Nuggets listening to offers for Carmelo Anthony?

AleksandarN

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http://www.denverpost.com/sports/ci_9199420


The math does not compute for the Nuggets.
Somebody has to go.
Carmelo Anthony, Allen Iverson and Marcus Camby are the team's big three. But they proved to be a big zero in the NBA playoffs.
Convinced they must make a significant change to compete for a championship, it's no secret the Nuggets will actively pursue trade options. What's more significant, according to a source familiar with the team, is nobody on the Denver roster has been deemed absolutely untouchable.
The Nuggets want to make a deal.
The challenge will be to get the Nuggets front-office team of basketball operations vice president Mark Warkentien, player personnel veep Rex Chapman and executive adviser Bret Bearup, who have sometimes worked at cross purposes since the blockbuster acquisition of Iverson, on the same page in any trade proposal.
It will cost franchise owner Stan Kroenke in excess of $44 million plus luxury taxes to keep Anthony, Iverson and Camby on the team payroll next season. That's simply not a smart investment in three star players who recently won 50 regular-season games, then went down without much of a fight against the Los Angeles Lakers in the playoffs.
Somebody has to go.
Despite his impressive defensive statistics, Camby's value as trade bait has been hotly debated by Denver management for the past 12 months. While the Nuggets tried to pry one of the young stars from the Atlanta Hawks in return for Camby last spring, a 34-year-old center now would likely have more appeal to a contender looking for the final piece to its championship puzzle.
As the Nuggets bet Iverson will not choose to opt out of a contract scheduled to pay him a salary in excess of $20 million next season, the team remains uncertain of what to do with the 32-year-old guard down the road, especially when Denver considers A.I. could be attractive to a potential trade partner looking for a marquee name to sell tickets in the short term and provide roster flexibility in the long term.
While the Nuggets have given no indication they will actively shop Anthony, the constant drama in the life of their 23-year-old forward has become the source of enough frustration within team headquarters that Denver would be willing to listen if somebody made a trade offer too good to refuse for Melo. The problem? In a league where stars such as Kobe Bryant and LeBron James dominate, it's difficult to come out ahead when trading a singular immense talent for any combination of players and draft picks.
Denver will not stand pat. With a draft choice late in the first round, it's believed the Nuggets are eyeing North Carolina point guard Ty Lawson. The team also is known to have recently scouted young European center Marc Gasol, currently property of the Memphis Grizzlies and a prospect who might be ready to emerge from the shadow of his big brother with the Lakers.
If the Nuggets want to make a blockbuster deal capable of altering the chemistry of a squad whose success seems to be less than the sum of its parts, however, they must move Camby, Iverson or Anthony. Who would get shown the door?
Maybe the more pertinent question is: Can Warkentien, Chapman and Bearup agree on what direction to take the Nuggets?
To put it nicely, this is a management team of three strong-willed, opinionated basketball men who too often appear to be competing for the ear of Kroenke.
For example: At the trade deadline in February, the Nuggets irked NBA teams from coast to coast when the front-office staff simultaneously worked deals for Sacramento defensive wizard Ron Artest and Memphis shooter Mike Miller, only to come off as an organization whose left hand was unaware of what the right hand was doing.
As the Nuggets struggled to make the playoffs only to be rudely bounced by the Lakers in the first round, it was not unusual to see Warkentien or Chapman take separate turns consulting and consoling Kroenke in the arena seats or a hallway outside the locker room.
If the Denver front office cannot give the boss better advice or results, why should Kroenke continue to listen? Before the Nuggets can build a championship identity, this is a basketball organization that needs to find its voice.
 
Petrie would be an idiot if he at least didn't make an offer for Melo. I think we should give up whatever it takes to get him
 
Didn't anybody watch that Lakers-Nuggets series? Anthony looked like the least interested, most overpayed young star in the NBA. He's a big part of why they got swept. Didn't box out for rebounds, didn't rotate to contest shots or even play very well man-to-man, just generally did a whole lot of nothing other than jacking up (and mostly missing) ill-advised jumpshots. The guy wouldn't know what defense is if it snuck up behind him and knocked him on the head. I'll pass on Melo. Talented player, but he looks perfectly suited to be a 30ppg gunner on a bad team for the next 15 plus years, wherever he plays. If I were the Nuggets, I'd be "listening" to offers too.
 
I am not at all sure Melo is ever going to be a true superstar -- a guy who can just will his team to victory ala CP3 or Kobe. But he's obviously a tremendous scorer, and still very young. That's a tough combo to beat, and if you coiuld get him wihtout having to give up Kevin or Spenser you would basically have all the offense you would ever need out of those positions, and offense coming from different parts of the floor too. Now of course you would also have a pair of one dimensional scorers who neither make anybody else better nor play any defense, but you would still have a core with a long future ahead of it while you tried to find enough defensive roleplayers to fill in around them to make them more than an overhyped dog and pony act.

Young star = automatic interest. Remmeber Webb had a shaky history when he aarrived here too. But he too was very young, and basically he grew out of it. Melo may too. In recent years I have been noncommittal and hesitated when people suggested going after TMac and Baron when they were available -- could see the upside, but also the risk. But you can see how well nabbing a player of that level when they are young can work out. And unlike those bygone days, we no longer have much of anything to lose.
 
And the Nugglets look even dumber than they did at the trade deadline. Wow, didn't think that was possible. :rolleyes:
 
I think we should go for him. I’m thinking about trading: Ron, Kenny and John (and maybe even Sheldon) for Melo. Let’s hope Denver goes for it. Since they messed up at trading deadline they’d be nice enough to finally deal with us :D
 
I'd throw in anything we have to get him, but I don't think we have the pieces to make it happen. He's a knucklehead, but not even 24. If he doesn't grow out of it his vaule should still be relatively high.
 
I am not at all sure Melo is ever going to be a true superstar -- a guy who can just will his team to victory ala CP3 or Kobe. But he's obviously a tremendous scorer, and still very young. That's a tough combo to beat, and if you coiuld get him wihtout having to give up Kevin or Spenser you would basically have all the offense you would ever need out of those positions, and offense coming from different parts of the floor too. Now of course you would also have a pair of one dimensional scorers who neither make anybody else better nor play any defense, but you would still have a core with a long future ahead of it while you tried to find enough defensive roleplayers to fill in around them to make them more than an overhyped dog and pony act.

Young star = automatic interest. Remmeber Webb had a shaky history when he aarrived here too. But he too was very young, and basically he grew out of it. Melo may too. In recent years I have been noncommittal and hesitated when people suggested going after TMac and Baron when they were available -- could see the upside, but also the risk. But you can see how well nabbing a player of that level when they are young can work out. And unlike those bygone days, we no longer have much of anything to lose.

Those are all good points and I have to say "Why not?". It's not like we're going anywhere fast with our current roster and upcoming picks. But the risk would be much greater then with Webber. We don't have RA coaching anymore to help troubled stars/players become NBA stars/players and at least from afar, Melo's problems seem far worse then Webber's. Either way he's still young and could be traded again if it doesn't work out.
 
...they should have done the Artest deal.

They're not trading Anthony and it's frankly ridiculous to even suggest that they would. Like LPKingsFan said, their stupidity was in not trading for Artest. There may have been chemistry and ball distribution issues, but they certainly would have been more competitive.

Think about it - they would have had two of the best scorers and two of the best defenders in the NBA on the same roster. Bad (non) move on their part.
 
I think Nuggets will just listen to offers for Melo and laugh on how the teams cant trade for him or else they are just stupid as i dont know what
 
We could sweeten the deal by taking back some crap. Maybe Kenyon Martin

Kings deal
Ron Artest
Brad Miller
Kenny Thomas
2nd rounder

Nuggets deal
Carmelo Anthony
Kenyon Martin
 
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