Like a Camby in the wind


Fuck the NBA.

Seriously, fuck it. Fuck it hard. Right in the face.

The Denver Nuggets traded former DPOY Marcus Camby to the L.A. Clippers yesterday, for absolutely nothing. The Nuggets got no more than the right to swap second round picks with L.A. in 2010, a year in which the Clippers will have the lower pick anyway, meaning that Denver won't be exercising the option. That's it. That was their return. That was what they got.

That was what they got for Marcus, freaking, Camby.

I am really annoyed by this.

Marcus Camby is a former DPOY award winner. He may have another one left in him yet, too. Camby is a high calibre player - last year, he averaged 13.1 rebounds and 3.6 blocks a game. 3.6 rebounds per game is a lot of rebounds. And 3.6 is a hell of a lot of blocks. He can pass, and also shoot 20 footers, if you give him a week and 40 feet of elbow room.

Camby is a rare commodity in this league; he is a centre that isn't crap. He is at the peak of his career, and strangely also at his peak physical conditionm having set his new personal best for games played in a season, with a commendable 79 games last season. Without wanting to go overboard and do something silly, such as calling him a dynamic two way player, it's safe to say that Tampon is one of the best at his position, the position that is so hard to fill that General Managers will consistently try any old shit to try and strike gold. In a league where most executives would willingly sacrifice their closest family memebers to get an elite centre, the Clippers now have two. And they're not even overpaid.

They got one of them for freakin' nothing.

How does Marcus Camby fit alongside Wolfgang Kaman? I don't know, but it doesn't matter. He's going to better their team simply by not being Aaron Williams. The Clippers just bagged a huge infusion of quality to their team, and all they had to do was not overpay Luol Deng. If they can now trade for Vince Carter using little more than Cuttino Mobley and Tim Thomas to die, then suddenly they're dancing. A front seven of Carter, Camby, Kaman, Baron Davis, Al Thornton, Quinton Ross and Eric Gordon could break 50 wins, even without Elton Brand or a bench.

And yet, somehow, Denver couldn't even get a first round pick for him? Is that even possible? Is instant salary relief really THAT important? Why has this come up now? Why could they not use the Warriors' and Sixers' cap room, before they spent it, as leverage for a better deal? Not even Memphis's? They couldn't take back even a BIT of salary if it meant getting soem assets, like young players or draft picks? Not a bit? Really? You mean to tell me that a team heading in no particular direction and capped out like buggery can afford to give away its best players for absolutely no return whatsoever? How can any team out there justify spending $23 million on a fourth choice power forward while already nursing one of the league's highest payrolls, paying $60 unnecessary million to a guy who played 3 minutes the season before, as well as giving Chucky Atkins $13 million to do big fat Fanny Adams, can now somehow justify giving away its first round draft picks and frittering away quality players like confetti? This from a team that made the ultimate let's-give-this-shit-a-shot trade only 18 months ago?

Sod that.

Somewhere, somehow, someone is systematically wrong. Either Nuggets owner Stan Kroenke woke up with the arseache and ordered General Manager Mark Warkentein to do a dramatic about-face and cut payroll immediately at all costs, or Warkentein is a pillock. Or both.

Whichever it is, they have a problem. They're still cap strapped, they're still a lottery team, they still have no exciting internal future, they're still a badly assembled veteran team that isn't getting anywhere, and they're still being mismanaged. I'd feel bad for them, but they've annoyed me, so I owe them nothing.

The fans, however, have my sympathy. When teams make bad personal moves to save money, purely as collateral damage from their own previous stupid move, then the fans become the victims to the folly that is the NBA and its old boys network. Believe me, as a Bulls fan, I know that pain. I miss Tyson Chandler every day.

However, in a rare but special first here at eddiebasdenslegacy.com, I'm going to try and think positively. The sole solace for the Nuggets in this deal is the $10 million traded player exception that this deal created. Then again, it will probably go unused. However, if the Nuggets let Allen Iverson expire this summer, they will finally be out, barring widespread changes, from the tax territory in which they currently reside. If that happens, they will still have the TPE to use until July 15th, 2009. And at that point, they'll be able to add salary again. Whether they do this or not is another matter, but the ability to do so remains. And that's a small solace that Nuggets can take away and keep.

Who knows, they might even use it to bring Camby back.



By the way, while we're sort of on the subject of the Clippers and Elton Brand, let us tangent for a minute as you explain something to me. As I understand it, the time line of events in their negotiations go like this;

1 - Brand opts out.

2 - The Clippers and Brand verbally agree to a new deal rather quickly.

3 - The Warriors top this offer, just to see if they get lucky. The Sixers follow suit.

4 - Brand and his agent David Falk take news of this new offer to the Clippers, looking to use it as leverage with the Clippers to make them increase their offer slightly.

5 - The Clippers say no.


Now, why would the Clippers do this? By all accounts, they had a verbal agreement for a very reason 5 year, $65 million offer. Why would they be so inflexibile in renegotiating that slightly? $13 million is a good price for Elton Brand - if you're overpaying him at the end of the deal, you're underpaying him at the start, so it works out fine. Why wouldn't you add a few million if it kept him here? Why wouldn't you discuss a sixth year? Why would you extend qualifying offers to Marcus Williams and Nick Fazekas, keep the unguaranteed Josh Powell around unnecessarily, and even more unnecessarily sign first round draft pick Eric Gordon before compelting your cap space adventure, needlessly costing yourself almost $1.5 million in cap room, a figure which could add over $10 million to the value of a 5 year contract? A $10 million that would have meant the re-signing of your best player, and a hell of a good starting five to build upon?

The answer: I simply don't know. Maybe they didn't know the rules or something. Maybe they didn't know signing Gordon would cost them cap space. Maybe they think Fazekas actually matters in some why. I couldn't say. But I think the Clippers, in doing this, nearly managed to one-up The Juan Carlos Navarro Experience of this past season. And for that, I salute, pity, humilate and disown them. At least they got Camby as a backup plan.

I will never get over how such multi-million dollar business franchises can be mismanaged by the whims and misinformation of those in charge. All the damn time, too. Fucking dumbfounding.



(Readers note: Never listen to Elton John and blog. It leads to the creation of stupid post titles and slightly aggressive opening gambits.)

9 Response to "Like a Camby in the wind"

Alberto said...

Didn't the Clippers almost match the Sixers' offer, only to be bltantly ignored by Falk and Brand?

Sham said...

I hope so.

Cagatay said...

They reportedly raised their offer to $ 81 millom, only 1 less than what Brands got from Sixers.

your favourite sun said...

I don't get this deal either. Even if they use the trade exception wisely(maybe Josh Smith in a sign-and-trade to replace Camby's shotblocking?) I don't see why they couldn't have squeezed Al Thornton or an actual draft pick into the equation. Or even Brevin Knight since he's cheap and Denver's point guard situation is for shit. Brevin Knight > nothing, right?

Sham said...

I'm glad they raised their offer, but I still don't see why you wouldn't top it.

Noce said...

The point of this deal on the Nuggets end was to get rid of $$ in hopes to sign their other RFA, JR Smith, to a deal before the season starts. It also frees up some space and almost gets them from paying out the ass in luxury tax. This is all an effort for the team to wait until 2010 and then hope to sign a Bosh, Wade or James to play with Melo.

Sham said...

I know that. And that's why it's gay. Dumping good players because you wildly overpaid your shitty players = complete fan alienation. Hooray for bad roster moves!

Torrence the Angry Colostomy Pouch said...

The Bosh/Wade/LeBron gambit is the most pathetic piece of fan-baiting in the league today. Every cheap team in the NBA is pretending to clear cap space to take a run at them, when it reality they are simply being cheap.

Take Denver. After the 2010 season, they will likely be $16-18 million under the cap, which is enough to make a max offer. There's only two interrelated problems: one, they would be $16-18 million under the cap because they only have three players (making $45 million!) under contract, and two, people forget about the roster minimum cap holds...and there'd be a lot of them when you have 12 empty roster slots. Even if it was CBA-legal, can anyone imagine:

a) The Nuggets failing to sign a single player this year or next to a contract that runs past '09/'10. That includes draft picks.

b) Signing a max free agent for every red cent of their cap space.

c) Some free agent looking at a roster destined to include Kenyon Martin, Melo and Nene, and shouting "fuck yeah, I'll leave my current team (who can offer more) to sign with a club that projects to have ten minimum-salaried scrubs!"

If the answer to all three questions is yes, you have syphilis-induced dementia. I'm sorry that you had to find out this way.

moocow422 said...

this is right in line with the bullshit Garnett and Gasol acquisitions last year. how the hell did this deal get approved by the NBA?
i wanted both LA and Boston to take it to game 7, only for all the players to foul out and leave the game undecided - both teams got their key roster pieces through ridiculous lobsided fleecings -- if the Clippers manage any amount of success this year, i'm calling bullshit. again. stupid celtics. stupid lakers.

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