The light is on in the Oval Office.![]()
I'll bet he's sound asleep already.
The light is on in the Oval Office.![]()
http://www.latimes.com/sports/baske...537.story?coll=la-headlines-sports-nba-lakersThe Lakers even engaged in discussions with one of their main rivals, the Sacramento Kings, for point guard Mike Bibby. The talks were stopped upon being discovered by the Kings' owners, the Maloof brothers, one of whom had a particularly hard time envisioning Bibby in a Lakers uniform, a source said.
LA Times says that the Maloofs have been involved in the trade talks...
http://www.latimes.com/sports/baske...537.story?coll=la-headlines-sports-nba-lakers
How can Petrie do his jobwhen he gets handicapped by ownership. I would not be surprised if Petire calls it quits soon if this keeps continuing. If the Maloofs are impacting his job he might leave because this is his reputation on the line.
How can Petrie do his jobwhen he gets handicapped by ownership. I would not be surprised if Petire calls it quits soon if this keeps continuing. If the Maloofs are impacting his job he might leave because this is his reputation on the line.
http://www.sacbee.com/100/story/127311.htmlIs this bye bye, Bibby?
The trade deadline is today, and the Kings still are shopping their point guard
By Sam Amick - Bee Staff Writer
Published 12:00 am PST Thursday, February 22, 2007
Story appeared in SPORTS section, Page C1
Print | E-Mail | Comments (0)
Geoff Petrie was discussing the past, when the absence of cell phones meant the days before the NBA's trading deadline were spent holed up in an old-fashioned office by an old-fashioned phone.
Unless, of course, his team wasn't involved in any serious talks, in which case an appearance at the headquarters wasn't always necessary.
"Sometimes there are certain years when you just know that you don't have anything going on and you're not going to get anything going on of substance," the Kings' basketball president said.
This, however, is not one of those years. Speaking from his office late Wednesday afternoon, Petrie said there had been plenty of chatter but no deals intriguing enough to sign off on as yet.
With the trading deadline at noon PST today, the Kings have been actively trying to exchange point guard Mike Bibby for the right building pieces, and Cleveland continues to appear the most likely option. The Cavaliers have been aggressively trying to acquire Bibby in what they see as a vital piece toward a title run. Trades have been discussed involving three or more teams, though a Kings official said none of the talks had reached the point where deals were being turned down.
And should Cavaliers general manager Danny Ferry wake up this morning willing to offer the Kings the right mix of youth, draft picks and/or expiring contracts they want, an 11th-hour deal might be made. (Ferry and Bibby share the same agent, David Falk.) A trade is unlikely, however, without involving another team.
"I've talked to Cleveland, (but) it's just conversation," Petrie said from his office before he left at approximately 5 p.m. "In general, it's not right now realistic that there's some sort of magic bullet out there for us, I think, in terms of some immediacy. I think if we do anything, it would be more geared toward the future and some combination of things that give us some flexibility potentially and hopefully some talent, too. It still remains to be seen. Right now, there's nothing of any substance to really talk about."
Yet even if the deadline comes and goes without a deal, recent days have revealed what is a deliberate plan on the part of Kings management. In essence, it is the decision to build for the long term rather than hold out for short-term hopes.
"It comes down to what makes sense to you and is part of some general plan going forward from where you are what you're trying to do," Petrie said. "If things come along now that fit into that, then we'd be inclined to do them. If we don't, then we won't. We'll wait for the opportunity that does."
It is the very sort of leverage that might pay off today. The mainstay in the Kings-Cavaliers discussions has been Drew Gooden, the forward who has two seasons and $13.5 million left on his contract. That's less than half of Bibby's deal (two seasons, $28 million), leaving plenty of room for discussion of how to fill the gap.
Acquiring point guard Eric Snow would work financially, but his age (33) and contract (two years remaining, $14 million) are not the direction the Kings would like to go. The expiring contract of former Kings center Scot Pollard ($2.2 million), according to sources unauthorized to talk, was discussed as, essentially, an aid to the numbers cause.
And, as Petrie noted, there is more to be discussed than Bibby. A source said Monday that Chicago was interested in Kings forward Shareef Abdur-Rahim, but Petrie said, "We have nothing going with Chicago."
"I know there's a certain amount of buzz out there about Mike, but it still doesn't preclude the possibility that someone else could get traded at some point, too," Petrie said. "If we don't do anything, we're going to go forward with the guys we have, continue to evaluate that and gear up for what you can do at the draft and in July."
"In general, it's not right now realistic that there's some sort of magic bullet out there for us, I think, in terms of some immediacy. I think if we do anything, it would be more geared toward the future and some combination of things that give us some flexibility potentially and hopefully some talent, too."
Sounds like Geoff may finally be getting it.
I agree in principle, but in this particualr instance mayeb the Maloofs were right. There would have been considerable outcry from the fanbase too when Kobe and Lamar and Mike came to town and slapped us around. I dunno, I think the Lakers shoudl be considered fair game in a trade, but mayeb its jsut the rumors of what we've gottten back. Trading with L.A. where either we get the major player or we swap major players...ok now I guess. But trading away a major player TO them, for a package of uncertainty, and having that major player being a guy at the core of the great rivalry of years past...don't like them running around nixing ****, but don't like that Geoff was going there in the first place.
If Bibby is traded , the days of Divac,Cwebb,Peja,Doug,Bibby is over. I can't believe that a team which had so much success in the past probably won't have one starting player in matter of years. I really can't of a team that lost all their original 12 players except of Miller .
Gooden is only marginally better, and bigger, than KT. He;s 6'8", turned into a strong reboudner, makes a lot of mental mistakes, can;t block a shot etc.
And the problem is that Cleveland doesn't have their #1 this year. Forgot who's got it, but its not them. So makes things tough. I would still want Varejao, but in a multiple team deal, a pick from soembody would not hurt.
As a slight aside, the Hornets are now rumored to be looking for a possible deal Note that they have a couple of nice enders in Desmond Mason and Marc Jackson, a couple of rookie bigs (who have sucked so far, but are young) and their pick.
"I would be surprised if we make a deal by the end of the day."
"We have talked about Mike Bibby, but, at this point, it'd be a big surprise if anything were to happen there."
"The deals that have been proposed have not made sense of us."
"I have not spoken to Scottie Pippen"
"On offense, we need to attack the basket more, this should not be a jump shooting team"
"Who knows what happens today? But I think at this point we're ready to make a decision on a trade, but we're willing to go forward with what we have right now."
doesn't sound promising
I am trying to make sense of this trade between the Kings and the Cavs. One question comes to mind.
Why would we want Gooden?
Did someone say that the deadline is 3:00??
Nothings happening... Exactly 2 hours until deadline is up...
The interest comes because many GM see that there is a chance that they can find a deal in which they can get an upper hand. There is blood in the water, so to speak.there is way too much interest in bibby for petrie not to get a deal done, he's got to do it.
there is way too much interest in bibby for petrie not to get a deal done, he's got to do it.
there is way too much interest in bibby for petrie not to get a deal done, he's got to do it.
The latest on Mike Bibby: The deal with Cleveland was hitting a snag this morning, said a person involved in the situation. The reason? Bruised egos over the leaking of the proposal that would've freed Bibby from Sacramento. That's only one of the many reasons why it's so hard to get trades done at the deadline. A few years ago, Miami's Pat Riley pulled the plug on a trade for Jamal Mashburn because he was so miffed that his secret discussions got out.
Exactly, the heat is on Ferry, not GP. The Cavs want to win right now. Kings are looking at the long term, which we can do just as well in the off-season, if there isn't a good offer now.Correction, FERRY's got to get a deal done...he's going balls to walls out for Bibby and is hellbent on acquiring him, especially now with Wade out for the stretch run.