This sets a dangerous precedent. Instead of merely being a formality, "Will Dictator Stern approve this trade?" becomes a very valid concern for every GM. If Stern and the NBA arbitrarily decide which trades can and cannot go through, it skews the playing field and makes it that much harder for a smart GM to build his team.
I was but once I found out Gasol was an All-star big man who could easily put up 20/10, I was estatic. Now we might have to settle for Dalembert.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_y...narowski_chris_paul_lakers_hornets_nba_120811 Stern kills Lakers’ deal for Paul NBA commissioner David Stern killed the New Orleans Hornets’ trade of Chris Paul after several owners complained about the league-owned team dealing the All-Star point guard to the Los Angeles Lakers, league sources told Yahoo! Sports. Some owners pushed Stern to nullify the trade and that the Hornets be made to keep Paul on the roster for the foreseeable future, sources said. A chorus of owners were irate with the belief that the five-month lockout had happened largely to stop big-market teams from leveraging small-market teams for star players pending free agency. The trade between the Lakers, Hornets and Houston Rockets had been consummated late Thursday afternoon, about the same time the league’s owners and players were completing their vote to ratify the new collective bargaining agreement – an agreement that Stern had repeatedly said would help restore the NBA’s competitive balance. League owners had watched last season as some of the game’s biggest stars left for larger markets. LeBron James and Chris Bosh joined Dwyane Wade and the Miami Heat, and Carmelo Anthony forced the Denver Nuggets to trade him to the New York Knicks. “The owners half-pushed this, and Stern took it the rest of the way,” a league source told Yahoo! Sports. “In the end, David didn’t like that the players were dictating where they wanted to go, like Carmelo had, and he wasn’t going to let Chris Paul dictate where he wanted to go.” Before Stern intervened, the Lakers had reached an agreement to acquire Paul in a deal that would have cost them Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom, league sources told Yahoo! Sports. Under terms of the deal, the Lakers would have sent Gasol to the Rockets. The Hornets would have received Odom, Rockets guards Kevin Martin and Goran Dragic and forward Luis Scola, league sources said. Houston had also agreed to send a 2012 first-round pick – previously obtained from the Knicks – to New Orleans as part of the package, a source said. Demps had informed two of the other finalists for Paul on Thursday evening that he had a deal in place for Paul to go the Lakers, front-office sources said. All the players involved in the trade have now been told to report to their teams for the start of training camp on Friday. Hornets general manager Dell Demps is “disconsolate” over the heavy-handed move from the commissioner’s office, a source told Y! Sports. Demps considered resigning his job on Thursday, league sources said, and had to be talked out of it. The Hornets had scored a terrific deal for Paul, a trade that was lauded by some of Demps’ peers throughout the league. Officials involved in the trade talks said the league office was consulted throughout the negotiations, and there was never an indication Demps didn’t have the power to make a deal. In fact, several teams negotiating with New Orleans to get Paul asked the league office, and were told Demps had full authority to execute a trade. Stern listened to enraged owners on Thursday insist this trade went against the entire reason the owners pushed for the lockout, that nothing had changed, and yet it was Stern who made the extraordinary decision to cancel the deal. Demps tried to talk him out of it, league officials said, but Stern was absolute in his desire to kill the trade. Paul had listed the Lakers as one of his preferred destinations, and it became a more clear choice for him on Thursday after the New York Knicks moved to the brink of completing a four-year, $58 million contract for free-agent center Tyson Chandler. The Knicks lost the salary-cap space they would’ve needed to sign Paul this summer, and the Lakers had been pushing hard to close a deal for Paul with Houston and New Orleans. As one rival executive with strong ties to the league office said, “Stern cared about two things: Selling that franchise for the best possible price; and showing the players that they weren’t going to dictate where teams could trade them. But now, there’s no way that the league can allow Chris Paul to be traded at all, otherwise Stern is basically deciding where one of the top players in the league is going versus having any fair process.” Officials from New Orleans, Houston and Los Angeles were stunned Thursday night. The killed trade had ripple affects everywhere in free agency and potential trades, and literally pushed the market into paralysis on the even of training camps opening up. “We were all told by the league he was a trade-able player, and now they’re saying that Dell doesn’t have the authority to make the trade?” said an NBA executive who had periodic talks with New Orleans throughout the process. “Now, they’re saying that Dell is an idiot, that he can’t do it his job. [Expletive] this whole thing. David’s drunk on power, and he doesn’t give a [expletive] about the players, and he doesn’t give a [expletive] about the hundreds of hours the teams put into make that deal. “How do the Lakers explain this to Odom? How does Houston deal with the guys it just tried to trade? Scola and Martin are going to be pissed at them, and who knows how long that takes to get over? Explain to me how the league kills this Pau Gasol deal, but allows Kwame Brown for Pau Gasol? “To me, this makes the league feel like it’s rigged, that Stern just does whatever Stern wants to do. He’s messed up the competitive balance of this league a lot worse by killing the deal, because you’ve completely destroyed the planning that New Orleans, Houston did and left them in shambles over this. I’ve never been so discouraged about this league, never so down. “I mean, come on: Chris Paul is leaving New Orleans in 66 games. He’s gone. And what’s Dell Demps, and that franchise, going to have to show for it?”
Is there precedent for this? Has any league ever vetoed a trade just for "reasons."? This is like vetoing a trade in fantasy sports, what a crock of crap. Seems there has to be some legal ramifications here, I don't know how this is not Stern overstepping his bounds.
we don't need draft picks. this roster (minus its leading scorers) was just bursting at the seams with potential that only Pau Gasol could unlock.
If Les has final say, why shouldn't the OWNERS of the Hornets have that same right? Oh, that's right, far better to run in circles screamning and shouting. While I would have enjoyed Pau with us, I get GREAT pleasure that the league is doing something about these crying millionaire allstar babys demanding trades to a particular team. I detested what happened in Miami last year. So I'm happy in that respect. I will admit that the veto by the league was probably not the best way of going about implementing their new belief, but life is messy at times. And they will definately loose the PR battle for it.
KBergCBS Ken Berger A person close to Hornets organization tells @CBSSports it would be "very surprising" if Chris Paul reported to camp Friday.
Your mistaken. This trade definitely makes the Hornets and Lakers worse. The Hornets would not be anything without Paul because West will sign elsewhere and it would be hard to believe Okafor can stay healthy consistently. As for the Lakers, they won two titles because of DEFENSE and size. Trading away Gasol and Odom kills that team. Especiall since last year the entire team forgot how to play defense and hired Mr. Defensive Guru to fix it. How do you suppose to they manage to play defense with only Bynum who himself cannot be counted on to be healthy, and for all the talk about "He could be a top 3 center" has only averaged a double-double once and 15 points once. On top of that, they would have even few pieces for another trade. The true title-contending Lakers would be dead. As for the Rockets. Scola is older than Gasol by 50 days, and on his best day is flirting with average on defense. Gasol is by and far an upgrade. Scola also could never be a No. 1 player on offense, as he has never done well faced with double-teams. Gasol can. Both are 31 yos, so you do have to expect both have some injury concerns over the next few years, but there is higher ceiling with Gasol. Martin's season last year was a total aberation to me. Why? because it was the 1st season in 4 years he played more than 61 games. No doubt he is a good player, but for his salary vs. having Courtney Lee start? Seriously, Lee defense makes up for the lost efficiency. Plus, you know have time for all the other players on the roster to get minutes. For what the Rockets are trying to do (be in the discussion for contention and other star players WITHOUT rebuilding), this trade makes sense on so many levels. They needed a star player, either a gold-level or silver-level star, to make that first jump, and Morey has learned that star-level FA's don't go to teams who don't already have that player.
this is why it doesn't change everything...because it's an entirely unique situation involving a team that's completely controlled by the league...who is trying to make one more go at keeping that market in the league.
If you wouldn't give up two good offensive players but horrible defenders, a backup PG (that people would argue was actually the 3rd string PG), and a 1st round pick for a team that was about to improve their team considerably just by signing Tyson Chandler... for the opportunity to get two legitimate 7 footers and improve the team's defense? I certainly would... but to each his own, I guess. The idea was to get Lowry (and Flynn) working in pick-and-roll situations with the two big men that move well. And you could spread the floor well because both guys actually have good mid-range jumpers for their size... so if Lowry attacked the basket, he'd still have the option to dish it out to two guys that can shoot well out there. And to add something that's being lost in all of this... Pau Gasol is a great passer. Like, borderline outstanding. He'd allow the Rockets to still run that high-post offense they've been running for a while. Yeah, what a terrible idea.
The trade was going to give them around $12M in trade exemptions. They could have used that to take back additional salary from Orlando.
What is your strategy exactly? What teams are lining up to trade multiple first round picks, or promising young talent for Luis Scola and Kevin Martin at their salaries? What players will accept any cap space we get without an established player like Gasol? You complain incessantly, yet you have no real ideas about how the team proceed.