|
Post by DERRENMATTS on Jun 26, 2006 14:17:13 GMT -5
Q, in this scenario, we are not trading Pierce for lottery balls. In this scenario, we are trading Pierce to whichever team has the #1 pick in their hands. Say the Hornets end up with the #1 pick once the lottery selection has been selected. It'll only then do we attempt to move Pierce for the rights to Greg Oden.
|
|
|
Post by freshnthehouse on Jun 26, 2006 14:25:55 GMT -5
Q, in this scenario, we are not trading Pierce for lottery balls. In this scenario, we are trading Pierce to whichever team has the #1 pick in their hands. Say the Hornets end up with the #1 pick once the lottery selection has been selected. It'll only then do we attempt to move Pierce for the rights to Greg Oden. IMO, there is no way that whoever holds the #1 pick would trade that pick for Pierce. Good wing players are a dime a dozen. Franchise centers come around 1-2 times a decade. History shows that trading big for little rarely pays off.
|
|