LuckyLloyd wrote: » He doesn’t have any of those lads now. Hence his desire to leave. The various partnerships nearly got there, as I noted in my post. I didn’t claim he was on his own.
qwabercd wrote: » And Harden should shoulder a lot of the blame for that.
LuckyLloyd wrote: » People may want to live in a world where stars shoulder blame and serve out years of non competitive penance on rosters they were complicit in running down. It doesn’t work like that.
LuckyLloyd wrote: » John Wall got through 19 mins of preseason action. Good for him to get back onto the court.
LuckyLloyd wrote: » Giannis signing the super max. 5 / 228 Wrong move imo.
Carcharodon wrote: » Good for Milwaukee and good for the NBA, it’s always going to be better to have superstars spread out across the NBA rather than 5 or 6 destination cities And it doesn’t necessarily mean he will stay there for 5 years.
Coneygree wrote: » Looks like Harden to the Sixers could have legs with Simmons going the other way. Obviously more pieces would be involved too. Don't know what to make of it, the Rockets will look really weird with Wall and Simmons.
ButtersSuki wrote: » It is by far the most logical trade from Houston's perspective. They won't get anywhere near as big a talent as Simmons from any other team and given the age differential it's a no-brainer IMO. Given Simmons position he's also the ideal guy to start a rebuild around in the modern NBA. I wouldn't bank on there being much extra involved though for a variety of reasons that I don't have time to go into now.
LuckyLloyd wrote: » I think if you accept that you’re not winning either way, acquiring Simmons and figuring out what to do with both him and Wall over the next while is the right long term move. It won’t work on the court particularly well, but Simmons is a good piece and maybe Wall gets back into shape and becomes something you work with or trade. If you’re not winning, acquiring assets is the next best thing.