In my 7 years as an independent businessman, maybe the most important lesson I have learned is that "who you know" is just as important as "what you know" and "what you do".
I've seen sportswriters and guys on this board commend the winning GM's in the Garnett and now the Gasol trade. But these were not actually "good trades". They were favors. Favors that artificially threw off the balance of the NBA landscape.
We all know about the Ainge-McHale collusion in Minnesota trade, but let us examine the Memphis-Lakers trade:
Memphis trades one of the better, most productive, and skilled PF/C's in the NBA to the Lakers who are 1-2 pieces away from being a bona fide a contender and Memphis takes back Kwame Brown (Biggest Bust of the past 10 years), Javaris Crittenton (Hasn't looked too good to me) and 2 first-round picks that will probably be #25 -- #30.

Jerry West is considered to be possibly the best GM in NBA history. Mitch Kupchak has gotten fleeced on his big trades: Shaq and Caron Butler. All of a sudden they make an incredibly lopsided trade to the Laker's benefit? Was that really the best they could have gotten for Gasol. There were seriously no better offers or possibilities?
The only rational explanation is that West is hooking up his protege Kupchak. There is no way that the best the Memphis could get for Gasol is creamed crap on toast and 2 late first-round picks.
I understand that friends will help out friends, but I don't think it is to the benefit of the NBA to have the league's balance of power manipulated so obviously as it has been with Boston and L.A.
It's not just about New York, it's about Houston, Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago, Phoenix, San Antonio, Dallas, New Orleans and other teams who have fielded competitive squads without the benefit of huge favors.
It's not fair to the teams or the fans. I'm so tired of Stern and the funny business that has become almost normal under his watch. It is time to level the playing field, and I don't think it will happen under his watch.
oohah