Posted: Tue Dec 12, 2006 6:00 pm
AI is going to be traded - but where?
Posted Tuesday December 12
The Allen Iverson sweepstakes reportedly were nearing a conclusion Tuesday, but where the All-Star will end up is still anybody's guess.
Boston? Minnesota? Denver? Indiana?
All have been mentioned as possible (and logical) destinations for Iverson.
Meanwhile, the rumor mill Monday was cranking out nearly as many new scenarios as Iverson has tattoos.
The hottest involved the Bobcats, who have enough room under the salary cap to absorb Iverson's $17.2 million salary without having to send back another big-money player in return. Charlotte needs a marquee player to put bodies in the seats, and new team co-owner Michael Jordan has always admired the little guard. The Bobcats and Sixers reportedly were close to a deal Monday, but Iverson nixed it because he doesn't want to play for the lowly Bobcats.
Why Iverson would have any say in the matter is a mystery, given that he is the one who requested a trade. We apparently won't know until the deal is completed, since Sixers GM Billy King is not returning phone calls.
At any rate, Golden State and the Los Angeles Clippers also were in the Iverson mix as of Monday. The Warriors reportedly are dangling Jason Richardson (who has missed the last four games with a sore knee), as well as Adonal Foyle. The Clippers have Corey Maggette and perhaps could include Shaun Livingston. As one Eastern Conference executive said Monday, "[Clippers owner Donald Sterling] likes superstars."
Meanwhile, the Bulls reportedly have no interest in Iverson despite an erroneous report that they would offer a package involving Ben Gordon, Michael Sweetney and a draft pick. "I know we're not a team that's in there talking about it," coach Scott Skiles told the Chicago Sun-Times. "I haven't given it a whole lot of thought. Wherever he ends up, he ends up."
One Western Conference executive I spoke with Monday predicted Iverson would end up with the Nuggets. "They could offer Andre Miller, a draft pick and an expiring contract in Joe Smith," he said. "Plus, it enables [King] to trade him out of the conference."
All we know for sure is that it won't be easy to trade Iverson, even if he is one of the game's biggest stars and box-office attractions.
For one, Iverson is 31. That's a relatively advanced age for a point guard, especially one who is 6 feet and has been fearlessly driving to the hoop and getting banged around like a pinball the past 10 years.
Moreover, Iverson still has two years and $40 million remaining on his contract after this season. It means any team taking him now has to be willing to risk that he won't slow down and become a salary-cap albatross in 2008 and '09.
Obviously, the biggest obstacle King faces is that everybody knows his predicament. Like the Ron Artest situation a year ago, Iverson's fractured relationship with the Sixers has been made public.
"His back is against the wall, so to speak, because people know he has to move him," says one Eastern Conference executive who wished to remain anonymous. "It makes things a whole lot tougher."
Like the Pacers (Artest) and Raptors (Vince Carter) in recent years, the Sixers are in a bind. They know they have to move Iverson, but they don't want to just give him away. Meanwhile, some teams are circling like sharks to try to take advantage of Philadelphia's predicament.
"It makes it tougher, but it's not insurmountable," says former Magic GM John Gabriel, now a scout with the Trail Blazers. "There's always a partner out there. As long as you play your cards right, you can get a deal done."
One big question is whether the Sixers should wait it out, perhaps until the trade deadline, in an effort to extract a better deal. That's what Pacers boss Donnie Walsh did a year ago with Artest, and he wound up getting Peja Stojakovic from the Kings.
Still, others point out that waiting presents its own risks. A potential trade partner might decide to go in a different direction in the meantime. Also, the distraction of daily trade rumors could have an ill effect in the locker room. The flip side to Walsh's patience a year ago was that the Pacers players and coaches had to deal with daily questions about Artest and where he might be headed. After awhile, forward Jermaine O'Neal came out and admitted it was becoming a distraction because some players kept hearing their names mentioned in possible trades.
The Sixers, who are still not that far out of the race in the woeful Atlantic Division, have to weigh the present. They probably feel they can perhaps make a run at one of the final playoff spots in the East.
"You don't want it to go on very long," Gabriel says. "A situation like this can absolutely take over your team, regardless of how well it might be playing. ... You don't want the trade deadline working against you either. There are only so many expiring contracts out there. You don't want other guys to make deals for those."
So that's the situation facing King on Tuesday as he gets set to pull the trigger.
One Internet betting site had the T'wolves and Pacers listed as the favorites to acquire Iverson, at 2:1 odds. The Celtics were listed at 3:1 and the Nuggets at 5:1.
Then again, that was as of Monday. By Tuesday everything had changed.
Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/w ... index.html