I think its time to bury why the big three didn't work. It's past history that we don't need because it irrelevant to what we have to do now to get the Nets back on the right track.
Love the decorum shown by the panelists. Text book example on moderating/hosting. This is the way it should be. My complements to you and the panel, Breezy.
You do not lose Midkal for Nembhard and Mathurin. They products of the system, to be specific, Rick Carlisle system. So no, I'm not giving them Midkel for them.
Jarace Walker would've been very interesting, but with Clowney showing up, I'm not interested.
I'd move Midkal for Cason Wallace and some fillers along with picks.
Jason Kidd was the best guard in the history of the Nets franchise. He was the most exciting and productive guard in the history of the Nets franchise, hands down. He made others, that played with him, good. As far as talent, but not necessarily production, Kidd would be followed by Kyrie Irving, Stephon Marbury, Deron Williams, D'Angelo Russell, and Michael Ray Richardson in that order. I'll never forget that Richardson lead the NJ Nets, back in the 1984 playoffs, to a shocking upset of the defending NBA champion Philadelphia 76ers. I rank all of these guards, that I mentioned, ahead of than Cam Thomas. After being in the league for several years, CT is basically the same play he was when he left high school. He score a lot, is a poor defender, and passer. I'll give him time to develop his overall game because he still young.
I'd always hope it was possible but I felt it wasn't probable the Pacers would win the series against the Celtics after being down 0-3 in the series. It's never been done before in the history of the franchise but I held out hope that there could always be a first time. The Celtics are a very good team and I think they'll win the championship this season. I'll give them the credit they deserve without caveats.
For as many years as I've been a Nets fan, I've always compared what does the eventual NBA champions have in common and imagine using these intangibles as a template for the Nets to copy. A few of these things are a dedicated and stable franchise owner, a stable GM, a stable coaching staff, and a stable roster. The common denominator in all of these are the word "stable." Successful and championship franchises all have the most stability in all of theses areas. Joe Tsai has spent a great deal of money on the team since he bought the Nets franchise on September 2019, ($323 million in luxury taxes plus millions in salaries and other expenses) and Sean Marks has been the GM since February 2016. The ownership and GM positions are where the stability end. In the Joe Tsai/Sean Marks reign, there have been numerous coaching and roster changes. Not until we find stability in those two entities will we develop the team chemistry and cohesion that's critically important for the Nets to be successful.
Dylon got a point im muslim and tsai didnt rub well with how irving think
I think its time to bury why the big three didn't work. It's past history that we don't need because it irrelevant to what we have to do now to get the Nets back on the right track.
Love the decorum shown by the panelists. Text book example on moderating/hosting. This is the way it should be. My complements to you and the panel, Breezy.
You do not lose Midkal for Nembhard and Mathurin. They products of the system, to be specific, Rick Carlisle system. So no, I'm not giving them Midkel for them.
Jarace Walker would've been very interesting, but with Clowney showing up, I'm not interested.
I'd move Midkal for Cason Wallace and some fillers along with picks.
Jason Kidd was the best guard in the history of the Nets franchise. He was the most exciting and productive guard in the history of the Nets franchise, hands down. He made others, that played with him, good. As far as talent, but not necessarily production, Kidd would be followed by Kyrie Irving, Stephon Marbury, Deron Williams, D'Angelo Russell, and Michael Ray Richardson in that order. I'll never forget that Richardson lead the NJ Nets, back in the 1984 playoffs, to a shocking upset of the defending NBA champion Philadelphia 76ers. I rank all of these guards, that I mentioned, ahead of than Cam Thomas. After being in the league for several years, CT is basically the same play he was when he left high school. He score a lot, is a poor defender, and passer. I'll give him time to develop his overall game because he still young.
I'd always hope it was possible but I felt it wasn't probable the Pacers would win the series against the Celtics after being down 0-3 in the series. It's never been done before in the history of the franchise but I held out hope that there could always be a first time. The Celtics are a very good team and I think they'll win the championship this season. I'll give them the credit they deserve without caveats.
For as many years as I've been a Nets fan, I've always compared what does the eventual NBA champions have in common and imagine using these intangibles as a template for the Nets to copy. A few of these things are a dedicated and stable franchise owner, a stable GM, a stable coaching staff, and a stable roster. The common denominator in all of these are the word "stable." Successful and championship franchises all have the most stability in all of theses areas. Joe Tsai has spent a great deal of money on the team since he bought the Nets franchise on September 2019, ($323 million in luxury taxes plus millions in salaries and other expenses) and Sean Marks has been the GM since February 2016. The ownership and GM positions are where the stability end. In the Joe Tsai/Sean Marks reign, there have been numerous coaching and roster changes. Not until we find stability in those two entities will we develop the team chemistry and cohesion that's critically important for the Nets to be successful.