SupremeCommander wrote:He's 28... I don't think the Knicks are interested. Seems to me they are trying to have all their core pieces be close to the same age
Any team would be interested depending on cost.
Noah, today, is a declining PEDs popping ******* who can't stay healthy. ( This is also considering in his prime, he was an incredible player with an incredible motor and one of the best BBIQ players in league history)
But for the league minimum, he's a pretty good value. If he was just to give you 6-10 minutes off the bench, he could be helpful.
Everything is relative to what it costs. If NO wanted Kanter/Hezonja and a protected first, ( basically salary relief), that's not such a bad deal. I don't think they make that trade, but it's a factor of trade cost once you get past the AAV/contract length.
I keep hearing about "timeline" scenarios and that's only relevant in the "Herschel Walker Situation" Where you have one player who is worth something in trade and nothing else. Literally nothing else. The Knicks had this with younger Melo. In every other situation, you simply consider what is in front of you. If Durant wants to be a Knick for just cap space, you sign him. Fuck any timeline. You readjust to that situation.
If Durant says, I want to be a Celtic. Then Ainge is going to take his young player plan and say **** it. If he has to trade Brown and Tatum to get a now contender going, he'll do it. ( though it would take a ton to have to move Tatum)
Do you think Morey had a chance to trade for Harden and worried about a timeline?
You know who did do a timeline decision? Kahn, who signed Kevin Love for one year less because he stated he wanted to stagger the contract situation with future Rubio. What the **** was that all about?
Take the talent, if it's the best market based decision/value and figure out the rest later. This is what people didn't understand about Hinkie and the 76ers taking three big men in a row. Noel, Okafor and Embiid. They felt those were the best values on the board ( though Hinkie wanted Zinger and not Okafor and the owner overruled him) They were going to take the talent and figure the rest out later. If the Knicks could draft an exact Zinger clone, do you think they will pass on a potential big who can defend the rim, space the floor and create his own shot at an elite level ( in theory)? Who gives a **** if said player is redundant, take that talent and figure the rest out later.
Timelines only matter when you only have one great player surrounded by nothing and draft/asset depleted and the only way to reload is to trade said player. Other than that, you take it one opportunity at a time.