It's not that I don't think Evans could turn out to be solid player or possibly even a star, I have nothing against the kid, it's that I have abolutely ZERO faith in Geoff Petrie getting anything for Kevin Martin. The guy hasn't pulled off a good trade for this team in over 5 years and if you think things will be different this year you are completely delusional.
1/10/2005: Traded Doug Christie to the Orlando Magic for Cuttino Mobley and Michael Bradley. I loved Doug Christie as much as the next guy, but we bailed out on that sinking ship at the right time. Christie played a total of 796 minutes in his post-Kings career and racked up 0.0 win shares. Mobley alone more than doubled that minutes total and got us 3.0 win shares in half a season before leaving in free agency. We also got out of a whole extra season of Christie's contract. That's a good trade.
2/23/2005: Traded Chris Webber, Michael Bradley, and Matt Barnes to the 76ers for Kenny Thomas, Corliss Williamson, and Brian Skinner. The infamous "movable pieces" trade. Webber, of course, was a shell of his former self after his knee injury. He contributed a total of 8.9 win shares in 166 games after leaving the Kings. Michael Bradley added another 0.2 win shares, and Matt Barnes didn't play for Philly at all -- on that contract. Due to knee tendinitis he didn't suit up the rest of that year, then signed a free agent contract with the Knicks, who later him, allowing him to return to Philly. So no extra credit for Barnes, who may just as well have bolted Sac as a free agent anyway. On our side, Corliss got us 3.0 win shares, Brian Skinner a further 2.9, and Kenny Thomas a shocking 9.0 and counting. Wait a minute - on talent alone, did we win that trade? I wouldn't have thought so, but it looks like we did! There's also the monetary aspect - we ended up paying out about the same amount of money over a longer period of time (and I think we saved ourselves some luxury tax payments). I'll admit that KT's contract has hampered us a bit financially the past two years, but when compared to what we saved in Webb luxury tax payments, it's probably a push. I'm shocked to say I think we won that trade.
Spoiler reveals more lengthy discussion...
I see that this is the most controversial of all of the trades (obviously), and since this got moved into its own thread I'll expand a bit on it. On the sentimental side, we lost the trade. Big time. It would have been great, nay ultimate, for Webber to retire as a King, no doubt about it. On the basketball contribution side, we actually won. It wasn't by a lot (just under 6 win shares -- for reference, Kevin Martin's best season was 10.5 win shares), but it is a clear margin. From the financial side, it's more complicated. I'm not sure where to find the exact numbers, but we were paying the luxury tax on a fairly regular basis back then. Webber, Bibby, and Miller all had big contracts with several years left on them, Peja had several years with a large but more reasonable salary. There's little doubt in my mind that we would have been paying luxury tax every year until we broke up that core. So we were faced with a three-way choice: 1) Pay luxury tax to keep Webber around on the gamble that he would return to form. That gamble would not have paid off. 2) Trade Webber to get out of the tax burden, and try to build a contender around Bibby, Peja, and Miller. 3) Blow up the clown, right there, right then. We picked 2), and it didn't turn out so great. But 1) wouldn't have worked, either, and would have been more expensive. And 3) would have alienated the entire fanbase. It's hindsight, not foresight, that's 20/20, and in 2005 that would have been a disastrous decision, derided forever. So the question may come down to whether the last year of KT's contract really hurt us -- because Webb wouldn't have come off the books until last summer. Well, last year we weren't in any shape to make a major free agent splash given our roster, and I don't imagine it would have been any different if Webb had stuck around. So I think financially, we did come out better for making the trade. It's only the sentimental aspect I think we lost.
8/2/2005: Traded Bobby Jackson and Greg Ostertag to the Grizzlies for Bonzi Wells. We should be careful to note here that when we traded Bobby, he only had one year left on his contract. The same goes for Ostertag. Bobby had a good year in Memphis with 3.3 win shares, and Ostertag ended up getting redealt back to Utah for a 1.2 win share season before retiring. Bonzi had a nice 3.4 win share season, and helped us to the playoffs where he averaged 23.2 points and 12.0 rebounds before listening to a stupid agent and turning down the contract offer of a lifetime. Still, despite the slight deficit in win shares, it's hard to say we lost that trade.
8/2/2005: Traded a future second round pick to the Bobcats for Jason Hart. That second round pick ended up being Ryan Hollins. Ryan has 2.2 career win shares in 1161 career minutes. Jason Hart played an uninspired 918 minutes in Sacramento, racking up 0.4 win shares. We may have lost that trade, but it's not a real big loss.
1/25/2006: Traded Peja Stojakovic to the Pacers for Ron Artest. Peja, of course, bailed from the Pacers the following off season, but contributed 5.5 win shares in the short time he was there. Ron Artest was in Sacramento for two and a half seasons and contributed 14.0 win shares. We clearly got the best of that deal.
2/23/2006: Traded Brian Skinner to the Blazers for Sergei Monia and Vitaly Potapenko. Skinner didn't fare as well in Portland as he did in Sac, with only 0.3 win shares to show for it before leaving for free agency. Monia and Potapenko played a combined 52 minutes for the Kings (-0.1 win shares!) but hey, at least we all got to fawn over the oiled-up chest of Monia in that creepy glamour shot. This trade was a wash.
2/16/2008: Traded Mike Bibby to the Hawks for Anthony Johnson, Tyronn Lue, Shelden Williams, Lorenzen Wright, and a second round pick (Sean Singletary). This was Petrie's first trade in two years, and the first true "rebuilding" move. Our goal in this trade was clearly not to win on the talent level, but to save money. And save money we did. This year we saved $11.5M on Bibby's salary (relative to Shelden's) and since we were an inch under the luxury tax, we saved ANOTHER $11.5M in tax payments for a grand total of $23M in savings. For a franchise in financial trouble, that's a godsend of a trade. And it's not like we were going to be competing. For a rebuilding trade, that $23M savings could have saved the franchise. That trade certainly helped our long term.
8/14/2008: Traded Ron Artest, Sean Singletary, and Patrick Ewing, Jr. to the Rockets for Bobby Jackson, Donté Greene and a future first round pick (Omri Casspi). Another rebuilding trade, and one that sent noted malcontent Ron Artest out of town. Given the sheer number of voices here clamoring for an Artest trade at that time, the fact that he was shipped off should have been enough. In addition, we have some future potential talent in Greene and Casspi. It's a bit early, but it's hard to say we got beaten on that trade. (Houston is probably happy as well, but that's not our concern.)
2/17/2009: Traded a conditional 2015 second round pick to the Celtics for Sam Cassell and cash. Why did we do that again? Basically doing Danny Ainge a luxury tax favor. I'm willing to pretend it never happened, because for all intents and purposes, it didn't.
2/18/2009: Traded John Salmons and Brad Miller to the Bulls for Drew Gooden, Andres Nocioni, Cedric Simmons and (via Portland) Ike Diogu. This was another rebuilding/financial trade that took $24M in future salary owed to Salmons and Miller ($18M next year) and turned it into $21M spread over the next three years (Nocioni). This in effect saves us $11M this year and brings us under the salary cap -- we would have been over otherwise. It's tough to argue with this trade, either -- it accomplished its goal and moved us forward in the rebuilding process.
2/19/2009: Traded Bobby Brown and Shelden Williams to the Timberwolves for Rashad McCants and Calvin Booth. In the end, this one was pretty much a wash. However, we at least had the opportunity to watch McCants play some fun minutes. (We also won the win share battle 1.0 to 0.5.) McCants was also a candidate to return next year as a free agent, though the acquisition of Tyreke Evans in the draft probably precludes that.
2/19/2009: Traded a protected 2014 second round pick to the Celtics for cash. Ho-hum.
6/25/2009: Traded the #31 pick (Jeff Pendergraph) to the Blazers for the #38 pick (Jon Brockman) and Sergio Rodriguez. Obviously far too early to tell on this one, but it's hard to complain about a decent backup point guard.
That's the extent of the trades that Petrie has pulled off in the past 5 years. I'd say we did pretty well. We clearly won two of them, and accomplished financial goals in three of them. Another four were complete pushes, and one tiny win and one tiny loss offset each other. The remaining two, it's too early to tell how we did. "Hasn't pulled off a good trade" in 5 years? Looks to me like he hasn't pulled off a BAD trade in that time frame.
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