I was thinking about the Free Agency topic a bit more and how I didn't really like anyone on the list this season. I also don't see a lot of realistic targets next season either. There are complimentary players who could help us, but not a lot of immediate improvements at the SG position. We're sitting at 27 wins here. We need to add at least one guard who can step into a 9 man playoff rotation effectively. If not Free Agency, how are we going to get this done?
Well here's the next in a long line of unpopular suggestions from me: what about Eric Gordon? I know my gut reaction when I hear that name is the same as yours ... hell no! Overpaid, shell of his former self, his current team can't get rid of him soon enough. I wonder though if he's one of those guys who's been thought of as overrated for so long that it's actually come around the other way. Let's explore this shall we?
First of all, this is what I think we need -- a steady backup SG who can be relied upon to make shots in 20-25 minutes per game off the bench. It should ideally be someone who can also handle the ball a little bit if Ben is keeping his job as the starter because that gives us more options with the rotation. It absolutely needs to be a three point threat, especially if we're also considering replacements for Collison in the starting lineup as he's actually a very good three point shooter relative to the rest of the PGs in the league. So the idea is to take the player PDA wanted to get in Stauskas and accelerate that development a few years with a veteran replacement.
Why Eric Gordon?
(1) He can shoot. Ex. 1
Yes that's Eric Gordon right after Kyle Korver on the 3pt shooting leader board this season shooting 45% on 295 attempts. If you switch over to PGs you'd see that he's actually out shooting all of them (including Steph Curry though on a ton less attempts). Is it a fluke? Yes and no. His career average is a still solid 38%. Year by year he's shot 39% (08/09), 37% (09/10), 36% (10/11), 32% (12/13), 39% (13/14), 45% (14/15) on his three pointers. I skipped the 2011/2012 season because he only played 9 games that year. He also missed half of 2012/2013 recovering from injury which partly explains the poor shooting that season. When healthy, you're looking at a fairly consistent three point threat and occasionally even an elite one.
(2) He's not a one-trick pony. Ex. 2
His career assist percentage of 16.7% slots in below Collison (27.3), McCallum (21.2), Cousins (20.5), and Gay (19.1) among Kings' regulars this season. His career average of 3.6 assists per 36 min slots in just after Cousins' (3.8) and Gay's (3.7) averages this season. Also his assist percentage this season (17.9) and assists per 36 min (4.2) are both above those career averages so the trend is encouraging here. If Andre Miller comes back next season there's less immediate need for an additional ballhandler on the bench, but Miller is also going to be 39 so he's obviously not a long term solution to anything.
(3) Age.
Despite being a six year veteran, Gordon will only be 27 next season. That bumps him above other potential veteran targets like Kevin Martin (32), Ben Gordon (32), CJ Watson (31), Anthony Morrow (29), Courtney Lee (29), Monta Ellis (29) and Aaron Afflalo (29) who are all a lot closer to their decline phase.
(4) Opportunity.
Eric Gordon has a player option for next season at 15.5M that he would be a fool to pass up. Not only is he getting paid next season, he's about to become a Free Agent during the biggest free agency bonanza in memory and New Orleans still hasn't figured out how to get minutes for all 3 of their guards: Holiday, Gordon, and Evans in the same backcourt. We know he's been on the market before (last summer) and it's likely he's on the market again at next year's trade deadline. If they don't trade him they'll have to re-sign him to another risky long-term deal or let him go for nothing.
Here's how I see this working out. It's a bit of a stretch, but not entirely ridiculous (well, you tell me)...
This summer we make a stepping stone trade in anticipation of making a move for Gordon at the trade deadline. Here's one possibility: we trade Carl Landry to Charlotte for Lance Stephenson. Lance has a team option for next season on his 9 million dollar a year contract so he's essentially an expiring contract tied to a player Charlotte can't get rid of soon enough.
Landry 6.5M/2 years for Stephenson 9M/1 year (with 9M Team Option)
Lance's cap hit next season is less than 150% of Landry's so the trade is legal.
Charlotte takes on extra overhead in 2016/2017 to get Lance out of the lockerroom and they get a serviceable veteran PF where they currently have two raw young players: C. Zeller and N. Vonleh. For us this clears out Landry's contract and gives us a salary matching trade chip at the deadline which we can combine with Jason Thompson's contract to acquire Eric Gordon.
Thompson 6.4M/2 years and Stephenson (9M/exp with 9M TO) for Gordon 15.5M/exp
Salaries match almost identically here so the trade is legal.
New Orleans gets a serviceable backup big and an option year on Stephenson if they decide they want him back in exchange for their expiring contract. They probably want a draft pick in exchange for Gordon but I don't know if they'll get it at the deadline.
Obviously this doesn't solve all of our problems, but it allows us to trade Stauskas with our draft pick to try to bring in a PF or backup C, gives us a secondary playmaker on the bench, and hopefully improves our 3pt shooting. I'm also looking at future free agent options at PG and wondering if re-uniting this year's effective Tyreke Evans/Eric Gordon backcourt tandem in Sacramento as a bench unit and/or fourth quarter platoon would be a good idea for us.
Well here's the next in a long line of unpopular suggestions from me: what about Eric Gordon? I know my gut reaction when I hear that name is the same as yours ... hell no! Overpaid, shell of his former self, his current team can't get rid of him soon enough. I wonder though if he's one of those guys who's been thought of as overrated for so long that it's actually come around the other way. Let's explore this shall we?
First of all, this is what I think we need -- a steady backup SG who can be relied upon to make shots in 20-25 minutes per game off the bench. It should ideally be someone who can also handle the ball a little bit if Ben is keeping his job as the starter because that gives us more options with the rotation. It absolutely needs to be a three point threat, especially if we're also considering replacements for Collison in the starting lineup as he's actually a very good three point shooter relative to the rest of the PGs in the league. So the idea is to take the player PDA wanted to get in Stauskas and accelerate that development a few years with a veteran replacement.
Why Eric Gordon?
(1) He can shoot. Ex. 1
Yes that's Eric Gordon right after Kyle Korver on the 3pt shooting leader board this season shooting 45% on 295 attempts. If you switch over to PGs you'd see that he's actually out shooting all of them (including Steph Curry though on a ton less attempts). Is it a fluke? Yes and no. His career average is a still solid 38%. Year by year he's shot 39% (08/09), 37% (09/10), 36% (10/11), 32% (12/13), 39% (13/14), 45% (14/15) on his three pointers. I skipped the 2011/2012 season because he only played 9 games that year. He also missed half of 2012/2013 recovering from injury which partly explains the poor shooting that season. When healthy, you're looking at a fairly consistent three point threat and occasionally even an elite one.
(2) He's not a one-trick pony. Ex. 2
His career assist percentage of 16.7% slots in below Collison (27.3), McCallum (21.2), Cousins (20.5), and Gay (19.1) among Kings' regulars this season. His career average of 3.6 assists per 36 min slots in just after Cousins' (3.8) and Gay's (3.7) averages this season. Also his assist percentage this season (17.9) and assists per 36 min (4.2) are both above those career averages so the trend is encouraging here. If Andre Miller comes back next season there's less immediate need for an additional ballhandler on the bench, but Miller is also going to be 39 so he's obviously not a long term solution to anything.
(3) Age.
Despite being a six year veteran, Gordon will only be 27 next season. That bumps him above other potential veteran targets like Kevin Martin (32), Ben Gordon (32), CJ Watson (31), Anthony Morrow (29), Courtney Lee (29), Monta Ellis (29) and Aaron Afflalo (29) who are all a lot closer to their decline phase.
(4) Opportunity.
Eric Gordon has a player option for next season at 15.5M that he would be a fool to pass up. Not only is he getting paid next season, he's about to become a Free Agent during the biggest free agency bonanza in memory and New Orleans still hasn't figured out how to get minutes for all 3 of their guards: Holiday, Gordon, and Evans in the same backcourt. We know he's been on the market before (last summer) and it's likely he's on the market again at next year's trade deadline. If they don't trade him they'll have to re-sign him to another risky long-term deal or let him go for nothing.
Here's how I see this working out. It's a bit of a stretch, but not entirely ridiculous (well, you tell me)...
This summer we make a stepping stone trade in anticipation of making a move for Gordon at the trade deadline. Here's one possibility: we trade Carl Landry to Charlotte for Lance Stephenson. Lance has a team option for next season on his 9 million dollar a year contract so he's essentially an expiring contract tied to a player Charlotte can't get rid of soon enough.
Landry 6.5M/2 years for Stephenson 9M/1 year (with 9M Team Option)
Lance's cap hit next season is less than 150% of Landry's so the trade is legal.
Charlotte takes on extra overhead in 2016/2017 to get Lance out of the lockerroom and they get a serviceable veteran PF where they currently have two raw young players: C. Zeller and N. Vonleh. For us this clears out Landry's contract and gives us a salary matching trade chip at the deadline which we can combine with Jason Thompson's contract to acquire Eric Gordon.
Thompson 6.4M/2 years and Stephenson (9M/exp with 9M TO) for Gordon 15.5M/exp
Salaries match almost identically here so the trade is legal.
New Orleans gets a serviceable backup big and an option year on Stephenson if they decide they want him back in exchange for their expiring contract. They probably want a draft pick in exchange for Gordon but I don't know if they'll get it at the deadline.
Obviously this doesn't solve all of our problems, but it allows us to trade Stauskas with our draft pick to try to bring in a PF or backup C, gives us a secondary playmaker on the bench, and hopefully improves our 3pt shooting. I'm also looking at future free agent options at PG and wondering if re-uniting this year's effective Tyreke Evans/Eric Gordon backcourt tandem in Sacramento as a bench unit and/or fourth quarter platoon would be a good idea for us.
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