- October 28th, 2012, 10:46 am
#409357
Not surprised by the trade, I knew with the contract Harden was going to take (a max or nearly max deal) from OKC was going to precipitate an exit from OKC by either Westbrook or Harden. I am shocked that they made the trade now though. It doesn't make them much worse as Kevin Martin can score buckets left and right in his sleep, but it does take them down a slight bit this year. Likely out of championship contention status unless Jeremy Lamb emerges quick as a defensive guy who can score - basically a Thabo Sefolosha type that can score. Kevin Martin is an atrocious defender, but it's not like James Harden was locking down his opponent, and James Harden played about as bad as a max contract player can play in an NBA Finals.
I think Sam Presti ran circles around Houston in this trade.
1) Presti got a significantly better deal out of Harden than Orlando got out of Dwight Howard even though it wasn't a well kept secret that Harden or Westbrook were virtually guaranteed to be traded if Harden refused to sign for less than the max.
2) I don't really buy Harden as a max contract type of player. Right now he's basically Manu Ginobili in his prime, but a lesser defender and playmaker than Ginobili, and was Manu never offered a max contract as far as I know. He has definitely never signed a max contract, I know that with 100% certainty
3) They gave up more straight up talent to get Harden. Martin gives nearly the same offensive value at a cheaper price and they gave up a promising rookie that has the best value contract in sports - an NBA rookie contract.
4) Martin is one of the most efficient scorers in NBA history. Martin has the fifth best career offensive rating and sixth best true shooting percentage among active players. He rankes 23rd and 21st respectively in those two categories in NBA history. And that efficiency comes as the go-to scorer on every team he's been on since his third year in the league, just imagine what he will do when surrounded by two elite scorers in Westbrook and Durant! His offensive efficieny is likely to be off the charts by coming off the bench as the sixth man going against backups while also getting more open looks and more room to penetrate with Westbrook and Durant freeing him up.
5) On top of that, Houston gave up a very likely lottery pick, another first, and a near first in the 2013 draft. With how well Sam Presti drafts, you can basically book it that he'll get at least one quality player out of those three picks if not two or three.
The Thunder acquired guards Kevin Martin and Jeremy Lamb, two first-round picks and a second-round pick in the surprising deal that was completed Saturday night. Oklahoma City also sent center Cole Aldrich and forwards Daequan Cook and Lazar Hayward to Houston.One of the first round picks is Toronto's 2013, so a lottery pick for sure, and the second rounder is Charlotte's 2013 second, so OKC will still be able to get a low first round quality player with that pick. The additional first rounder is the Dallas first in 2013
Not surprised by the trade, I knew with the contract Harden was going to take (a max or nearly max deal) from OKC was going to precipitate an exit from OKC by either Westbrook or Harden. I am shocked that they made the trade now though. It doesn't make them much worse as Kevin Martin can score buckets left and right in his sleep, but it does take them down a slight bit this year. Likely out of championship contention status unless Jeremy Lamb emerges quick as a defensive guy who can score - basically a Thabo Sefolosha type that can score. Kevin Martin is an atrocious defender, but it's not like James Harden was locking down his opponent, and James Harden played about as bad as a max contract player can play in an NBA Finals.
I think Sam Presti ran circles around Houston in this trade.
1) Presti got a significantly better deal out of Harden than Orlando got out of Dwight Howard even though it wasn't a well kept secret that Harden or Westbrook were virtually guaranteed to be traded if Harden refused to sign for less than the max.
2) I don't really buy Harden as a max contract type of player. Right now he's basically Manu Ginobili in his prime, but a lesser defender and playmaker than Ginobili, and was Manu never offered a max contract as far as I know. He has definitely never signed a max contract, I know that with 100% certainty
3) They gave up more straight up talent to get Harden. Martin gives nearly the same offensive value at a cheaper price and they gave up a promising rookie that has the best value contract in sports - an NBA rookie contract.
4) Martin is one of the most efficient scorers in NBA history. Martin has the fifth best career offensive rating and sixth best true shooting percentage among active players. He rankes 23rd and 21st respectively in those two categories in NBA history. And that efficiency comes as the go-to scorer on every team he's been on since his third year in the league, just imagine what he will do when surrounded by two elite scorers in Westbrook and Durant! His offensive efficieny is likely to be off the charts by coming off the bench as the sixth man going against backups while also getting more open looks and more room to penetrate with Westbrook and Durant freeing him up.
5) On top of that, Houston gave up a very likely lottery pick, another first, and a near first in the 2013 draft. With how well Sam Presti drafts, you can basically book it that he'll get at least one quality player out of those three picks if not two or three.