Trade Breakdown by Charley Rosen

For what it's worth.

Charley Rosen / Special to FOXSports.com
Posted: 14 minutes ago // front-end hack to remove postedTime from Rumors page until a better way can be determined if (document.URL.indexOf("/name/FS/rumors") != -1) document.getElementById("postedTime").style.display = 'none';
Here's my take on the latest deadline wheelings and dealings:


Webber to the Sixers





Chris Webber to Philadelphia



It's no longer a secret that Webber has been a toxic and overly dominant presence on the court and in Sacramento's locker room. He wants to be in the middle of every possession, but he shuns the paint where the serious banging happens. He's decried his teammates' softness (remarks indirectly aimed at Peja Stojakovic) when he's Mr. Charmin himself. He's lied to grand juries, choked in the clutch, and has always been reluctant to play defense. Sure, he can pass like a point guard, and hit mid-range jumpers with anybody, but he's also a misstep away from totaling his knee.



It's understandable that Allen Iverson is looking forward to teaming with a high-post player with Webber's slick skills. But if AI thought that Glenn Robinson was a loser, wait 'til he gets a close-up look at Webber.



For Sacramento, Webber's absence has a huge impact: The most important being that Stojakovic no longer has any excuses for his periodic vanishing acts.



Matt Barnes to Philadelphia



He's a second-year player with the requisite jumping, running and quickness skills. Defense, execution and hustle are his priorities for the present, and he needs to develop his left hand. He can also rebound and is a solid open shooter with 18-foot range, but will launch 3-balls if he's wide open. Barnes is the kind of player who can be given a short rotation (five minutes, or so) when his team is stagnant in hopes that his effort can energize everyone. A good 11th or 12th man with a promising, if limited, future as a role player.



Michael Bradley to Philadelphia



A 6-foot-10 small forward, Bradley is strictly a jump shooter. Otherwise, he's soft, slow and a poor rebounder who can occasionally block a shot. Roster-fill.



Kenny Thomas to Sacramento



An active player with a scorer's mentality, Thomas seems to be a smallish (6-foot-7, 245) power forward, but has the skills and the work ethic to be very effective. He's an excellent rebounder (especially on offense), has legitimate 3-point range, plays well off teammates' penetration, and can post on both blocks with jump hooks and a variety of spin-back moves. While not a particularly effective defender, Thomas never backs down from any confrontation. A terrific scorer off the bench.



Corliss Williamson to Sacramento



Let him go 1-on-1 in the left box or along the left baseline and Williamson is as nasty as ever. Another aggressive, nearly unstoppable power forward, but a defensive liability against quicker players.



Brian Skinner to Sacramento



This guy has 18-foot face-up range, can run the floor, and bang the boards. He can also be effective in the low post with jump hooks, turnaround jumpers, and an inside reverse pivot on the left box. If his defense is only average, Skinner is an accomplished shot-blocker. A solid presence at both power slots.



Who got the best of the deal?



Philadelphia got a finesse player who can work and play well with AI at the expense of sacrificing front-court depth and power. Sacramento got rid of a loud-mouthed phony and a pair of spare parts in exchange for a trio of big-chested, hard-working bigs. In the short run, the advantage goes to Philadelphia. In the long run, Sacramento has the edge.

http://msn.foxsports.com/nba/story/3418918
 
To loosely quote Robin Williams in "Good Morning Vietnam":

"I've never seen a guy in more desparate need of a BJ"
 
just another hack journalist who claims to have "really" known what was going on in the kings locker room. nothing more, and nothing less. very little intuitive analysis in this breakdown, and even less intelligence.
 
Kenny Thomas has legitimate 3 point range? A 24.7% career three point shooter who has just nine attempts in the last three years. I also liked the description of Corliss being nearly unstoppable. I almost feel guilty now seeing as how this was such a steal. Maybe we should ship them a draft pick to help even things out.


Just another example of Rupert Murdoch's company's idea of reporting.
 
Wow...a lot of harsh stuff he said.

But he actually said a few good stuff about the new Kings players though.
 
FullAB said:
....of a Bobby Jackson? My 9 year old daughter didn't get it and neither do I.....:(

of something that I hope a 9-year old doesn't know of. Watch the movie and see...
 
i've seen the movie geoff....and unfortunately know the expression.....just don't expect to have to explain it to our younger kings fans on here......know what I mean...
 
This trade is the perfect example of addition by subtraction. If this team can mentally get over the idea of losing a brother in arms then they will be fine. I suspect this team will be even more united than before.
 
for credible nba analysis, charley rosen is arguably the biggest douchebag on the internet. he has always hated webber, i've read articles from him ripping him over the years. he also once wrote an article where he put karl malone was the most over-rated player in the history of the nba - i think he also put webber on that list but i'm not certain...

needless to say ESPN fired him and his garbage columns. just at the beginning of this year he put up a list for most over-rated and under-rated players in the nba - he listed mo taylor as the most under-rated, and kenyon martin as the most over-rated but also added that jason kidd and kevin garnett were notable over-rated candidates.

the guy is a tool.
 
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