green
Well-Known Member
I apologize.
Well, that wasn't meant for you, so I apologize to you for the misunderstanding.
I apologize.
Ok, we need to move on, or I do, about not signing Matthews.
However, I think it's time to question KOC's method of "negotiation," in letting the market decide. As one poster put it, and I think it might've been on another site, it leaves the small market teams at the mercy of the larger market teams with more money.
Isn't it better to negotiate with the players you want, to assure them you want them back, and isn't it human nature that guys will take less to stay with the team they like and are comfortable playing for, and who they are going to get guaranteed playing time because they know their role and they fit well? So, you lock them up with a fair offer and don't worry about getting raped by other teams.
It's happened two years in a row now with Portland. Is KOC going to learn his lesson or continue being a weasel?
Bargaining in good faith worked for many years with Stockton. Don't see why it can't work again.
But that isn't what Matthews said. So, you believe one side that satisfies your view of things but refuse to believe the other side because it doesn't fit. Someone is not telling the truth.
But that isn't what Matthews said. So, you believe one side that satisfies your view of things but refuse to believe the other side because it doesn't fit. Someone is not telling the truth.
We just signed Raja at half the price of Matthews. KOC did well...
Why offer a guy less when he's going to look elsewhere anyway? 4/16 in my mind is overpaying for Matthews. Matthews started the process at the full MLE.
When the person you're negotiating with demands more than double what you think is fair, negotiations pretty much go nowhere.
So it goes in the NBA. You can't win them all. KOC worked his *** off this offseason and pulled the Jazz out of the potential cellar into contention again. He did everything the fans wanted. The Wesley situation was unfortunate, but we move on with the team we've got. Raja is no slouch and bring almost everything Matthews did, and veteran experience and leadership. I think we should let this go and thank the FO and the Millers for giving the fans another competitive team to root for. We just saw the Jazz org. do something it has never really done before. Savor the moment.
It seems as though wrong4u and others aren't interested in facts...
From Ross Siler of the Tribune via Tweeter:
It would be nice if people focused on the main topic here, not Matthews. And that is the method of negotiation that has left us vulnerable two years in a row.
KOC also made an offer to Millsap. And Millsap's uncle/agent was "insulted." So rather than counter with a slightly higher number, they shopped the market. write4u needs to go back and look at the reports last year. Millsap's camp originally said he and Lee should get about the same, because their numbers were similar. And do you recall what Lee was asking for? $12M!!! The deal Portland gave Millsap actually ain't that bad. In comparison to other PF's, Millsap's value was probably around $6-$7M. He's getting $8 average over 5 years, which is actually starting him at $6.5M with a 10% raise each year.Hard to form an opinion on KOC's approach based on the little bit of information we get. KOC called Mathews agent the night of FA--that call probably set the stage for the process and who knows what was said in the call.
If the Jazz truly meant that Wes was their priority they should have offered him the MLE. The Jazz were being cheap and they got burned..
RE: Matthews, I'm sure the Jazz would have gladly given Wesley a deal in the $3M-$4M dollar range on Day 1. Remember the QO is only a formality required by the NBA to retain his rights. It's really not an "offer"; who has signed for the QO?
When you boil everything down about this story, the 'fault', to the extent there is one, lies at Matthews feet.
If the Jazz truly meant that Wes was their priority they should have offered him the MLE. The Jazz were being cheap and they got burned..