The world of the NBA trade is an animal in and of itself. Deals are not often struck for the purpose of two or three teams coming out the other side better. You get players' actual talent traded for the proverbial bucket of balls – only if that bucket of balls was Jerome James.
If you were paid way too much once upon a time, and can now attach the words "expiring contract" to your bio, you become instantly valuable. A few years ago, it turned Raef LaFrentz into one of the league's most sought after big men.
Trades are made to get under the luxury tax threshold or the salary cap, and young talent or future draft picks are nowhere near as valuable as is the freedom from having to pay them.
You end up getting contract swaps like Brian Cardinal for Darko Milicic, or the pure salary dump of Matt Harpring and 2009 first-round pick Eric Maynor for the rights to 2002 German second-rounder Peter Fehse, whose entire value lies in the fact that he is not in the NBA and never will be, making him as much of an asset as I am.
The NBA has always been a freak animal, but something has come over the league recently. It's the mythical "Summer of 2010."
LeBron James. Dwyane Wade. Chris Bosh. They all are free agents this summer, and whatever sacrifices are made between now and July 1 are just water under the bridge.
My New York Knickerbockers were the poster child of horrendous NBA deals under Isiah Thomas, and now they are trying to reverse that trend. Donnie Walsh has, in under two years, managed to jettison Stephon Marbury to China, get rid of Jared Jefferies, Jamal Crawford, and the aforementioned Jerome James, though James most likely would have eaten all traces of his contract anyway.
In the process, he has brought in a potential star (that right there is called a New York bias) in Danilo Gallinari and has a chance to sign Tracy McGrady at a steep discount, as his albatross of a contract will come off the books at the end of the year.
With the final shedding of Jefferies, the Knicks can attempt to woo two top-class free agents with maximum money. As long as he doesn't spend it on the likes of Michael Redd and Jermaine O'Neal, two guys who really don't deserve the close to $20 million they are making this year, he could be a hero.
Largest media market in the country? Coach famous for a run-and-shoot offense known as "seven seconds or less?" Knicks fans are dancing like Jeff Jagodzinski after beating Virginia Tech.
The only blemish on Walsh's record is the failure to get rid of Eddy Curry, the man who was once a solid post presence, but as he aged, it became clear that his "baby fat" was actually man fat, and the only thing he could do in seven seconds or less is pound down a Big Mac and large fry.
The summer of 2010 has replaced the draft as the place where teams go for hope. Everybody that wants a shot has one.
New Jersey is saddled with an NBA team that will almost certainly fail to crack 10 wins, in addition to the sad fact that, well, they are in New Jersey. Still, they could have the most cap space in the NBA and can offer LeBron a fresh start in Brooklyn with his boy Jay-Z.
The Bulls can offer Wade a hometown crowd.
The Clippers can offer the second biggest media market in the country and Blake Griffin.
The Timberwolves can offer … okay, not much, but they can throw down tons of money.
Teams see the horizon, and every one of them sees the superstar they want in their jersey. All these pointless trades create cap space and the possibility to be an immediate championship contender. The consolation price if LeBron and friends don't want to spend their time hanging out in a city like Milwaukee? I guess you can still have Fehse.
Summer of 2010 Will Be Lucrative For NBA's Stars
Published: Sunday, February 21, 2010
Updated: Monday, February 22, 2010 01:02

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