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PHIL HAS NO CHOICE BUT TO TRADE
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mreinman
Posts: 37827
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Joined: 7/14/2010
Member: #3189

12/15/2014  3:52 PM
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

so here is what phil is thinking ....
AUTOADVERT
NardDogNation
Posts: 27405
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Joined: 5/7/2013
Member: #5555

12/15/2014  3:53 PM    LAST EDITED: 12/15/2014  3:55 PM
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

Nalod
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USA
12/15/2014  3:55 PM

My take is there was not much for us unless we are sellers.
Amare really can't be traded and the league knows JR Smith is an idiot.
Shoulder or not, Shump really is not very valuable. I assume we'll let him walk after the season or let the market determine his value.

Im ok for a small deal like Shump for Jimmer Freddette.

mreinman
Posts: 37827
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Joined: 7/14/2010
Member: #3189

12/15/2014  3:56 PM
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

so here is what phil is thinking ....
NardDogNation
Posts: 27405
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Joined: 5/7/2013
Member: #5555

12/15/2014  3:57 PM
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

mreinman
Posts: 37827
Alba Posts: 1
Joined: 7/14/2010
Member: #3189

12/15/2014  3:59 PM
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

so here is what phil is thinking ....
NardDogNation
Posts: 27405
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12/15/2014  4:07 PM    LAST EDITED: 12/15/2014  4:30 PM
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Knicks1969
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Member: #5915

12/15/2014  4:39 PM
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

Dude! I never like guys like Bargnani nor Amare. They are not my type of players

Thank God Fisher is no longer our coach, now let's get Calderon out of here:)
mreinman
Posts: 37827
Alba Posts: 1
Joined: 7/14/2010
Member: #3189

12/15/2014  4:45 PM
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Vacuum??

People who ignore obvious numbers have their heads stuck in a vacuum.

Bargs - OBVIOUS STINKER

Korver - OBVIOUS POSITIVE SUM PLAYER (now figure out what he is worth)

so here is what phil is thinking ....
Knicks1969
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Member: #5915

12/15/2014  4:47 PM
smackeddog wrote:I would take a chance on Lance- IF we can shift JR's or Calderons salary in the process.

Also, in reply to the original poster: we can add talent by losing as many games as we can and getting a top pick. No one is going to trade talent to us for fun- it'll either be a bad contract or to unload a difficult chemistry guy (e.g. Lance).

Some knuckleheads are worth gambling for. Stephenson is still young and can be groomed under the right environment. So what he blows air in Lebron's ears; the bottom line is that the kid will compete. He is a showboat, but so is basketball. He is much more talented then JR, and the two should never be compared, because they are very different.

Thank God Fisher is no longer our coach, now let's get Calderon out of here:)
mreinman
Posts: 37827
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Joined: 7/14/2010
Member: #3189

12/15/2014  4:49 PM
Knicks1969 wrote:
smackeddog wrote:I would take a chance on Lance- IF we can shift JR's or Calderons salary in the process.

Also, in reply to the original poster: we can add talent by losing as many games as we can and getting a top pick. No one is going to trade talent to us for fun- it'll either be a bad contract or to unload a difficult chemistry guy (e.g. Lance).

Some knuckleheads are worth gambling for. Stephenson is still young and can be groomed under the right environment. So what he blows air in Lebron's ears; the bottom line is that the kid will compete. He is a showboat, but so is basketball. He is much more talented then JR, and the two should never be compared, because they are very different.

If we were SA then we can afford to bring on a knuckle head.

The knicks have their max fill of knuckle heads. WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY over the cap.

so here is what phil is thinking ....
NardDogNation
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12/15/2014  5:10 PM    LAST EDITED: 12/15/2014  5:12 PM
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Vacuum??

People who ignore obvious numbers have their heads stuck in a vacuum.

Bargs - OBVIOUS STINKER

Korver - OBVIOUS POSITIVE SUM PLAYER (now figure out what he is worth)

Kyle Korver career PER is 13.2, career high is 14.2. Bargnani's career PER is 14.4, career high is 16.4-17.4.

I'm not even an Andrea fan but if Bargnani is healthy, are we even having this conversation? Figure that out.

Knicks1969
Posts: 25394
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Joined: 11/7/2014
Member: #5915

12/15/2014  5:18 PM    LAST EDITED: 12/15/2014  7:07 PM
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Vacuum??

People who ignore obvious numbers have their heads stuck in a vacuum.

Bargs - OBVIOUS STINKER

Korver - OBVIOUS POSITIVE SUM PLAYER (now figure out what he is worth)

Kyle Korver career PER is 13.2, career high is 14.2. Bargnani's career PER is 14.4, career high is 16.4-17.4.

I'm not even an Andrea fan but if Bargnani is healthy, are we even having this conversation? Figure that out.

I would take Korver over Bargnani any day. He is by far a much better basketball player from whom you know what you are getting every time he steps on the court. Bargnani? Wowwww.

Thank God Fisher is no longer our coach, now let's get Calderon out of here:)
smackeddog
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12/15/2014  5:20 PM
Isaiah Thomas (Suns pg) is also rumoured to be available (he fired his agent and wants to be a starter)- the two most lauded 2014 offseason bargain signings are both ready to be traded.
H1AND1
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12/15/2014  7:00 PM    LAST EDITED: 12/15/2014  7:13 PM
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Vacuum??

People who ignore obvious numbers have their heads stuck in a vacuum.

Bargs - OBVIOUS STINKER

Korver - OBVIOUS POSITIVE SUM PLAYER (now figure out what he is worth)

Kyle Korver career PER is 13.2, career high is 14.2. Bargnani's career PER is 14.4, career high is 16.4-17.4.

I'm not even an Andrea fan but if Bargnani is healthy, are we even having this conversation? Figure that out.

Korver is certainly a specialist so you have to value him in that light however Imo injuries aside and everything equal Korver is a much better player than Bargs. Sure they average about the same
Number of points but Korver gets his points in a very small number of shots and hits the shots he does take a ridiculously high percentage.

Bargs is a chucker of the worst ilk and relies on volume and takes way too many shots to get his points (comparable as they are to Korver).

I would take Korver over a healthy Bargs any day of the week. Sure he's a specialist but he's so freaking good at what he does do that its pretty valuable. Certainly more valuable than Bargs.

Edit to say, Bargs also sucks at all other aspects of basketball other than scoring so he's basicalhy a specialist too.

Knicks1969
Posts: 25394
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12/15/2014  7:09 PM
H1AND1 wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Vacuum??

People who ignore obvious numbers have their heads stuck in a vacuum.

Bargs - OBVIOUS STINKER

Korver - OBVIOUS POSITIVE SUM PLAYER (now figure out what he is worth)

Kyle Korver career PER is 13.2, career high is 14.2. Bargnani's career PER is 14.4, career high is 16.4-17.4.

I'm not even an Andrea fan but if Bargnani is healthy, are we even having this conversation? Figure that out.

Korver is certainly a specialist so you have to value him in that light however Imo injuries aside and everything equal Korver is a much better player than Bargs. Sure they average about the same
Number of points but Korver gets his points in a very small number of shots and hits the shots he does take a ridiculously high percentage.

Bargs is a chucker of the worst ilk and relies on volume and takes way too many shots to get his points (comparable as they are to Korver).

I would take Korver over a healthy Bargs any day of the week. Sure he's a specialist but he's so freaking good at what he does do that its pretty valuable. Certainly more valuable than Bargs.

I can't believe one can find the gall to try to make an argument for Bargnani. This must be these dude who advocated to resign Amare.

Thank God Fisher is no longer our coach, now let's get Calderon out of here:)
NardDogNation
Posts: 27405
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Joined: 5/7/2013
Member: #5555

12/15/2014  7:10 PM
Knicks1969 wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Vacuum??

People who ignore obvious numbers have their heads stuck in a vacuum.

Bargs - OBVIOUS STINKER

Korver - OBVIOUS POSITIVE SUM PLAYER (now figure out what he is worth)

Kyle Korver career PER is 13.2, career high is 14.2. Bargnani's career PER is 14.4, career high is 16.4-17.4.

I'm not even an Andrea fan but if Bargnani is healthy, are we even having this conversation? Figure that out.

I would take Korver over Bargnani any day. He is by far a much better basketball player from whom you know what you are getting every time he steps on the court. Bargnani? Wowwww.

Yes, today I Kyle Korver. But would you have taken him over Bargnani during Bargnani's heyday?

NardDogNation
Posts: 27405
Alba Posts: 4
Joined: 5/7/2013
Member: #5555

12/15/2014  7:12 PM
Knicks1969 wrote:
H1AND1 wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Vacuum??

People who ignore obvious numbers have their heads stuck in a vacuum.

Bargs - OBVIOUS STINKER

Korver - OBVIOUS POSITIVE SUM PLAYER (now figure out what he is worth)

Kyle Korver career PER is 13.2, career high is 14.2. Bargnani's career PER is 14.4, career high is 16.4-17.4.

I'm not even an Andrea fan but if Bargnani is healthy, are we even having this conversation? Figure that out.

Korver is certainly a specialist so you have to value him in that light however Imo injuries aside and everything equal Korver is a much better player than Bargs. Sure they average about the same
Number of points but Korver gets his points in a very small number of shots and hits the shots he does take a ridiculously high percentage.

Bargs is a chucker of the worst ilk and relies on volume and takes way too many shots to get his points (comparable as they are to Korver).

I would take Korver over a healthy Bargs any day of the week. Sure he's a specialist but he's so freaking good at what he does do that its pretty valuable. Certainly more valuable than Bargs.

I can't believe one can find the gall to try to make an argument for Bargnani. This must be these dude who advocated to resign Amare.

Next time, read things in context. No, I wouldn't take Andrea over Korver TODAY. But Bargnani before all these injuries in 2006, 2007, 2008,etc.? Not sure how you'd argue that Korver was the better player then.

NardDogNation
Posts: 27405
Alba Posts: 4
Joined: 5/7/2013
Member: #5555

12/15/2014  7:13 PM
H1AND1 wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Vacuum??

People who ignore obvious numbers have their heads stuck in a vacuum.

Bargs - OBVIOUS STINKER

Korver - OBVIOUS POSITIVE SUM PLAYER (now figure out what he is worth)

Kyle Korver career PER is 13.2, career high is 14.2. Bargnani's career PER is 14.4, career high is 16.4-17.4.

I'm not even an Andrea fan but if Bargnani is healthy, are we even having this conversation? Figure that out.

Korver is certainly a specialist so you have to value him in that light however Imo injuries aside and everything equal Korver is a much better player than Bargs. Sure they average about the same
Number of points but Korver gets his points in a very small number of shots and hits the shots he does take a ridiculously high percentage.

Bargs is a chucker of the worst ilk and relies on volume and takes way too many shots to get his points (comparable as they are to Korver).

I would take Korver over a healthy Bargs any day of the week. Sure he's a specialist but he's so freaking good at what he does do that its pretty valuable. Certainly more valuable than Bargs.

I wasn't talking about today's Andrea. Was talking about him historically.

H1AND1
Posts: 21747
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 9/9/2013
Member: #5648

12/15/2014  7:36 PM    LAST EDITED: 12/15/2014  7:37 PM
NardDogNation wrote:
H1AND1 wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:
NardDogNation wrote:
mreinman wrote:be honest ... were you one of the guys who was for the bargs trade?

there were many of them on this site though they are hiding.

....weren't you one of those guys lauding Bargs?

were you for the bargs trade?

I had nothing against Bargs but I hated the fact that we gave up picks to get it done though. At the time though, I was routinely criticized for not seeing the light, which involved us dumping Novak's 2015 salary and getting a guy who could be the new Rasheed Wallace. Flash-forward a year and Bargnani is even more injury prone than Rasheed was and Steve Novak was dumped on the Jazz using our own 2nd round pick as a sweetner. And I was criticized again for pointing the latter fact out.

This was the problem with many knick fans. They had no clue how bad he was because they did not check or understand his numbers.

They should have given us 2 first rounders to take him.

I knew the inherent risks beforehand. If we went by your numbers, guys like Monta Ellis and Zach Randolph would've been out of the league.

The numbers were not the problem is Bargs. The problem with Bargs was that he came with so much risk involved. And in this NBA, you don't give up picks on risks. Had the deal been kept to Novak and expirers that would've been reasonable.

The numbers were not the problem?

Did you ever check the numbers?

Yeah, I did. And he was injury-prone to boot.

ah ... so the numbers were not the problem?

I think this is why you keep suggesting we trade for idiots who's numbers are awful. You just look at compiled numbers instead of the important ones.

And this is why you've tried to hype guys like Kyle Korver into things they are not. This game isn't exclusively based off of numbers that measure very limited elements of the sport. The reality is that nothing operates in a vacuum.

Yet, people like you would have given up Zach Randolph for an expirer, only to watch him become a centerpiece of a legitimate contender. Then the narrative magically gets re-written as though a change in coaching, culture and an upgrade in talent had nothing to do with his ensuing success.

Vacuum??

People who ignore obvious numbers have their heads stuck in a vacuum.

Bargs - OBVIOUS STINKER

Korver - OBVIOUS POSITIVE SUM PLAYER (now figure out what he is worth)

Kyle Korver career PER is 13.2, career high is 14.2. Bargnani's career PER is 14.4, career high is 16.4-17.4.

I'm not even an Andrea fan but if Bargnani is healthy, are we even having this conversation? Figure that out.

Korver is certainly a specialist so you have to value him in that light however Imo injuries aside and everything equal Korver is a much better player than Bargs. Sure they average about the same
Number of points but Korver gets his points in a very small number of shots and hits the shots he does take a ridiculously high percentage.

Bargs is a chucker of the worst ilk and relies on volume and takes way too many shots to get his points (comparable as they are to Korver).

I would take Korver over a healthy Bargs any day of the week. Sure he's a specialist but he's so freaking good at what he does do that its pretty valuable. Certainly more valuable than Bargs.

I wasn't talking about today's Andrea. Was talking about him historically.

Bargs in his heyday was still garbage IMO. He was a chucker who took too many threes at a bad %, and too many bad shots in general (relied on volume to get his points). He also didn't rebound, especially pathetic for a 7 footer or play D, and was generally overrated and minus sum overall. Sure, Korver was simply a specialist years back before he became super efficient but Bargs has always sucked. Even when he averaged 20 a game he did it on too many shots.

PHIL HAS NO CHOICE BUT TO TRADE

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