see no reason the Knicks should have players like Lee on the roster. The Knicks should be building for 3 years from now. Hopefully we can compete with Boston. We should be looking to take on bad contracts for draft picks thats it. Trade the malcontnt KP and reset the clock, its going to take that long this team is a frickin mess.
Jm -- Bellinelli got traded for pick 22 last year. From a combo standpoint( offense/ defense) I think that Lee holds more value. Detroit has gotten NO value from te draft since svt took over it's been a nightmare. Kcp also is a nightmare scenario to them because he wants 20 mm. They will weigh the cost if everything. I wouldn't do it if I'm Detroit but I'm also not in their shoes where there must be a big time theme of starting to win now
Sinix wrote:I would be absolutely amazed if the pistons were interested in this deal. I'll take a late first for Lee. 12 would be insane value. Doesn't seem realistic.
Yeah this sounds more like either a team or agent throwing up smoke screens to me.
BRIGGS wrote:Jmpasq wrote:Sinix wrote:I would be absolutely amazed if the pistons were interested in this deal. I'll take a late first for Lee. 12 would be insane value. Doesn't seem realistic.
Lee is maybe worth a pick in the 25-30 range not the 12th. What im seeing from Golden State I see no reason the Knicks should have players like Lee on the roster. The Knicks should be building for 3 years from now. Hopefully we can compete with Boston. We should be looking to take on bad contracts for draft picks thats it. Trade the malcontnt KP and reset the clock, its going to take that long this team is a frickin mess.Jm -- Bellinelli got traded for pick 22 last year. From a combo standpoint( offense/ defense) I think that Lee holds more value. Detroit has gotten NO value from te draft since svt took over it's been a nightmare. Kcp also is a nightmare scenario to them because he wants 20 mm. They will weigh the cost if everything. I wouldn't do it if I'm Detroit but I'm also not in their shoes where there must be a big time theme of starting to win now
Belinelli makes half what Lee does. Lee would definitely have strong trade value on a $6 mil per year contract.
Bonn1997 wrote:Jmpasq wrote:Sinix wrote:I would be absolutely amazed if the pistons were interested in this deal. I'll take a late first for Lee. 12 would be insane value. Doesn't seem realistic.
Lee is maybe worth a pick in the 25-30 range not the 12th. What im seeing from Golden State I see no reason the Knicks should have players like Lee on the roster. The Knicks should be building for 3 years from now. Hopefully we can compete with Boston. We should be looking to take on bad contracts for draft picks thats it. Trade the malcontnt KP and reset the clock, its going to take that long this team is a frickin mess.
Even that is iffy to me though it's possible. If I were a GM, I'd expect to get more production out of pick 25 and $11 mil per year in players I signed than $12 mil per year on Lee. Maybe a win-now team with no chance of cap space any time soon would do your trade though.
If I was a GM I wouldnt give up a pick for him. Maybe one in the 50's, just saying a team that has problem signing free agents might consider his 12 million a good contract. Lee is an ok player but Im not giving up const controlled assets for him.