The Ringer NBA Show - Trade Deadline Extravaganza: Giannis Stays Put, the Tankers Load Up, and Much More | Group Chat
Episode Date: February 6, 2026Justin, Rob, and J. Kyle Mann are here to give their reactions to a busy trade deadline day. They start with Giannis and Ja staying put before discussing the recent big trades of Ivica Zubac, James Ha...rden, Darius Garland, Anthony Davis, and Jaren Jackson Jr. Then they touch on a handful of other trades that caught their eye. (00:00) Intro (3:08) No trades for Giannis and Ja (5:42) Zubac to the Pacers (17:15) Harden-Garland trade (25:39) FanDuel Ad break (26:30) Anthony Davis to the Wizards (44:40) Jaren Jackson Jr. to the Jazz (58:25) Other intriguing trades Check out Rob's piece on the Anthony Davis trade here! Hosts: Justin Verrier, Rob Mahoney, and J. Kyle Mann Producers: Victoria Valencia and Isaiah Blakely Production Supervision: Ben Cruz and Conor Nevins Additional Production Support: John Richter and Chris Wohlers Social: Isaiah Blakely and Keith Fujimoto The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to this trade deadline extravaganza edition of group chat.
I am Justin Verrier, joined as always by Rob Mahoney, Jay Kyle, man.
The energy is just coursing through us.
At least that's like maybe just the caffeine because I haven't eaten in like 10 hours,
but it's something.
Yeah, a lot of caffeine, very little food, very little sense of where we are or everyone in the NBA is.
Like the flowchart of what happened today, I find absolutely dizzying.
Yeah, a lot of stuff going on.
I'm pretty well-fed.
I had some chilly, so I'm sitting back feeling good.
But as per usual, feeling well-fed.
What constitutes an extravaganza?
Do we need to have some kind of circus performer
come in in the middle of the pod?
I don't know.
I've always wondered that.
Or do we just need to sort of be in a more entertaining mood?
Explain that one, too.
Because Rob's got his arms out in a Rilo-Kiley shirt.
I think that's already enough to constitute an extravaganza.
But what do you guys say?
That bumps us up from a bonanza,
which we tend to do
when we forget to change it up.
Or Palooza.
Yeah, Paloosa.
We do some Paloosa too.
I think at the point where Tyos Jones
has been traded to four different teams
in the last 24 hours,
that's an extravaganza in my book.
Yes.
A lot of just middling veterans
got traded in that last hour.
Pretty much was pretty docile
at the end there
outside of the big old Visa Zubach trade
going to the paces.
We'll talk about that.
But overall, this was a day
for the tankers.
We were expecting,
like maybe we get a Yannis,
some team just rips the cord,
a contender,
and just goes all out
and gets them for the stretch run here.
Instead, it was the worst teams
in the league
trading for next year
in the hopes that they could do
their business a little bit earlier,
which is odd.
I don't remember anything like that, Rob.
I think we're gearing into that stage,
clearly. Like, the Raptors
were among the teams that did it last season.
There's clearly an appeal,
especially if you aren't anticipating
having cap space or you don't see your
franchise as a player in the summer in that particular way, why not take the chance now?
Why not trade for the guy on the team who may be a little bit expendable because, you know,
the clippers aren't thinking much of their season?
Why not trade for an injured star if, honestly, you're looking to tank the rest of the season
anyway?
Like, you can, you can kind of serve all of your objectives at once if you just strike early
enough and you honestly find whoever's available to be appealing.
Like, that's the trick with the Anthony Davis types, I think.
It's like, can you talk yourself into the risk or reward of Anthony.
Davis because if it pays off for the wizards, I think it's going to be a really nice bit of
business for them. It's just the risk is considerable. Should we start there? I mean, that one,
that's sort of the dizzying nature of the trade deadline. But, uh, well, go ahead. Well, I, I want to just
check off the honest box before we get anywhere else. If only because this was the biggest news and
it ended up being the biggest lack of news on the day. When it all kind of just fell apart
toward the end there when Shams alerted everyone that this wasn't going to happen, my conspiracy
theory was that like this was just all a big show to show Janus that we put forth a good effort,
but we actually never wanted to trade for you or trade you.
If only because in the in the off seasons, we've been saying for months now, there's just
will be more opportunity there.
Having said that, we got a very odd tweet from Janus suggesting that now he wants to add
to his run in Milwaukee, which seems to be a reversal of what he said, like yesterday to the
athletic and a couple other outlets.
So this is a big old mix.
I don't know where to really I stand with Yannis overall.
You're telling me Yonis is on both sides of these issues,
refusing to commit to literally anything at all for fear of being a bad person or perceived as one.
I mean, that's crazy to me, Justin.
I simply don't believe it.
Rob, I have a question for you because you're the prestige TV guy.
Do you think that this today, Janus's social media activity,
was it the equivalent of Harper's gating the fund email with someone typing it up?
Was Janice's social media manager today as he rattled off the tweets, which is, you know,
don't chase or whatever it is.
He wants to, I forget what the exact wording was, or the, even though, you know, the pencil tweet,
just, is that the equivalent?
Do you think that he was, like, overpowering?
Because I felt like the social media strategy today is probably in the cringe Hall of Fame,
if it were up to me.
First ballot, as far as I'm concerned.
And this is where I would be very surprised if Yannis has a social media manager,
Maybe someone out there technically has that title,
but the things that he puts out in the world
are not things anyone would be paid to do,
including this.
Like, again, just super weird for Janus and the Bucks,
we should say, it's kind of like on all sides of this
to pretend as if none of what's been happening
over the last like, I don't know,
six, eight, 12, 24 months has been happening.
We've all been here.
Like, it's not just smoke.
Like, these are real stories.
There was real interest.
There were real attempts by the Bucks to trade Janus.
He pushed at various points to be,
off the team. Why are we
pretending anything else? Like, why are we trying
to be cute about this?
Yeah, I still can't track down
whether or not he requested a trade
because then it sounded like he had
implied for months was
the reporting that he was open
to being moved or wanted to be
moved. And so just his
emotions about this seemed to change on
a dime. So I guess it's not surprising
that nothing ended up happening because this keeps
flipping over and over again. So
Yonis stayed put, John Mawin's stayed put,
as well. Also another expected one.
I think the one we need to start with here is Visa Zubach,
because this was like the big splash, right?
As like the last hour or so was kind of unfolding here.
I was not expecting this.
I know he'd been in rumors, I think, to the Celtics early on when they,
when the clippers were struggling.
But it just seems like the clippers,
even though they are conservationists in terms of trees,
they didn't mind cutting down perhaps the hottest team in the NBA
in order to, at the very least,
the page to something else like some of these other tankers are doing.
I see what you did there.
I appreciate what you're attempting to do.
Was it funny?
Was it good?
I'm not going to go that far.
Would you R to you?
Always a good spot to end up if you're asking blatantly, was it funny?
It was smirk funny, not ha ha funny.
Okay, I'll take it.
But look, the clarity we're seeing from the Clippers,
not something we see often enough in the NBA.
Too many teams talk themselves into their mid-season run and be like,
okay, why not us?
Why couldn't we have some momentum here?
Why couldn't we figure this out?
But I think the combination of James Hardin's contract
not positioning him to be with the team for the long term
and the clipper's not wanting to invest in him in the long term
and everything in terms of the writing on the wall with Kauai's ongoing health concerns,
right?
He's healthy now, he's available now, he's great now.
What about tomorrow?
What about a month from now?
What about two months from now?
There's just way too many questions and way too many variables for the clippers,
even at their absolute best,
to feel confident that they're going to continue to be.
be at their absolute best. And so so long as that's true, all, everything should be on the table,
including a Vizizzoobots, who's been one of their most rock solid players over the last several
years, an incredibly useful center in a variety of ways, which I'm sure we're going to get into
from the Pacer's side, and leaves a gigantic hole behind him as far as like what the clippers are
going to do with all this the rest of the way. Yeah, so they weren't resigned to being old,
which is always nice to see from anyone from a team or from a person. I think it's interesting sort of
the influx of so they go out and they add, they've managed to add some speed and some vigor,
you know, whereas we've talked all season about how they were, you know, slower.
I'm sure we'll talk about the garland, you know, hardened situation, what that's going to look like,
but they go out and they get math or in the thing that really, that, you know, stuck out to me
on the pacer side of this is that Zubots is going to add, you know, they are in the position to,
depending on how Zubot's plays down the stretch of this year, the pick is really the thing that I was eyeballing it.
Because when I first saw the 2026 thing, I was like, that surely that's not just straight up there.
But we were texting about how this is protected 1 through 4.
Then we have the gap in the 5 through 9 gap.
And then 10 through 30 it's protected.
So depending on how the home stretch of this goes, you know, it's going to make for a really interesting draft lottery night,
Pins and needles draft lottery night
because the Pacers, go ahead.
No, I think this is the balliest move that I can remember
probably on both sides in a very long time
because in the Clippers, you have a team
actually getting out in front of the inevitable decline
and actually hitting the button sooner than later
when we've seen so many teams basically wait,
wait, wait until John Moran just doesn't have any value.
Here, they just got ahead of it.
They got rid of Hardin and followed it up immediately with Zubach,
which I thought was very smart of them.
We'll see how Kauai thinks about that.
I mean, he's playing his best basketball
of his career, but I guess to Rob's earlier point, like, there's still a long way to go between
where they are in sixth place in the West. So that makes sense. The Pacer's doing this and basically
leaving it up to the lottery gods or just like how much they're going to now tank over the
second half of the season is unlike anything I've seen before. On the one hand, they could end up
with Zubacho, I think is a great fit alongside a healthy Halliburton in that team. Just just from like
a starting point.
But if they then still tank end up with the top three pick,
they could add an AJ DeBonza to all of this.
And so on lottery night,
this could basically be like a dynasty or not,
is really hanging in the balance.
Yeah, they're easily the most exciting part of the tank race
from here on out.
And some of that is because, yes,
like right now they are well positioned
to potentially keep this pick.
I would think that they're probably going to slide a little bit
in the lottery odds, not in the standings,
rise in the relative order, rise in the relative standings.
Because when you think about who the bad teams in the league are right now,
the Pacers may be tied for the third best lottery odds,
but Washington is going to be shutting down AD and Tray Young, presumably.
They're going to be leaning into being as bad as possible.
Dallas needs to be worse.
They need to cash in on this pick specifically this year.
So I would think we can count on them to be worse.
Memphis without Jaron Jackson Jr. will definitely be worse.
Brooklyn, honestly, just getting started as far as what they're capable of tanking-wise.
So there is like a real sweet spot here where, and we should say if you're not familiar with pick protections,
basically all this means is the only way the Pacers keep the pick is if it's between the fifth and the ninth pick and the draft,
like a very delicate needle to thread.
And I think what's even a we'reer because we've seen complicated pick protections before,
something I've never seen before is if it does end up protected and the Pacers keep their pick this year,
it kicks into a unprotected first five years from now to the clobst.
clippers. I've never heard of anything even remotely on that timeline before with protection.
It's pretty wild. If you think about like, A, there's the, there's the volatility of how these
teams are going to play down the stretch. And then there's just the way the ping pong balls are
going to go, period. So this is just like trying to catch, it's like trying to, the odds of like
catching a ping pong ball when you're in the middle of a tornado. Like the odds of it, you know,
going great for the clippers here. But I think that that leaving that, that unprotected gap between,
you know, five and nine was extra, it was a smart move to sort of incentivize the clippers to do it,
I think, to compensate a little bit on the fact that Oklahoma has their pick. Oklahoma, I feel like,
Oklahoma City, I feel like during this whole deadline, have like stealthily been, they could end up
being winners, which they have a knack for doing this. But I just think that the way some of these
things could play out, I could see, I could see them kind of, you know, down the stretch here,
down the road here coming away from this as somebody who just played it smart without really doing
a whole lot.
Yeah, Sam Presti always moves in silence.
I think we did a piece last year or two years ago on the ringer about like what
activity level each GM has had historically at the deadline.
Presti historically one of the people that sits on his hands and just waits for the
offseason and then does his business there.
They did get Jeremy, which is different.
But we'll we'll talk about that later on.
So I think as a side kind of tangent to this deal in a lot of what the tankers did,
I think the biggest matchup I'm looking forward to over.
the second half isn't like okay C spurs or Detroit Pistons versus the Knicks. It's more about
these tanking teams in the NBA and the NBA potentially forcing these teams to play a lot of
the all-stars that actually are in air quotes hurt or are they hurt and like because there was this
rule they made a very hard line about that if you were a recent all-star you're expected to play these
guys. And I think for that reason, that's why the wizards haven't rolled Tray Young out for the
entire year.
Sure.
But for a lot of these teams, draft picks are on the line.
So you assume that they want to keep out Jaron Jackson, Zubotch, all these other guys.
But is the NBA just going to just like allow this to happen when it's so blatant that they
need the picks in order to make this all work for them?
I mean, I don't think it's going to be enforced very strongly because how can't, like,
there's so much murky gray area between why guys are sitting and when and for how long.
And like, I don't even know how you legislate that stuff because we've seen the league try.
and it just doesn't work very well.
And with the team like the Pacers, again,
they're so heavily incentivized
to be as bad as possible to try to keep this pick.
I don't think they're going to be good enough
to be in that, you know, the 10-plus range
in terms of the odds, I should say,
I think in explaining it flipped it
in terms of what causes the Pacers to keep the pick,
they need to be bad.
Like, they need to be as bad as they possibly can.
Will that happen to a satisfying degree?
I don't know.
But I applaud their willingness
to know.
not get cute with the two timeline stuff to not try to say, like, oh, we're just going to
draft a young player and put all our eggs in our own unprotected pick. Like, try to have your cake
and eat it too. Try to get a Vita Zubots, as you said, JV, and potentially get a pick in that sweet
spot where you're able to add someone of real value to your team. Well, I would love to see
Kevin Pritchard's board because clearly he's indicating that he thinks that five through 15 is flat,
maybe even five through 20. I don't know. I'd be curious to see, which to me,
speaking for myself, that range, if they get, it's the difference between if they, you know,
the one through four, basically, you're going to get a playoff level rotation guy who maybe won't
be your star immediately, but on a team like the Pacers is going to be able to come in and contribute
in some capacity. So you see the immediacy of that versus if it is in that, if it's in that 10
through whatever, through 30 range, it's somebody that, you know, a couple years from now
will be able to maybe, that's, to me, that's kind of the bet that they're making is that
they don't really see a big difference between 5 through 9 and 10 through 30, or 10 through 20,
whatever.
But I think that if they, and they can play this a lot of different ways.
You know, we haven't got to talk a lot about Darren Peterson of the prospects in specificity,
but if they ended up with a boozer who's long been, I've said, on this show, he's the guy
that I would love to see them get Zubots interfaces with him.
And if they end up getting a Peterson or a DeBonza, Zubots also gives them.
So to me, I think it's a smart move because he can kind of, he can kind of play with whatever
direction they choose to go if they do get that top pick.
Zoo is just like as good and balanced a five as they were going to be able to find by next
season.
Playing any part of the market, trade, draft, whatever for agency.
Like, he's already such an excellent positional defender.
He's immediately the best screener of the Tyrese Halliburton era in Indiana.
And I think his ability to just kind of like catch in the middle of the floor and do a variety
of things, right?
He's not like a natural facilitator, but because of his size and because of his comfort with
the ball on the move, you.
you can kind of set them up for like a higher post up than you might expect or that kind of like roll into a short roll post up off of Tyrese Halliborne and get something really good out of that kind of action.
Like I'm I'm already so curious to see what Rick Carlisle does with him because there's just like a lot of skill you can tap into in addition to just being a big Hulk and man with Aviza Zupontz.
You know, Rob loves a big Hulk and man.
We all have our types.
I mean, it's going to be fascinating just because he provides them an opportunity to be balanced both on offense and defense.
in a way that they weren't even at like the height of their powers in the playoffs.
It's just Zoo, Seacum, Nemhart, all of a sudden, like, we could be talking top 10 both
sides of the ball.
And if Halliburton is healthy from the start of next season, like, they could be off
and running and could over the next two to three years just be pretty dominant, frankly.
I guess the tradeoff would be the opportunity cost of like getting a luck into someone
at the fifth spot who could potentially just open up the window.
so you're not just as focused on the next half decade,
it could be a decade long run.
But it seems like Kyle,
a lot of the generational transformative prospects
are going to be in that one to four range to begin with.
So maybe they get both.
If they get both,
honestly,
we're talking like them,
Thunder as like a east-west square off
for potentially the next couple of finals here.
It could be really interesting.
But if that was a trade of opportunity,
I feel like the Cavs side of the Clippers trades
was one of desperation.
it seems like based on reporting that's come out after the fact,
particularly with the athletic,
it seems like Donovan Mitchell has let it be known
that he didn't want to wait into the offseason
in order to change things around.
He is a free agent or can be a free agent in the 27 offseason.
So there is some sense of urgency.
Can we just say on that front, Justin?
He's right.
Like they should not have waited to the offseason
to change this around.
I like this trade not because James Hardin is like a super.
perfect fit for everything happening in Cleveland, but pretending that the status quo was okay
wasn't going to be good for anyone involved there. Yeah, it's interesting though, Kyle, because I
think you really had to lean into one direction ultimately is where Mitchell kind of forced them
into because you would look at the roster and say like, oh, our future is Garland Mobley and Mitchell
is just kind of what we're doing until we get to the point where those guys can perhaps be
our frontline guys, Mobley in particular. Or, but it seems like they were more focused on Mitchell,
potentially keeping him long-term
or like taking an advantage of what they have now.
I just don't see what they have with heart
and really appreciably changing their trajectory this season.
And so for that reason,
I'm a little flaccid on this,
especially when you consider the Glippers
just got back an All-Star point card
who was 10 years younger
and is just as soon as he gets through these toe injuries,
might just be able to be a pretty transformative player for them.
So I don't know.
I'm a little lukewarm on what they ended up doing.
I don't mind I'm a little flaccid on this
becoming a recurring audio drop for us.
If we just want to clip and stamp that thing right now.
Just let the ear out of the like the will be cushion or something.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah.
I'll zag a little bit where I think there's a world where, number one,
I wonder if there was a long view where they kind of had their eye on this to begin
with tying into the thing that I was talking about, like the types of players, the,
the foursome that they were envisioning kind of backing each other up,
mixing each other with, you know, with Ellis and with Schroeder and with Garland
and with Mitchell, Hardin kind of balances that a little bit better to me and his play style.
And I think that could work in a way that's pretty interesting because they've got two lob threats.
I think that you enable, you know, you take a little bit of load off of Mitchell.
And Hardin's used to for as much grief as we give him about being such a, you know, center of the universe-minded kind of a player, you know, deep into his 30 saying that he's still a system.
God bless you.
But I also think the other direction here you could go is talking about the getting a little bit younger, getting a little bit faster.
If there is a world where this could play out well for both sides, where if Garland goes over to the clippers, I called it an accelerant where he can play a lot of different ways on and off the ball.
If you imagine the sludge that Kawhi Leonard drags you into with the way that he plays, if you have Adairius Garland with his movement shooting, with his live dribble passing, I think it could be pretty fun.
Granted, it's all short-term thinking.
I love the German, the Justin Termini thing about comparing going with James Hardin as like, you know, being with Jennifer Lopez for a while.
You're not going to grow old with James Harden.
Embrace it, bring him in.
And it's, but I see, I think it could work for both.
I don't know.
Am I crazy?
Who's the Ben Affleck?
Is that like the Rockets taking another swing and just seeing how it goes?
Love weighted, right?
Isn't that way?
I mean, look, I have a hard time squaring.
the part of me that loves Darius Garland, the basketball player,
and the part of me that is freaked out
by the fact that he just can't seem to stay healthy basically ever.
And for a small-
Any toe specialist at Cedar Sinai?
That's what I was doing with.
Because it's both toes now, right?
It's both.
It's both feet, in addition to some other random freak injuries along the way,
which is always like, I don't know,
makes my, like, alarms go off a little bit.
You don't want to over-index on the chaotic stuff
where a guy just breaks a jaw or something.
But if it just keeps happening,
then maybe it can be indicative of something about style of play,
something about ultimately how they're carrying themselves on the court
that lends itself to that.
I don't think of Garland as that kind of player,
and yet the proof is what it is,
that he's had a really hard time staying on the floor,
and in between those spells,
sometimes takes a minute to kind of ramp up
and get back into form again.
Like, we blinked, and this guy is about to be in the prime of his career.
Like, he's not a young player anymore.
He is a star that the Clippers absolutely should bet on
and should see if maybe he can be healthier for them
than he was for the Cavs.
Maybe it'll just be like the right time in his career.
He'll catch some better luck.
Everything will turn out.
I just get from a Cleveland perspective why they would be nervous, given the stakes,
given the pressure, given all that desperation to say like, are we absolutely sure he's
going to be one good enough and too healthy enough to be what we need him to be in this exact
playoff run, which is going to determine the future and the fate of our team.
It's a lot to put on Daris Garland's shoulders.
Yeah, I get it from the Cavs point of view.
I also think that there's a world in which heart.
and unlocks perhaps some of the stepbacks that Evan Mobley has been dealing with this season.
He's just the pick and roll master.
Can he learn from him for a year or two?
And all of a sudden, he's on a different level to himself.
The added...
Evan Mobley learning stepbacks?
Is that what you're suggesting?
No, the metaphorical step back that Evan Mobley has taken.
Oh, I was like...
That would be sick.
Whoa.
I was like...
But I often define at the deadline, the teams that take advantage of another team's desperation
are the ones that ultimately win in the long run.
I do think, we'll talk about the Bulls later,
but I do think getting Jaden Ivy at his lowest value
is actually a good piece of business.
I couldn't really stand for the rest of the business
that the polls did this deadline.
But basically the Clippers were willing to blow up their season
and fork over a particularly juicy pick to the thunder
in order to get Garland in house.
And if I'm the Cavs or anyone else in the league,
I'm like, that's a bad sign.
Because I do think if you wait out the injuries,
you figure that out, you have another decade run of this guy.
And so I'm still.
high on Garland. I don't, but do you? Do you have another decade of a small guard who's already
at this, like, I think a great case for Daris Garland is he has like six good years left, right?
Like, that would be a great career. That's still pretty good. That would be amazing. Again,
that's like a 99th, 100 percentile outcome for him. I think there's a lot of range in between
those things where you get, you know, a year or two of star level play and then a lot of like
mystery box, is he going to be healthy enough, like questioning? That's the dread in the pit of your
stomach that you feel if you're, you know, if you make this move, if you're the clippers,
because Rob, what you were talking about, play style, everything that he does is contingent
on sharp, stop and go, on cutting at angles, at being quick, because he's not that tall.
He's like, six one. And it's like, you got to have some tools to sort of have longevity in that sense.
Either you slow the world way down, which I don't really see him doing. I don't see him becoming
a technician who slows the, goes bullet time the way that Chris Paul did. And I don't know,
I don't know that he's going to be the same kind of, like, wizard in traffic the way that
Kyrie is.
Granted, Kyrie's had injury trouble too.
That's the counter to my optimism, my like conspiracy theory, optimism about it, that it could
work.
It'd be a real worry.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, Garland has great vision for a point guard.
But to what you're saying, Kyle, it's like vision on the move.
It's like a more of a kinetic read of the floor and not a Chris Paul.
I'm going to move the chess pieces just so and then throw this like crazy baseball-style pass.
Like, that's just not really the way he operates.
I hear what all you guys are saying.
and I also think he's the type of player who the larger you get into the playoffs,
the more concerned you are about the size problems.
Having said that,
I just don't see another pathway for the clippers to get anything approximating a player like him at his age.
And so in terms of opportunity costs,
I totally understand it for them because resetting was going to be difficult no matter what was going to happen.
We'll see what happens with Kauai now.
Maybe they can get something out of him or maybe the fact that they weren't able to trade him before the deadline.
It's a suggestion that he has a suspension coming up.
We'll see about that.
But just having something going forward, at the very least to me, if I'm a Clippers fan,
I feel good about because it was going to be a wilderness for a long time without our picks,
without any way to get anybody like him in there.
Well, especially if the alternative was James Harden declines his player option over the summer
and leaves leaving you with nothing.
I would sure rather have Terrius Garland than absolutely nothing to show for James Harden
bolden out the door.
They were selling Cap Space.
And Cap Space is not a plan.
It's a dream.
All right.
Why don't we take a quick break and we'll get to the rest of these deals in a bit.
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All right, let's get to some of these other deals now.
Probably the next one in terms of prominence
would be Anthony Davis going to the Wizards,
if only because that one just kind of,
to put me on my, my butt.
Yeah.
I was not, I was not expecting the wizards
to swing trades for two
all stars now. They come with all sorts
of problems. When will we see them?
Who's to say? But
Trey Young
Anthony Davis was something
that we've been seen mocked
in like fake photoshopps to
first the Lakers and then the Hawks for like, what,
two to three years at this point? I guess the wizards have that
going for them. I mean, clearly they took
notes. You know, they saw the photoshopps
are like, but why not us?
Why not a slick wizard's jersey instead?
And I gotta say, I don't hate it.
Like, there is a cost here to be absolutely clear.
Nothing is certain.
Anthony Davis, speaking of injury risks,
makes me very nervous all the time in terms of his availability.
And a huge reason why he's no longer a Dallas Maverick is the fact that
he couldn't play in like two-thirds of their games during his brief time there.
But the idea of who he is and what this team can be,
I find myself, you know, I find appealing.
I find myself intrigued by the combination of
Tre Young's playmaking and table setting,
Anthony Davis's defense,
this wide array of very talented young players
on rookie scale deals who could pop at any moment,
depending on who you buy into.
Maybe there's just enough of a balance here for,
at minimum, to be competitive in the East.
Like, the Wizards are going to be fighting
for a playoff spot next season.
Anything above that feels like gravy.
The Washington Wizards, competitive in the East.
Look.
Get excited, DC.
They're all, every team is fighting for something different.
And this was not a team that was going to shortcut its way to actual title contention,
but it could shortcut its way here, clearly.
Yeah.
And if, you know, if AD and Trey don't play down the home stretch and they are terrible dog shit,
and they end up in the lottery like we were talking about,
there's a, there's a scenario where they come out of this with a new lease on life,
with a new player that's going to sort of be the centerpiece of what they do in the future.
We've talked about these top four picks who they could be.
And you have a Trey Young and you have an AD,
with not much of her.
You can choose to keep them and build around that one player.
It's an interesting sort of juxtaposition of really talented players in Davis and Trey
where you could end up with a super generational talent like a Darren Peterson like we were talking about.
If they end up with that, they could.
Kyle, could you imagine if they won the lottery and then end up trading Anthony Davis one year from now just like the Maverick.
If this just becomes what AD does.
Yeah.
I'm already sad about it.
I mean, yeah, in the basketball sense of just we're playing 2K injuries are turned off,
and I just like to, I get to see what's going on out there.
I know this is a low-stakes thing to say, but, I mean, Sarr and AD can play together.
I think that could be pretty interesting on the floor together,
and then if you throw, if you get Trey out there with Trey Johnson or Kishon George,
and I don't know, there's some interesting.
How far away would they really be from?
Because the Hornets became interesting pretty fast.
I think we would all agree.
It kind of clicked into place pretty fast.
ago, I don't think we would have been having that conversation. Is it absurd? I know we were ahead of
the curve on saying the Wizards were interesting. We've all kind of receded and step back from that
take recently. Speak for yourself. How far are they? How far away are they from being from being like,
oh, that's an interesting team that could be good. They might be a playing team. They might even be a
high playing team. Wow. Next year. Look at you. So they could be the new Chicago Bowls. I'll say this.
Everything does click into place very nicely. If you lay out the one through five based on what they
have now before they go into the lottery.
Trey and also other Trey and Kishan George and Sarr and AD.
That's like a very competent lineup that really clicks in alongside each other.
We've talked at length about SAR being next to an actual big and or not to offset some of
his particularities.
I just, and I will say this, the cost was zero.
It was basically the opportunity cost of filling your cap space in the same way that they've had
in the past couple years, which is just taking on.
other people's mistakes and getting draft picks for it.
The two picks they're getting in the AD deal
are basically the 30th pick this year
because it's coming from the Thunder.
And it's a top 20 protected Warriors pick in 2030.
It's nothing.
They got these guys for free.
Having said that, though.
That top 20 pick too, Justin,
it's like a one shot to convey
before it turns into like a second round fizzle of smoke.
Right.
Having said that,
I just don't know what being competitive
in this like one to two years zone
while Trey and AD are like your focal points really gets them,
as opposed to continuing the long and harder process of building toward whatever this
draft pick is going to be in the collection of young players before.
And so, like, I don't think you could be super mad about it.
I don't ultimately know what the neck gain is because these guys are not going to be around
when the team that you're hoping to build will ultimately come to form.
And I would rather, like, opportunity, like, other picks or just other young guys
in order to be there as opposed to just nothing?
I mean, they've been bad for a minute now.
And I agree with you.
Like, there's no question this is accelerating at a time
where, like, there isn't maybe enough on the ground to justify it.
The variable is the pick they're about to get.
Like, and we're talking around that.
Kyle mentioned it as far as, like,
what that could look like for this particular team
kind of penciled into the depth chart.
That's the franchise changer.
That pick right there.
Because everything they have, they have, like,
again, I'm as,
positive a Keishon George booster
as you're likely to find, I'm not telling you he's a superstar.
I love Alex Saar and the development.
He's shown this season. He might be a multi-time
All-Star, but he's not going to be someone who dominates
the ball in offense and kind of gives you a way of life.
They might get that guy in the draft this year.
And that pick, I think, is what positions
to separate them from, like, becoming the Sacramento
Kings of just like the flash in the pan,
here's one, like, feel-good playoff run,
and then all of a sudden everything falls apart.
Because they're going to have whatever window they have with AD and Trey,
And how long the window is with AD is definitely something worth talking about
because he's due for a new deal, is looking for a lot of money and a heavy investment.
That's kind of an issue in and of itself.
But you have this window with these guys, and then hopefully there's a changeover moment
where whoever that high lottery pick is in this year's draft,
that they're ready to assume more responsibility.
They're ready to take over for Trey, you know, orchestrating the offense or whatever that looks like.
Like, that's where the hope lies for me.
I thought it was going to swing into motion in an interesting way,
even if they didn't get the, before they got these guys.
I was envisioning one of these top four guys
with, like, plugging into the collection of players that they have
and that being interesting, you know, already.
And also, if these are really our generational, like,
floor-raising talents, you know,
how bad were you really going to be in terms of, I don't know.
I just think it's not going to be a huge variation
between what would have happened
if they, you know, hadn't pulled these guys off.
I just think another thing, too, that's interesting for,
if you're looking at this as a functioning basketball team,
ADD, we know, has been physically having a lot of problems,
recently staying on the floor.
We know what he can be if he's healthy.
Defensively, if you have Trey Young out there and Trey Johnson out there,
I just, you're really kind of funneling a lot of activity
and a lot of responsibility to him.
Maybe Sarr, I don't know, maybe Sarr is ready to take some of that load off of him.
I just think defensively at the point of attack, I would be a little worried about that for A.D.
I think that defensive combination could be pretty sick.
Like, SAR and AD together on the backline.
I love that.
But that's, I think it speaks to the overall point there,
where it's like, what is the ultimate goal of this version of the Wizards?
It's to be as competent as possible,
if only to, like, sell to your owner that we are doing something
while we're waiting for the actual team to click in.
I find myself just vacillating between, like,
this being a prime example of why you tank
or why tanking is just like kind of a fool's errand
where it's like going out and getting these guys,
like, really is an indictment on what,
they've drafted thus far.
And it's kind of reminding me of the magic of a previous vintage where it's like,
we keep drafting at the top of the draft.
We don't get the actual true blue chip guys and we're just stuck being kind of middling.
Having said that, though, like, if they just luck into Darren Peterson tomorrow, everything
changes.
And for a small market franchise, like, that's the lightblood of actually changing the thing.
We can keep talking around like that fact.
But all of these teams, the ceiling of what they're building is changing purely based off
of losing as many games as possible
and then lucking into a draft.
Yes.
They just needed to go their way one time
as far as that draft luck goes.
I get that this is
bailing on what ultimately,
if we're all acting responsibly here,
with no job pressure whatsoever,
would be an even longer term rebuild than this.
This is also a franchise that's made the playoffs
one time in eight years.
There are entire generations of Wizards fans,
I say theoretically,
because what child would opt into being a Wizards fan
where they've never even seen their team play postseason basketball yet.
Like, I think giving the people invested in your team a reprieve from that is important.
And if you can do it without selling out the long-term vision,
and it's not like they traded away even like Balakulibali to get a deal like this done.
They really just, as you said, Justin, it was just like Chris Middleton, you know, Malachi Branum,
Marvin Bagley.
I mean, God forbid you give up Marvin Bagley.
It all feels so reasonable because of the cost.
And because it doesn't really sacrifice or come at the cost.
cost of the vision of what you're hoping to accomplish.
What are you going to do with Jaden Hardinie and DeAngelo Russell?
That's an interesting thing because they just seem kind of like you're stacking
dissent pieces on older dissident pieces on your young guys.
That's a tough one.
I don't know.
What do you think?
Are they on the team?
Do the go-go need another point guard or a scoring guard?
Which one are you assigning?
Both?
Maybe both?
DeAngelo Russell was about to get paid a lot because I believe he has a player option for next
year for just hanging out.
I mean, not a lot.
About to get paid some money.
More than any of us are making.
I mean, you know what?
More than he deserves.
You're absolutely right.
But you got to reserve the right to throw out the Trey Young, DeLo, Jaden Hardy,
Bob Carrington, Trey Johnson lineup.
You know, maybe that's the future.
Yeah, I'm going to need a barf bag, but yeah.
I don't know what the bulls seem to like that strategy, you know?
Do you want to talk about the bulls?
Justin, I would love to talk about the,
but we should at least talk about the Mavs part of the Anthony Davis trade.
I was going to say, we didn't even mention that side of it.
Yeah.
Right.
You wrote about this for the Ringer.
I did.
Walk us through it.
I mean, it was time.
It was past time.
This had to happen in some form or another, unfortunately.
A year later, it was time.
Well, again, the writing should have been on the wall,
but this has been a process for the Mavs
in terms of getting themselves to this point where they could make a trade like this.
And I think the important thing is that they made it,
that they bit the bullet, that they said, you know what, two bad first round picks,
some seconds, the aforementioned expiring Chris Middleton contract, et cetera,
is just like enough to turn the page.
And they had to do it, I think in part because as we're going through kind of the lottery
situation earlier, they just have to cash in huge on this pick,
even more than the Wizards have to cash in huge on this pick.
Because after 2026, the Mavs don't have control of their next four first rounders.
This is the only moment they're going to have as far as like participating in that part of
the draft at this level to give Cooper Flag a proper running made of any kind.
So if you're not going to trade Anthony Davis now, like, what are we even doing?
They haven't been an Anthony Davis team.
I'm not sure they ever were an Anthony Davis team.
He showed up, he got hurt, and they almost immediately lucked into Cooper Flagg and became
a Cooper Flag team.
So the timeline shifted, whether they were willing to acknowledge it or not, and this, to
me, at minimum, feels like an acknowledgement of that fact.
Yeah, my only question for the Mavs would be if they sold at the absolute lowest,
in order to just finally rid themselves
of the emotional burden of Davis and Luca
and everything that came before it.
Because ultimately, as we outlined with the wizards,
they got two picks, which aren't really much.
And they got 70 million, I think, in savings next year.
So what they traded off here is effectively, Kyle,
is opportunity costs.
The Wizards basically gave up theirs
in order to fill two spots with older veterans.
The MAVs basically opened doors
so that they don't feel pressured, for instance,
to dump a PJ wash,
and some of these other guys who are helpful players for nothing
because you're up against the second apron,
which they were had they kept Anthony Davis another year.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think that's this, you know, the OKC pick at 2026,
they're going to be able to keep that too, right?
So they're going to get one at the top and at the end.
And I think those are going to be two.
And I think all of this obviously is about just freeing up
to build around, you know,
Cooper Flagg,
who has been just soaring into the stratosphere of,
like, soaring past expectations,
I guess, for people who were maybe,
conservative on him. I personally wasn't.
But I think something, so that
pick, you know, the things that you're typically
looking at getting, I don't know that they're
going to get a full-blown running made. I think at the
spot that they're probably going to draft that
unless they get just crazy luck again
and get somebody up in the stratosphere
of what we were talking about with the top four.
I mean, right now, Kyle, they have the seventh best odds
and maybe with a little more
massaging of their rotation, like maybe they can
get into the top five odds.
This is going to be fucking
tragic. It is. I can't wait.
It is, there's people putting weights around their neck to sink to the bottom here.
This is, and then, you know, but the 30th pick, you know, I'd say the Pistons will probably end up with the 30th pick.
But this OKC pick could be somebody.
It could be like an, it's probably going to be a steady, it's probably not going to be like a volatile athlete, like the types of guys that you get at that range.
It's going to be like a steady, a steady guy who, you know, maybe is a stretch four who's a little older or, you know, I'm just thinking about that in my mind.
I could rattle off some Bob's and Doug Nett names for you, but I won't.
But they stand to get somebody.
And the good thing about Cooper Flag, I think, is they stand to get somebody that's going
to fit.
But Cooper Flagg's dynamism, like there's a steadiness and I've written about this.
He has such a wide and broad skill set that can interface with so many different directions
that they could choose to go.
I'm sure that they have a lot of confidence that they're going to have a high hit rate
because of the range of things that he's able to do and he's being able to show.
For sure.
And they were just so log jammed because.
of the expense of the roster, especially staring down Anthony Davis's next deal, which is going
to be like $60 million a season over however long he wants to pursue it, like between that
and not having their own picks, they were just kind of stuck. And it was going to be really difficult
to actually reshuffle this group in any meaningful way without making these kinds of hard choices.
And this is where like, as we're talking about that potential like, you know, 30th, 29th pick
that they're going to get from OKC and the other bad, very protected warriors pick that.
that Justin talked about, those are not meaningful picks to the wizards, right?
Like, those don't mean anything to them.
I think they do mean something to Dallas because of the dearth of trade assets and draft
assets otherwise.
It's like if you don't have any of your own picks, just having a couple, whether you use
them or not, can like grease the wheels of trade negotiations, can kind of get you
into different conversations than you be able to otherwise.
They get you some measure of flexibility.
And so it's like, if you're going to build a Cooper flag team, you got to have the means to
at least make some kinds of moves, and they just didn't have that before.
Right.
You break up the step, Ian.
It just provides you more outs and more flexibility there.
I guess the question, if you're reading the kind of vibes of Mavs fans right now,
when the dust settles, like, let's say in a week from now, do you feel good that you've
officially moved on from everything that happened last year, or do you look back on it?
You're like, we got Chris Middleton to Bad First and Max Christie for Luca Donchich.
I mean, they're going to feel bad for, I'm sorry, to say this to Mads fans.
the rest of their sporting lives.
Like, Luca is always going to be the one who got away
or really was given away.
That's never going to change.
But at least the guy who did it
is no longer running the team.
And the prime return,
you know, Anthony Davis didn't ask for any of this,
but he became the face of it,
was at least flipped to propel the franchise forward in some way.
It would have been great for the Mavs
if they got back another star
or like a great pick in exchange for that.
But sometimes you just got to do it just to do it.
You just got to rip off the Band-Aid,
hope for the best,
and believe in the fact
that you can actually build something
if you give yourself
the opportunity to do it.
It's hard to get the swish and spit
like the Listerine.
It's hard to get that out of the original sin
of the way that...
What a big eyes here.
I'm just trying to keep up with the metaphor
of where we're going.
Swish and spit?
You all never did that in school
where they gave you...
It was for the kids who didn't brush their teeth.
It was like a social service thing in Kentucky
where they brought...
You never heard about this?
It was for the kid...
This feels like...
slander somebody would say about Kentucky
just like in a mean, cruel way.
But you're just saying this is a fact of life.
Well, the people of Kentucky reject you, Rob Mahoney.
You're from Texas?
Okay. Anyway, moving on.
We didn't have to swish and spit, you know?
Come off your high horse. I don't know if you all...
It was like a social service where they were like, it was for kids.
Did they provide petoons or what are we doing here?
They came around and there were these little things and you switched it and you, it was like
Listerine basically. It was, I don't, they just did it.
For the record, I support it. It's a good idea.
I remember this kid next to me,
at my desk sneezed into his, just as he was getting ready to, and it went all over me.
So anyway, moving on.
It's hard to, anyway, it's hard to get, like, get the original sin of, like, Nico's mis-evaluation
of Anthony Davis is ultimately what caused this.
And the market responded and said, nope, this is who Anthony Davis is.
I think that's the clearest.
That's a really haunting sort of mirror or just, you know, totem of what went wrong with this whole
situation, but, you know, they're trying to move forward and hopefully they will. So, you know,
mass fans, yeah, you're going to be haunted by it to some extent forever, but at least you got
Cooper. Yeah. I agree with you guys. I just think like just getting that weight off your back probably
feels pretty nice. You could enjoy flag without the encumbrance of everything else that's like
been befallen this team. So I get it. Let's talk about Jared Jackson, who went to Utah,
another instance of a team kind of turning the page here.
I love this for the jazz,
a team that already looked in some instances to be too good
in order to continue to bottom out.
I think we've been saying this about them for a little while now,
but they did a nice job of making sure
that their defense was just virtually unplayable on most nights.
And so they find themselves at the bottom here again.
But Lori just seemed too good in order to keep him out there
or to move on from him,
because he seems like a real foundational player.
Keante George, as we talked about several times this season,
looks like a real player there.
And so you get Walker Kessler back next season,
resign him after he comes back healthy,
and you pop in Jaron Jackson.
All of a sudden, this looks like a big old team.
I know.
That really could be a force, almost as immediately as next year, even.
Let's start with this question, this basic question.
Can you play those three guys together in the basketball world?
Could you play JJ?
Could you play?
Nobody says that.
Anyway, I already did.
Move on.
Kessler and Lowry.
Could you play those three guys together?
Because I think you might be able to.
Not only can you, they absolutely will.
And they should.
I think Lowry has shown enough,
specifically in Cleveland,
in terms of being able to play the three
and guard some perimeter players.
And I think, honestly,
Jackson's pretty good at that stuff, too.
Like, the fact that both of your three-four
could be, in theory,
perimeter defenders or switchable defenders.
And they both can shoot.
And they both can shoot.
And they both can handle.
I think the variability,
or the variable with them is, like,
the rebounding.
And this is where I feel myself getting really old in real time.
It's like every passing year I feel slightly more annoyed by bigs who don't get any rebounds whatsoever.
And they're both kind of that.
Kessler is a really terrific rebounder, especially on offense.
So hopefully you're getting enough there.
Hopefully, you know, Ace in particular, learns to kind of play to his sides as we're,
as we're fleshing out what this jumbo lineup can look like, like Ace Bailey at the two with that three, four, five combination.
I mean, this could be an enormous team.
you just hope they play like an enormous team.
Yeah, I do like that.
It gives them an identity right off the bat.
And while Lori has played more at the three, I believe, in the Cleveland years,
he's basically just a jumbo movement shooter to begin with.
So he really functions offensively as a three to begin with.
I also love the versatility it provides because Kessler, I think,
is going to net out both in contract and play style,
something around like what Jared Allen is,
where he's probably overqualified to only be playing 20 to 25 minutes.
and if you need to size down, if you really want to jack the offense,
all of a sudden, Jaron can play five closing minutes at the five,
and then Lorry slots back into the four.
Now, I do think it's incumbent upon them to find a true blue like perimeter stopper
because that spot at the two is going to be absolutely critical.
And I do think like Ace, like we'll see how he kind of fits into all of this.
But Ace himself is huge.
He's like what, six, 10, 11?
And so like they have like not only like a vision for who they are,
I also have a flexibility, which is what we've seen in the regular season,
is more paramount than most things.
Yeah, I mean, when you make this kind of addition,
all of a sudden it just relieves pressure on some of the other projects
and young players here to become incredible, like, you know,
like someone who would become a load-bearing part of the jazz organization, right?
Like, a Bryce Sinsibod, for example, like could just be a good role player.
Could just be auditioning for that role, the two that you're talking about JV.
Like, if you get anything from him meaningful and lasting,
that's great. If not, then you can move on.
Like Vince Williams came over in this trade.
Same thing.
Like maybe he could be an interesting role player for this version of the jazz.
They're going to have opportunities to try guys on for size,
whether they're the young players who are already on their roster
or kind of bring them in an audition for smaller roles.
And now there just are enough things put in pen that they feel like an actual basketball
team.
And that just hasn't been the case for the jazz for, I don't know,
basically the entire time Will Hardy has been there.
I see this as an opportunity for, to take some pressure off a base,
specifically.
Like you were talking about him at the two,
I think that would be a desert of ball handling
that I don't know that they could sustain.
But I do think that if they have ace in that position
where he can sort of swap in and they'll end of the Lowry role
and then, you know,
have him back him up and then come in.
And, man, that's going to be one of the more interesting,
like help side rim protection teams in the league.
Like they're going to instantly,
and lobs too.
It's going to get really interesting to watch.
You know, that graphic came up.
I know we'll get to the Warriors,
but the graphic of their front court,
sort of what they were aiming at came up.
And I was like, I'd take the jazz is 10 times out of 10.
This is just, this is a fascinating move.
And you were talking with the rebounding.
Maybe Kessler with his free agency coming up will be, you know,
incentivized to sort of get motivated in that sense.
There will be less opportunities for him to be floating around.
I assume he'll be the one in if they try to, you know, four out, one in, whatever.
I don't know.
They're going to be really, they instantly became a pretty interesting, fun team to watch for me.
And they did give up three firsts and multiple actual young players to get this done.
So, you know, just a much different bargain than what Anthony Davis was on the market, for example.
And I think that's fair.
Like, for all of Jaron Jackson's flaws, he's such a unique shot blocker.
He is a unique offensive player, too, in his capacity to handle the ball, to shoot a little bit,
to have the kind of like push shot in between game.
Like, there's just not a lot of players who can offer what Jaron Jackson Jr. can.
And so-
Love a push-shot.
Love a push-shot.
Well, especially for a big like him, if you're going to be playing with a bunch of other big players, right?
like who are the guys who decongest the clutter?
And Lowry is great at that.
Jaron Jackson is potentially really good at that with this group.
We'll have to see kind of how he fits with everything.
But I like the bargain.
And frankly, like this is what Utah has been waiting for
is an opportunity to either take a chance on a player like this
or flip Lowry into a different kind of star
that they felt more comfortable building around.
And I like that they ultimately went in this direction.
Yeah, I heard some quibbling over whether or not Jaron,
like how good of a player is he ultimately,
especially because next season is when the,
extension kicks in. He's getting paid 50 million. I do think there are some long-term concerns because
both Lowry and Jaron Jackson were overpaid specifically by their teams, Lowry by Utah,
in order for them to stay put so that maybe down the road they could figure something else out. And so
I think by 2027, this is going to become a very expensive team all of a sudden, which makes next
season competing immediately more paramount. It also speaks to the NBA, just making it way too
difficult for NBA teams to build a collective like this.
If you were to find like one sort of like way to poke holes in it would be they
basically waited four years in the wilderness after giving up the Mitchell Gobert
combination to ultimately end up with a team that's pretty similar where it's like we
don't have the true blue superstar.
Maybe they look into that in the draft and this is all different by the time like that rolls
around in six months or so.
But they're kind of like similar teams.
It's like a good bi-collective team that maybe doesn't have the ceiling.
when you go up against a Webben, Yama, Shea, a guy that could be just like a queen on the chessboard.
And I do wonder how Utah fans feel about that.
And it kind of speaks to our overall conversations about, like, oh, we're tanking, but what do we get in the end?
We're ultimately getting what we used to have.
I mean, there's just no guarantees with this stuff.
You know, as you said, you can spend years and years out in the wilderness and maybe you have the Orlando Magic Path.
Maybe you have a run like Utah's had where you don't end up with the superstar prospect.
I think to Utah's credit, they haven't.
but they did end up with Keante George
and developed him into a borderline
All-Star when a lot of the evidence,
especially last season, said he was not
going to become that player. And they stuck with him
and he worked on his habits and he improved by
leaps and bounds. So yeah, you can't
guarantee your luck, but you can make some of your
own luck. Yeah, Billy Zane
style. And I think that if you
think about Keontay,
it's from Titanic, JV.
I got it. It took me a second. I was there.
If you think
about Keontes' evolution,
And I think if you're thinking about the path, it really makes a lot of sense for him specifically.
I'm sure he's thrilled to have a guy.
You know, he's legitimate, you know, picking pop option and a rim protector.
Those guys are really hard to get.
And, you know, Jackson has experience playing with, you know, playing with Jha early,
I think he's going to be ready to provide some opportunities for Kianti to get better that he hasn't had yet.
So I'd be very excited about this if I was highly invested in Kianti's development.
clearly Memphis was open for business.
They didn't trade John Morant,
but they were willing to make a swing this big
that in some ways is a lot more surprising.
I kind of wondered for a minute there
if they were going to end up as a Janus trade facilitating team
because of like the trade exception
they generated in this deal.
They could have then become a waste station
for another kind of transaction of some kind.
Didn't quite work out.
But get some more picks in the coffers,
get a couple young players to take shots on.
Like I still want to believe that Taylor Hendricks
can be a good, like good,
versatile NBA forward,
at least on defense,
we'll see on the offense.
And I got to say,
Kyle,
like,
when I have seen Walter Clayton Jr.
this season,
it's drips and drems.
It's like spots
where he really shines
or like the athleticism
will really pop or something like that.
I don't know what he is yet.
I certainly don't feel like super comfortable with him,
like running offense full time,
given what I've seen so far.
But that's the kind of prospect.
I like Memphis taking a shot on.
Yeah,
I don't know that he's ever going to be.
I mean, he was an older prospect.
You know, he stayed in college for a while, obviously.
I think that I'd be hesitant to ever say, like, okay, this guy is going to be the, you know,
carrying all the reps for a serious team.
But I think he's somebody that has a skill set.
Like, I'm confident in him shooting the ball.
I think he's a pretty solid passer.
He plays pretty well at faster paces.
His skill set holds up like he's not a pounded and kind of glacial point guard.
So I, but I think he's probably a rotation guy.
I think he's probably in your top seven, top eight, if you're a serious team.
But none, he's a good player.
I don't think that he's going to end up in the Tyos Jones camp where years from now we're
like, you know, for cash considerations and he's just pinging all over the league.
I may live to eat those words, but I'm confident in his skill set that maybe if he's not
a primary ball handler for a good team, I think he's at least in the mix for a good team.
I believe in his skill set on that level.
I think this is where we need the flaccid drop because I have to say I appreciate the Grizzlies
acting ahead of this by getting out and trading Jaron Jackson.
Clearly the writing was on the wall with this team.
It seems like Jah was basically going for nothing.
They can't get rid of them,
but it seems like they're going to move on from them as soon as possible.
Having said that, like the return,
I don't know if they really got this sort of blue-chip asset
that like really would have excited me if I'm a Grizzlies fan.
And I did find it funny that like the kind of massaging from the reporters was like,
oh, they're building around their cornerstones of Cedric Coward and Zach Eadie,
which is like, I guess,
like those are two players
that will be there probably
for the next generation.
I don't know if they would be considered
cornerstones at this point,
but they just got a big load of stuff.
And as we've seen with other teams,
like certain teams,
just things go haywire
and all of a sudden you're back dooring
into a top 10 pick.
So I get it at this point,
especially when the swaps are of swaps,
of swaps, of swaps of swaps.
But I don't know,
they just basically cleared the road
for what's next, which is fun.
But again, another team
that needed to do that.
needed to like disillusion itself in some ways for like what it what it thought it was capable
of with the current core that team is done like it started falling apart the day they decided
to trade desmond bain it crystallized when jod just like was never able to regain any kind of
like transformative form if he's not going to be that player this team wasn't going to go anywhere
and so trading jaron jackson junior for as valuable as he's been for as great a grizzly as he's
been, I think it's a tough call.
And I agree with you that you're not getting that like one definitive asset of return
unless you want to factor in the grand reuniting with Kyle Anderson, one of the great
Grizzlies of all time.
But short of that, it is a platter of stuff that you hope pans out.
And I think that's kind of where the Grizzlies are going to end up with a lot of their
guys.
Like they're not going to get anything wonderful back for John Morant, I wouldn't expect.
They're going to end up with a lot of like pretty good and pretty interesting players and
hopefully enough picks to package some of that stuff together and find.
their next John Moran.
Yeah, the building around Burbage is,
I would maybe quibble with that.
I know you, the belief in Cedric Coward,
I'm their Burbage, no one on this pods.
But the, yeah, Coward, I mean,
your belief in him.
Like, Edie feels even more precarious.
Yeah, I just think they are still missing their roadmap,
I think, but I think that Coward and Edie
have looked good enough to me.
I don't know, are you guys ready to say
that, like, Coward is the obvious next star?
I don't think he necessarily even has to be a great star,
like a superstar or star level player for this to be, for,
I think they're missing, they're still missing their core thing.
I don't know if I totally buy into the idea that like,
coward is this ascending rocket into their next phase.
He's a good player, but I don't know if he's quite that.
I don't know if I'm there.
They don't know what the meal looks like.
And this package, this platter is a lot of like coal slough
and like just a bunch of olives and all this other stuff.
They got a chopped back.
Love a coleslaw. Yeah. When they prepare it like well, then all of a sudden things are looking
pretty good. Right now, though, it's a lot of just like just leafy greens just on the plate.
Right? Seems healthy. Seems good for you. Yeah. Well, they need that down in the south.
They got some good solid sides, but I don't know. Yeah, it's like we need the, we need the, we need the
centerpiece. Can a meal be made of sides alone? I mean, it's just one of the great philosophical
questions of our times. While we ponder that, why don't we?
we take a quick break and we'll come back to the last part of these trades.
All right.
Well, if some of these teams have we been talking about prioritized picks,
let's talk about a team that doesn't give a shit about any of them.
We're talking about the Chicago Bulls.
Well, they care about seconds.
They loaded up with nine second round picks is what they came out after trading
Kobe White, Ayudusumu, and just like 30 other guys in separate deals where they may have
taken someone back or they're dumping someone.
It was just a real flurry of activity.
I find myself, unfortunately, in the usual position where I almost want to see the ray of hope
in the midst of all this shit right now.
Are you flaccid, Justin, again?
Are you having problems?
No, I'm like, I'm somewhere in between.
Okay.
Because if you just-
I was trying to hear what you were going to say.
I went up to the line and decided to walk back from it.
But if you look at every thing.
That's very boldly of you, honestly.
Momentarily fluffed, Justin.
that's right.
Jesus Christ.
If you look at how everything lays out
now that the dust has settled,
they basically have Jaden Ivy,
Anthony Simons,
and a bunch of other guys
who may or may not be on the team,
plus those nine seconds for White and DeSumu.
Now, I do think if we're thinking long term,
I would rather Ivy and bring back Simons
than White and DeSum.
If it was a two-for-two,
you had to have both,
which it isn't.
This is just like a false binary.
But I actually like betting low on Ivy.
who just wasn't ready for where the pistons are right now,
which is to go on a finals run.
But if you give him time to work back from his injuries,
all of a sudden you might have the downhill attack with force combo guard
that is a higher level than what White and Dissumu will get,
which is a little bit more speed-based, more flow-based,
on off-ball sort of stuff.
And Simons, I think I can take it or leave it,
but I do think he has shown that he could fill it up in this league.
And the Bulls like to play in a way that I think befits his general style.
and so I like Ivy Simons and stuff
more than I like the other two guys.
The process to get there is insane.
Like, I don't know why they didn't try out.
Here, all this other stuff that's happening.
But I don't hate where they knitted out.
I mean, they at least did stuff.
And that's not something that the Bulls do very often.
Or usually they're like desperately trying to cling
to the ninth seed at this point in the season.
And this felt a forward thinking
in a way that the Bulls rarely are,
in part because of Jade and Ivy.
I'm completely aligned with you.
JV. That's the kind of player they should be betting on. That's a great prospect to pair with Josh
Giddy, who has the burst and the athleticism, as you said, once he's like fully back from this injury
and kind of off his minutes limit and all that. He also has been a good enough shooter over the last
two years where you don't have to worry about that aspect of his game. Like, I like that pairing a lot.
I think where I'm going to split the difference with you is on the Simons part of it,
or if you prefer, frankly, the Colin Sexton part of it, who is also now a Chicago Bowl.
This is a team with lots and lots of guards. More than they have, more guards than they have
room to play.
And Simons and Sexton both are poised
to be unrestricted free agents.
And so if I were choosing between paying
one of Kobe White or Iodosumu
or paying Simons at what I'm
sure is going to be a pretty considerable payday farmer
I would think, or Colin Sexton,
I think I would have preferred
one of the original two guys in that case.
But I also don't know why the Bulls kind of turn
their nose of it paying a guy like Kobe White
in the first place.
They just have this like
swath of supplementary.
guards who present as primary guards.
Like, I know everybody's dying for Simons to be more than he is.
Everybody's dying for, I mean, and then Ivy will see.
I mean, I'm with you that, like, I like betting on Ivy.
I just, I-O, are we going to couple this with the I-O-Dissumu conversation at all?
Let's get into it, yeah.
He goes to wolves, white goes to the Hornets, yeah.
I know that he doesn't put up the production that Asimans does,
but I feel more confident that an I-O is going to be a part of a real serious playoff situation
than any of these other guys.
And I just don't love the return.
And I just, I don't know.
And they send Herder off to a better situation.
Depending on how you feel about Herder,
I think he's going to do better with the Pistons,
just because the way that's going to work,
I think he addressed the need for them.
And then you bring on Dillingham,
who as much as I love him and as much as I whiffed
on my prognostication of what he would be in this league,
I'm not hopeful about that one.
So it's an odd cluster of guys.
I mean, I'm not having a brain,
part here. They ended up with Dillingham too, right? So they have a way station here of guys who just,
I just don't know about that, especially when you throw a sexton into it. Yeah. To me, like the Dillingham's,
the Leonard Millers, the Collins sextons, those are just names on a ledger who can, you can either take or leave it at
this point. Dillingham does probably still have some money on his deal, but he probably has options in there
where you could just wave your hands of it if you really want to go to that point. They basically used him as
salary matching and that was his primary value. So I don't see a problem with that. But my,
my like bullishness does stem to, excuse the pun,
yeah, does stem a lot from Ivy.
It's really like,
if you got Ivy by buying low and just like I said with the clippers,
like prioritize a longer view as opposed to the Pistons
who just needed a rotation spot for just an offensive jolt,
which is what they got and heard her.
I get it.
And so we'll see about Simons.
I have to imagine also that like the market,
if it plays out this year like it did last year with a lot of these combo guards
who are just offense forward and they're just too small.
all to really have a role defensively.
Like, he might be looking at, like, having his salary.
I also think, like, the giddy situation last year makes me bullish about Ivy's
negotiations because if restricted free agency isn't that much of a threat, they might get him
on a deal, too.
So there's a lot of words to, like, ultimately pay over the fact that they do end up with,
like, a lot of guards and ultimately probably don't change their ceilings.
But this is, like, a baby step forward overall.
And for that, I guess it's something.
I mean, it's a transition point at bare minimum.
Even just, like, moving on from the Vooch era of Bulls basketball is, like, kind of a meaningful thing.
And changing the guard in such a meaningful way.
Like, they have turned over a lot of their supporting cast.
We should say, also brought in Nick Richards to now kind of plug some minutes at the five,
which otherwise would have just been like Jalen Smith and a prayer.
So I'm glad to have another just like live body there for them.
And Gershawahe, who has played terribly for the Knicks this season.
But, you know, it is not worth burying at this point.
I think is deserving of another opportunity
and maybe he'll be a better bull than he was a Nick.
There's just a lot to sort out.
And I'm with you that Ivy is the headliner here.
He is the piece that makes sense for the Bulls
as a now shockingly forward-thinking organization.
Everything else is wait and see.
Everything else is like, let's see how the dust settles
with all these guards and who can play together
and who makes sense.
Because in the meantime, it's going to be a lot of like
three small perimeter players all out there,
kind of ball hogging it up,
and Josh Giddy doing his absolute damnedest
once he's, I would think eventually back from this hamstring injury,
theoretically back from this hamstring injury,
trying to facilitate all those guys at once.
I think quickly here, I'll just do a few of the angles for this.
I think it pin a lot about how Giddy is so conditional
as a, quote, quote, quote, superstar.
I think this is brutal for him in terms of the way that he plays.
Like a lot of these guys with, you know, I don't know,
maybe Simon's pairing.
I'm not even going to think about the fit,
with this. Spending it off to Hornets, them getting Kobe White, I feel like is a good pickup for them
in this deal because I think that he is a little bit bigger than Sexton. He's going home,
I think is another thing that could matter to for the retention of him. And I think that
he could, depending on if they have guys in and out of the lineup, he's scoring lean and I think
the passing of those guys that we've lauded so much on the Hornets. I think that he'll be a good
fit there. And then on the wolf side of it, I think I think Isle is going to be a nice. He's
proving himself as a pretty solid catching two guys.
A great athlete, guards his ass off from what I've seen.
I don't know if you all agree.
But I think that he's going to fit in well, I think, with what the wolves did.
So I think he's a nice, solid addition who can kind of play with any kind of combination
of what they already do.
They needed some of that jolt, the wolves did.
And, like, you were hoping that Dillingham could eventually be that kind of player.
They ejected on that experience pretty early.
Bones Highland, I think, has been giving them some good minutes.
But I was just like a much more poison polished, which is kind of a crazy thing.
considering we're talking about Ayodosumu,
but he's become a much more reliable
player and someone who ultimately,
I think Pencil is into like an eight or nine
man playoff rotation so easily.
Like the energy he plays with
just like the pop that he's going to be able
to give them relative to a Mike Conley
who we should say, because of the
now triangulated nature of him getting
traded and traded again and now cut by the
Hornets could potentially resign with the
wolves and maybe back in that
rotation anyway, but I was just giving
you something totally different in terms of those
guard minutes and something that they've badly needed.
And I think you've even seen it with like Dante DiVincenzo, right?
Like, Iowa is kind of tapping into a similar vein of shooting and production and activity
that I think is going to make their rotation that much more robust as a result of it.
Conley didn't even have to like shut off his cable or anything like that.
He could just walk right back into the locker room tomorrow.
That's the dream.
I think two things.
I think it is troubling if I'm going to give the other side of my bull's optimism that
two teams that seem like they're onto something, both welcome these guys and are like, let's
fucking go. Having said that, both of these guys are walking into much smaller roles than they
had with the Bulls. And so I think this slots them into basically where they ultimately net out
in the league. The white one is more interesting to me. I mean, I think the Dissuma will probably
matter more in terms of the big picture of title race, because perhaps gives them the little
jolt that they've kind of needed for a little while here that Conley wasn't giving him this season.
I think he was only averaging four points a game this season. Yeah. But what?
quite kind of compounding this already advantage of the Hornets who had the best offense in the league over the course of January.
And it looked like the hottest team in the league, if it's not the Clippers, since January 1st.
He just fits them and their identity so well.
And I do think, like, when those three guys aren't all on the court at the same time, Cniple Miller and Ball, it just really craters, especially in the back court.
I don't think Sexton wasn't much more than just like a stopgap to get to something like this.
and now they have an overqualified version of that.
I know.
Maybe this muddles White's next negotiation
because he is due for a new contract in the off season
that's part of why Chicago wanted to move on for him.
But I do think if he can glom on to this team,
which really kind of highlights his best traits
and weave his way into that identity of just being fast,
shooting in like 10-3s-a-game from each player
and really like works himself into being a critical figure there,
I think this works for everybody involved.
Yeah, I think Khan and Brandon Miller both have,
have enough like supplementary playmaking, second unit, like pick and roll play to them
to then really allow Kobe White to just be the purest most bucket-gettingest version of himself.
And it's like, again, the fact that you can have three of those guys plus Lamello like
in various combinations on the floor basically all the time, incredibly exciting stuff
for the Hornets.
Like being an overqualified backup point guard, that might just be Kobe White's destiny.
That's fine.
Yeah, go ahead.
The duel between the Hornets and the Bulls
for that last playing in the spot
is about to be fierce.
They're catching them.
There's really no air revenge game
for the 10-9.
I love that.
It's really going to be something.
I just think the way that a player is cast
on a bad team just creates this weird
cognitive effect where people are like,
what?
It's like, I know that the guys ahead of him,
those guards that they're all bringing in
project as like, okay, those are,
they have the ball, they can handle the ball,
they can shoot, they can make passes,
It's like, no, but if your ceiling is limited with those types of players, I just think IEO's value was a little distorted through that conversation.
I would be kind of frustrated if I were a Bulls fan and we lost IEO personally.
I just keep coming back to that because I think that even though he wasn't playing the sign of kind of, he can't play this kind of role that even a Dillingham would or whatever it is.
I just think he's going to end up being on a serious team.
And I think that's going to be frustrating for them.
But I do like the white situation for the Hornets.
I don't know.
I don't come away from at love
and what the Bulls did, but we can move on.
For the record, Bulls fans should always be frustrated
with the Bulls, even today.
Like, this is, again,
it's not dissimilar to the Anthony Davis situation
that, like, some of these things just kind of needed to happen
if the decision was already made.
Like, if you're not going to pay Kobe White,
you should trade Kobe White.
Sure.
But that doesn't mean you have to be thrilled about,
like, I would assume who's having the year of his life
and is one of the most exciting things about the Bulls,
and here's your four second round picks to show for it.
Oh, even going to be.
a step further, he's one of the shining examples of the few things that the front office got
right over the past few years. We unearthed him for the second round. Finally, he has this
starring moment where he was like 29, 8, 9 against the heat the other night. Looks like a real
player. Boop, you're gone. We're actually just building around Noah Senge, who hasn't played
the entire year and all these other, like, big mobile, like past triple shoot guys who haven't really
shown much of anything. So, yeah, I get it. I get if you're frustrated in the old's fan, like,
You've been waiting a long time, and you're actually, what the signals is you're waiting longer.
Well, in Modus, you trust at least.
You know, just cling on very tight.
Well, there are a lot of other kind of riff-raft sort of deals.
A lot of guys just filling rotation spots, other guys picking up some interesting ones.
Of the other deals on the board, Rob, which one is the most interesting one to you?
I got to say, I got to give credit to the Warriors for finding the one Jonathan Cumminga destination we had not talked about.
Yeah.
He's an Atlanta Hawk.
Had not considered it.
What's that?
What's that reason you think?
We didn't consider the Hawks because Prozingis has played five games since I believe November.
It's very true.
End of November.
Atlanta got Jock Landale back.
I think there's no question he's going to play more games this season, at least the rest of the way,
than Chris, that's Porzengis will.
Yeah.
The Hawks are just a tremendously weird team now.
They've turned over so much of the roster.
Basically, their entire second unit is new if you want to rewind, starting with like the
Trey Young trade to now, all of the sequence of,
moves. You've got Cominga coming in. You've had McCollum,
Buddy Heald in the Cominga trade as well. Cori Kispert as well in the Tray Young Deal.
Landale, like, I don't know what this team is.
It's a weird roster, man. The glut of guys from 6-7 to 6-9 that like to have the ball.
Yeah, it's weird. I mean, they're Jalen Johnson plus the Pelicans draft pick is what they are.
That is true. And I do like it from that point of view. I think like if you go through the
transactions, it looks pretty weird because I believe they gave up for first just in order to sign
and they're not signed in trade, but trade for Porzingis from the Celtics.
And so I bet you the transaction math doesn't work out in their favor.
But clearly things change over the course of this season, getting rid of Troy Young.
I do like that they're seemingly picking a direction here.
They're basically saying we're the future, not the now.
And none of these guys really changes that.
They don't exactly change it.
I don't know how well they're all going to fit together.
And again, the Hawks are such a strange story because individually,
Nikiel Alexander Walker has been unbelievable.
Jalen Johnson is an unimpeachable All-Star as far as his production and his impact on the game.
And yet in composite, none of it is quite working yet.
And maybe this is just a combination of players that isn't going to make sense together.
I don't know.
But let's throw Jonathan Cumminga in there and see if literally anything shifts around or moves or adapts as a result.
Let's see if he has a place in a team like this where if there is going to be a situation for Cumminga to thrive,
I would think it would be a fluid one in which everyone can kind of handle the ball and create a little bit.
like the warriors are that team to an extent,
but they're also such like an off ball engine
that requires a different kind of focus.
I think Kaminga could be a good hawk.
I'm just like caught off guard
by even having to consider the possibility.
Yeah, I mean, it's, it kind of comes,
I think the play style is the central kind of pivot lever,
whatever that could decide whether or not he's unhappy
because the opportunity, he's going to play.
I guess that's already an upgrade.
whether or not he has primacy within what they do.
I don't know.
I was going to say my, you didn't ask me,
but I'm going to go ahead and bring up my.
The last two is,
let me save you the transition there.
I'll do just a quick two-parter here.
I mean, the canard of the Lakers thing is interesting
just because he on paper is shooting the ever-loving shit out of the ball.
As ever.
As ever.
The whole league is just kind of like looking like,
if you're going to play on a team with three of the best like advantage creators in the, you know,
in basketball,
all. He's an interesting premise on that point.
I wrote down here, finished the joke.
The Lakers now have more edgy white guys than dot, dot, dot.
I wrote a Newsmax comment section.
Oh, boy.
That was, do you got, what's your all's, finish the joke?
Let me challenge the premise real quick.
Luke Conard, not edgy.
He's known to get fiery every once in a while.
I mean, I'm just, you know.
More edgy, Austin Reeves, Jake LaRavia, I'm with you on all those guys.
My favorite thing is in a graphic of all those guys,
which included Drew Timmy and all the other ones.
They also put JJ Reddick there as he counted.
Drew Timmy, stroking the mustache, he's edgy a little bit
in his way.
He's interesting.
More edgy white guys than a Portland brewery.
Ooh, okay.
That's kind of a docile city, though, right?
Portland, not an edgy town.
Maybe like low-key prickly, though.
Yes, low-key prickly.
Prickly about the certain, you know, subjects that would make you want to...
More edgy white guys than, like, the most brotastic, like, finance floor.
I think you got to get that, like, testosterone suited kind of edge, ultimately.
Like, that's what Luke Kinnard is to me.
He reads finance, bro.
A party on the Strand in Manhattan Beach, perhaps?
Before I get any comments from Portland, people,
I absolutely should live in Portland, so don't take it personally.
I love it there.
Especially, you have feet?
Yeah, we're really on to something now as a society.
The other question I was just going to say that the one that came in
that slipped under the door like a secret agent that Rob texted us with,
I don't, how many Haas were in that?
I think 26, 27.
It was a lot.
Is the Cam Thomas situation here.
It is objectively inherently hilarious.
Who's going to roll the dice for a half season of Cam Thomas in an interesting way?
Listen, he called his shot and he was wrong.
Nobody needed him.
which is very tough.
But I appreciate the boldness
in order to put yourself out there.
For sure.
Didn't seem like the money
was going to be there for him regardless.
So I don't know what he actually...
This is in a Dennis Schroeder situation
where people are now just like
kind of putting that to you 10 to five years later,
whatever it was when he turned that down from the Lakers.
Still pretty tough overall.
Just tough to be confronted with the consequences
of your own actions, you know?
Whether it's playing the market,
whether it's the way you conduct yourself,
whether it's the fact that you really just don't pass the ball almost at all.
Extremely tough stuff for Cam.
But like better now than sitting on the bench and having to do all this over again in the summer.
Like get an audition with somebody.
And I got to say, he's not my cup of tea, not my kind of player.
He's going to jump on somewhere.
There are plenty of teams that are in need of like a little microwave.
It's got to be a good team, though.
I think if he has smart people around him, which I don't know,
I don't know who reps him or what conversations are going on.
I'm just saying if he has people that are trying to help him, I think I would assume they would say,
hey, you need to go, you need to fall into a situation that already has pecking order,
that already has order.
And show that what, I think that's the best way for him to show value here is to be like,
okay, I'm willing to be, you know, in whatever capacity.
So I just, I don't know what team that would be that can absorb him.
And is it the rockets?
I've heard people suggest that.
Sure.
Is it, is it, they could certainly use his punch.
I'm just trying to think of another team.
Samans?
Wolves?
Could they?
I don't know.
I think wolves and Rocket should have a conversation.
I think Pistons maybe should have a conversation.
Like, nothing binding.
Why no Celtics?
Why don't you like the Celtics?
I don't know.
I can't even put a finger on it.
I think he will probably fit their offensive.
Yeah, go ahead.
Let me say this.
Everything in the Celtics, as far as I am concerned,
is like running on kumbaya,
Like there is an element of like, I don't know how to fully articulate
why this offense works the way it does.
And Cam Thomas is such a grenade to throw into any offensive situation.
He would actually freak me out a little bit if I were,
even if I were Joe Missoula,
who as far as I can tell, is freaked out by nothing.
I think everything we probably said about Simons going into this season
is what you could probably say about Cam Thomas now.
And Simon's worked out fine.
That's true.
Now, Simons, I think, is a different personality type.
I don't think he's as hardo about getting his shots as Cam Thomas is.
But I think Kyle outlined the blueprint right there.
You have to show to everybody at this point.
You have to prove your worth.
This isn't like proving that you are of value of like a star.
Yeah.
You need to really just glom onto a winning situation to prove that you could play
reserve minutes.
And so I do think that the like the motivation factors work on both sides.
Yeah.
Does Cam know that?
We don't know.
That's a question I find myself asking a lot.
Does Cam, is Cam aware of that?
This is why, like, I think the best market for Cam is not these level of teams that we're talking about.
It's like the next rung down to, like, middle of the pack, but playoff level and competitive teams.
You get into, I think Golden State is a real candidate.
Just like, take some of the pressure off of Steph.
That's a team that desperately needs off the dribble shot creation.
Let's see what you could get from Cam.
Like that.
Toronto, I think, could be in the mix as well.
Miami, like, if you're talking about a team that needs to run on one-on-one generation,
why not throw him into the heat system?
I think my favorite, though, is the magic.
I would love to see him as just like
pull him off the bench
and make something out of very tight quarters
and sometimes compromise spacing.
Like, Cam is good at that,
and the magic certainly have a need for it.
Yeah, especially after just getting out of Tyos Jones
to duck onto the luxury tax.
I do think a lot of teams in the myth of all
that did get under the certain aprons,
whatever one it may be in order to sign buyout guys.
So I do think the buyout market could be frothier
than it has been in recent years.
A couple other deals that we should just check off here
just because there were some interesting on the fringes moves.
I do think Vooch to Boston is really interesting to me.
I've always been a Vooch believer,
and especially over the past two seasons
when he's actually hitting his threes.
At the very least, you can squint and see the effect
offensively that Perzingas had,
where it's like if you can go five out in certain lineups,
which you can't do with Keda,
like that's another look that they're at the very least comfortable with.
I do think it begs the question
is our producer Isaiah Blake who was going into this podcast,
of whether or not you want to start him versus like use him more in the Simon's role where
he's like an offensive forward six man you play through him in those sorts of lineups.
Right.
We'll see.
But I do think there's a comfortability there, especially if he could help them on the board,
which I think they really need help with.
That's the huge part.
And I think the distinguishing factor from Porzengis is, yeah, you're getting some of
the shooting that KP was so valuable in offering to the team.
But you're getting the rebounding.
You're getting some facilitation, which is really important to the Celtics.
They don't have a lot of like very standard.
Just give this guy the ball and he will run your offense sort of initiation.
So give Vooch the ball at the elbow.
Give him at the three point line to hand off.
Like I think there's going to be a lot of entry points for him to be an active part of that offense.
Extra attractive too, because he's 35 years old.
So we know that the clock is ticking louder and louder by the second.
And he's unrestricted this season.
So I think you bring in somebody that is going to be motivated to play good basketball.
I think in whatever capacity, I think he'll be refreshed in a similar way that that Porzingis was to
come in because of where he's been spending his tires in the playoff and the playing game for a
few years here. So I think it's a win-win for both parties for him and for the for the Celtics.
So and, you know, I think, I think that using him the way that you guys have talked about will be,
will be the way to go. And yeah, I don't, I don't mind it. I'm not like in love with it, but I don't
mind it at all. Why not? Do you think, do you think Missoula saw the clip of him being mad that his teammates
were celebrating? Obviously. It was like, that's my guy. Ever since then. He's been, he's been, he's been, he's been
number one on their board ever since that day.
A couple other ones. Jared McCain to OKC.
Sure. Weird one. Don't see a guy who had a moment last year and is still very young, still
on his rookie deal, get shipped between two teams that are very much in the mix of this thing.
I think if I was to play devil's advocate or be a little bit more cynical here, I do worry
that the Thunder's injury list, which is becoming deeper than the Ten Commandments at this point,
I do wonder if they just need healthy bodies in order to be.
order to get them.
There's 10 of those,
Kyle,
and thus this might be longer than that.
It's a really interesting poll.
What's a long list?
I didn't want to say like a CVS receipt.
I didn't want to see like a grocery list.
Yeah.
Thou shalt not Alex Caruso.
Well, they have Jeremy Kane to play
because nobody else is playing.
Yes.
They do.
I mean, it's also like,
oh, go ahead, Kyle.
I was just going to say,
They love Jared McCain from what I understand, and this was a nice way of correcting history and ending up with him.
They love their guys.
They have their philosophy.
I think there's a whole lot of soap in the rag with Jared McCain.
I think that, and I don't know, I'd be pretty annoyed if I were a Sixers fan and it played out this way because they're going to get more expensive in the future.
And if you get a guy that you believed in originally and you think that this is just a Jedi cannot.
I'm shocked.
I tweeted that, you know, not to promote your own tweet.
but Shay's got the abdominal strain.
I tweeted that, yeah, it was probably from laughing
that they somehow ended up with Jerry McCain
because I think that he's a good pickup.
It's a good tweet.
If you believe in them, they clearly do.
I'm going to go find that and like that right now.
Thanks, man. Appreciate it.
The retroactive likes me and even more, frankly.
You went to the effort to go find it, to like it.
It really says a lot.
There's always so much material in the world.
I had to just, you know, say what I said before.
So there we go.
That's very true.
I mean, look, the Thunder adding one more shooter
at minimum, not a bad thing.
And we've already seen what they did with
Isaiah Joe, another former sixer for that matter, and just like the player that they turned him
into in their developmental complex. And why couldn't Jared McCain become that? I was never like
the biggest McCain fan. I always probably saw more of the flaws in the midst of like all of the
movement shooting and like the high point totals he racked up in his first year. Ultimately,
when the thunder ended up trading for him, I immediately changed my position on him because
I do think they are the new version of the Spurs. Yeah. Oh, as soon as they identify a guy. What do they
No.
100%.
Last one we should probably talk about here.
Jose Alvarado to the Knicks,
who I believe is a New York native, Queens,
if I'm not mistaken.
This is the talking point, yeah.
I just, I think they need a little lifeblood,
especially with Josh Hart on the bench these days with the injury.
And Deuce McBride, as we learned,
going to be out for presumably the rest of the regular season.
Yeah.
And what Elvarado can bring is just real pep.
And so if he could just get him through the doldrums,
of the rest of the regular season,
I think that'll be worth the cost,
which was minimal to be good on.
Yeah, I think it'll be great for it.
I also think this is the please God
don't make me play Jordan Clarkson trade.
Mike Brown's plea to the heavens,
and it was answered.
You know, he doesn't have to do that anymore.
Mm-hmm.
I like it.
I mean, he's going to be just a nice little,
a nice little sprinkling of annoyance
in their rotation,
which is going to be a nice thing
for them to have in those non-brunson minutes.
Yeah.
Ooh, all right.
I feel like I need some more hydration.
I need to get one of those like those Gatorades
where they have the electrolytes in them or whatever.
You want to do a little swish and spit?
What do you think?
You guys.
Yet another highfalutin thumbing of the nose.
You guys don't have a good record.
I would be careful.
That's all I'm saying.
I don't know about this one.
I just appreciate you guys bailing me out there
because I have no idea what I was talking.
about.
Like, aren't there specific
Gatorade, like,
packets that are specific
for, like,
like,
bring you back up
after you've just had an exhausting run?
No,
no,
no concept of,
but yeah.
Gatorade?
That's what I'm confused
about myself.
I could have sworn
there's a different version,
but we can,
we can look into that.
Isn't there gatorade
that has gatorade in it?
Yeah,
it's effective, right?
I don't know.
Yeah.
Some have the twist knobs.
Some don't,
you know?
Yeah.
All right.
Well,
now that we got that solved.
Why don't we wrap it there?
We'll be back on Sunday.
Don't worry about the Super Bowl.
We have more takes on the trade deadline
coming for you in a couple days.
Thank you to Victoria Valencia.
Thank you to Isaiah Blakely.
Thank you to Ben Cruz.
We'll talk to you next time.
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