In order to get the salaries to match, we put the following proposal through the ESPN trade machine and it said the following deal would work: Harden to the Sixers for Simmons, Matisse Thybulle, and Shake Milton. In addition, Rockets general manager Rafael Stone should ask for two future first-round picks.
The Sixers may not want to give up that much, especially knowing that Harden wants out of Houston and the Rockets could eventually cave in. However, there is no reason to give Harden away for 50 cents on a dollar.
From the Sixers’ standpoint, they would be giving away three players either 24 or younger for a 31-year-old ball-dominant guard.
No doubt, Harden would open up a lot of space for Embiid and for the rest of his teammates. But does having one player dominate the ball like that really work in the NBA?
In the long run, Houston would be better off making this trade, because the Rockets wouldn’t be ready to win this year if they trade Harden.
Then there is the question of whether Harden can work well with other All-Stars. His one trip to the NBA Finals came with Oklahoma City, when Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook were the headliners, and he was emerging as a great No. 3 threat.
Since going to Houston, he has been the clear No. 1.
Here is how Harden has fared with fellow All-Stars:
Morey brought a still-in-his-prime Dwight Howard to Houston in July 2013, signing him as a free agent. The Rockets reached the Western Conference finals during Howard’s second year, sandwiched around first-round playoff losses his first and third seasons.
Howard didn’t click with Harden and departed.
Then came Chris Paul, who was acquired by Houston from the Los Angeles Clippers in the summer of 2017.
Houston went 65-17 and advanced to the Western Conference finals during Paul’s first season, 2017-2018. The Rockets led Golden State three games to two in the Western finals, but Paul suffered a hamstring injury in Game 5 and he did not play the rest of the series. Had he been healthy, it could have been an entirely different story.
(In Games 6 and Game 7, Harden combined to shoot 6-for-25 from three-point range, with 14 turnovers and a minus-32 rating).
The next season, Houston lost in the Western semifinals, and then Paul was traded to Oklahoma City after not clicking with Harden.
Houston acquired another All-Star in that trade: Westbrook.
If the Sixers made this move, they would be saying that they are out to win a championship this year. Fans like that, but would Harden jell with fellow All-Star Embiid? Would the Sixers prosper with one player handling the ball so much?
It would be a bold move no doubt to acquire Harden, and Morey has become one of the NBA’s top executives because he isn’t afraid to go for a home run.
It seems the Sixers are better off the way they are constructed. But the speculation and chatter won’t die until Harden finds a new home.
Jajaja, eres bienvenido al club de fans. Pues a lo que ya prometía, el músculo que ha añadido le da un plus más, me encanta este chico.darka escribió:Bueno, mejor creo que voy a ir recogiendo cable con Milton, está jugando de una manera increíble.
Pues precisamente, no tiene necesidad de decir nada públicamente. No es nada normal que un directivo salga a desmentir informaciones de un rumor de traspaso salvo que le pregunten algo en alguna entrevista.J_Bo escribió:Que va a decir Morey...
Usuarios navegando por este Foro: No hay usuarios registrados visitando el Foro y 3 invitados