Vlade4GM
All-Star
I know, not another "would you trade Thompson if we got Griffin?" thread but I think this idea is at least interesting.
Say we get the no.1 pick and Memphis stays at 6. We take Griffin and they miss out on the top bigs (Hill and Thabeet), so we offer them Thompson for the no.6 (I don't know if it needs fillers because I don't know when exactly teams are given their incoming cap space. Not sure how that works exactly.) and they take Jennings for us.
Why the Grizzlies do it? Easy, they need a PF in a bad way and Thompson provides them a good young PF who can rebound and has scoring potential. They're not likely to get a better big at 6.
Why the Grizzlies don't do it? I can't think of many reasons, but perhaps they don't think a backcourt of Mayo and Conley really cut it, and they decide to put Mayo at the point and grab a 2 like Evans or just take Jennings for themselves.
Why the Kings do it? While a talented young frontcourt like that would be nice to have, Thompson and Griffin are very redundant in what they offer. If Hawes and Griffin are the future starting frontcourt, then they're going to need a third man that is going to be a strong defensive presence rather than a guy like Thompson, who is not much of a defender. This way instead of relegating Thompson to coming off the bench (sure he'll be spelling both Hawes and Griffin, but he'll still be a bench player because no way they're not going to start Griffin) they can get a guy who can become their PG of the future for them. Hawes/Griffin/Nocioni/Martin/Jennings isn't a bad way to kick off the first big draft in this rebuild.
Why the Kings don't do it? Thompson had a very strong rookie year despite the lack of acknolwedgment around the league (not making the rookie all-star team or making the 1st/2nd all rookie teams) he was one of the best players to come out of last year's draft. While they still lack a lot of defensive talent in their frontcourt, in overall talent they have a young 3 man rotation that is pretty much set for the future. Should they trade a known quantity and a proven solid young big man for a risky PG prospect in Jennings? Does the old adage of not trading big for small stop them from doing this?
Not really sure if I'd do this exact trade, but I think the general idea behind it is worthwhile. I guess it depends on how impressive Jennings is in workouts.
Say we get the no.1 pick and Memphis stays at 6. We take Griffin and they miss out on the top bigs (Hill and Thabeet), so we offer them Thompson for the no.6 (I don't know if it needs fillers because I don't know when exactly teams are given their incoming cap space. Not sure how that works exactly.) and they take Jennings for us.
Why the Grizzlies do it? Easy, they need a PF in a bad way and Thompson provides them a good young PF who can rebound and has scoring potential. They're not likely to get a better big at 6.
Why the Grizzlies don't do it? I can't think of many reasons, but perhaps they don't think a backcourt of Mayo and Conley really cut it, and they decide to put Mayo at the point and grab a 2 like Evans or just take Jennings for themselves.
Why the Kings do it? While a talented young frontcourt like that would be nice to have, Thompson and Griffin are very redundant in what they offer. If Hawes and Griffin are the future starting frontcourt, then they're going to need a third man that is going to be a strong defensive presence rather than a guy like Thompson, who is not much of a defender. This way instead of relegating Thompson to coming off the bench (sure he'll be spelling both Hawes and Griffin, but he'll still be a bench player because no way they're not going to start Griffin) they can get a guy who can become their PG of the future for them. Hawes/Griffin/Nocioni/Martin/Jennings isn't a bad way to kick off the first big draft in this rebuild.
Why the Kings don't do it? Thompson had a very strong rookie year despite the lack of acknolwedgment around the league (not making the rookie all-star team or making the 1st/2nd all rookie teams) he was one of the best players to come out of last year's draft. While they still lack a lot of defensive talent in their frontcourt, in overall talent they have a young 3 man rotation that is pretty much set for the future. Should they trade a known quantity and a proven solid young big man for a risky PG prospect in Jennings? Does the old adage of not trading big for small stop them from doing this?
Not really sure if I'd do this exact trade, but I think the general idea behind it is worthwhile. I guess it depends on how impressive Jennings is in workouts.