An announcer at some game today said this trade ought to be investigated. I don't know if he was joking or not. It's certainly the first thought that entered my mind.
What would our team be like if we traded Artets for Gasol? If the Griz wanted an expiring contract, he has all but guaranteed the contract will end in a few months.
This is not sour grapes as I may be one of the few on this forum except those from LA who actually occasionally like the Lakers. The trade stinks and not even the most convoluted of explanations can convince me that Gasol was not handed to the Lakers on a silver platter and it is not a matter of great negotiating that the Lakers were the benefactor.
The announcer was probably serious because I see the same sentiment on every board at RealGM. It's spilled milk tho since there's no investigating a bad GM with a bad MO. And I think we all know that it's because it's
this team that people are upset. Baron to GS was applauded by all parties, for comparison. Sheed to Detroit was too. I similarly remember people wanting Stern to investigate Shaq to LA as if the spirit of free agency suddenly didn't apply to a HOF center.
It's a merely matter of timing, nothing more, nothing less. It hasn't been posted here, but Wallace did a Q/A article where he broke down why the Chicago deal died on the vine. He said, first, that they were only offering 2nd/3rd stringers. He said that at the time, Memphis wasn't ready to trade Gasol unless the price tag was higher than what the Bulls were offering. That implies that the Grizz owner hadn't made up his decision to dump the team (even though Wallace claims it was his decision alone to make this deal -- which I don't quite buy). Wallace sounds like he's trying to buffer perceptions on the disarray of the org for the next owner. He's playing up their supposed flexibility to the extent of claiming that Marc Gasol would've been a high first rounder next year.