Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Camby is Gone! Now What?

(Boulder-CO) My day has been dominated with different media types and fellow fans alike calling me to try and make sense of this Marcus Camby trade to the Clippers in what appears on the surface to be one of the worst moves in the Nuggets' most recent history. And believe me, I've heard it all from those who are ready to cash in their season tickets and give up on this franchise to those who are actually happy that the Nuggets made the move they did. Furthermore, both sides present valid points when breaking this trade down, but for those of you who haven't had the chance to take a real comprehensive look at this maneuver you've come to the right place.
Salary: Obviously, we all knew the Nuggets would make an attempt to cut their salary down going into this season after last year's salary cap bulging payroll. By sending Marcus to L.A. for a possible second round pick in next year's draft the Nuggets do just that. Immediately, that money can be used to lock up the futures of J.R. Smith, Linas Kleiza, and/or anyone else management may have on their radar. The only remaining question when understanding this angle of the trade is why the Nuggets didn't do the exact same thing with Kenyon Martin? K-Mart makes more money and as long as the Nuggets were going to practically give someone away it would have made more sense to me to dump the under productive Martin before Camby. But, then again, maybe the other end of the deal wanted nothing at all to do with Martin...
The Trade Exception: The Nuggets are currently sitting on a $10 million dollar trade exception that could be used to pick up part of the tab on a future maneuver. As of right now, it's senseless to send Camby’s salary to the coast only to bring in more salary this season with the trade exception. The reasoning behind this is two fold: First because using it now will cost them $20 million once the luxury tax is accounted for, and secondly by holding onto the exception until next summer's draft affords the Nuggets the luxury of waiting to see who else may become available in the meantime.
Immediate Future: No one is sure as of right now what the Nuggets' high priced think tank is actually scheming. For all we know, Denver brass (a group that is not afraid to make big moves) has only executed phase one in a set of many to turn the corner and produce a championship caliber product. The Nuggets are a franchise that, in my opinion, is a piece or two away from being right there in the thick of the championship contending pack. The bottom line is they still have the most potent offensive duo in the league, two of five of the most promising young talents from the 2004 and 2005 drafts, and a huge question mark to be answered by Nene. If management is correctly betting on those three aspects to pay off, and they do, this seemingly bizarre trade certainly becomes more comprehensible.
Age and Durability: Marcus Camby turns 35 after the All-Star recess next season and the historically injury prone Captain just played back-to-back 70+ game campaigns. Is that to say Marcus is due to go down for an extended stay at the inactive hotel? Let's hope not, but history has a funny way of repeating itself and brass would look genius if in fact he does vacation at said resort in L.A. and leaves the recently injury-decimated Clippers right back at square one.
With those four points in mind, (and hopefully Nene is locked away in a rubber room on a high protein diet somewhere) I think the Nuggets may have made the correct move with Camby. Sure, a first round pick would have been better, but with only the Grizzlies and Clippers under the salary cap and willing to take on a player and situation like Camby's it's at least a push.
Keeping him and putting essentially the same team back on the floor next season wouldn't have been any better. Furthermore, the knee jerk reaction is that it would appear the 2008-09 Nuggets may give the NBA's All-Time points allowed per game for a season a run for it's money, but the one thing we did know was how bad this team was defensively with Camby. Maybe shuffling the deck, and the return of a healthy Nene, will make a big difference in the Nuggets' overall defensive abilities. Because when you critically analyze Camby's defensive style the only thing the Nuggets will surely miss in the absence of Marcus is shot blocking. He was a mediocre at best one-on-one post defender and rebounds are almost sure to be grabbed by whoever else is in the position to hit the boards.
With all that being said, don't bail out on those season tickets and NBA League Passes yet! My gut feeling is the Nuggets wouldn't have extended AI's contract for another $21 million dollars to put a team that floats around .500 on the Pepsi Center hardwood next year. If that was the case and rebuilding was the goal. The Nuggets would have given AI his walking papers. Meaning... there has to be something else going on behind the scenes...
Go Nuggets!

9 comments:

Unknown said...

My first reaction was WHAT!!! HUH!! They traded Camby for a swap of 2nd round picks!! If Ben Wallace, a worse player than Camby IMO, can get a 60mil dollar deal in his mid 30's, then why can we not at least get a 1st rounder out of the Clippers for Camby.

But then, I got to thinking. We could swap Camby for another castoff player that another team doesn't want (ie: Zach Randolph) but then, where does that get us? In the end, we probably would not be getting a player that truly fits what Denver needs, plus it would not fix the Luxury tax situation THIS year.

This was the only option Denver had to reduce salary for this season. And to be honest, this allows Denver to sign JR to a contract and not lose him, which to me should be priority #1 this off-season.

However, if Denver does not use this trade exception, than this trade becomes one that we gave up a talented player for nothing, and to me would be a failure. So this is almost like a delayed trade. The trade is not complete until Denver uses that Trade Exception.

The options now available to Denver become great indeed. I still do not see Denver using it this off-season or season, but rather next year around draft time.

I like this trade in some ways, but it makes you feel like we are stepping backward, and that is not a good feeling. But sometimes patience is in order.

Good looking out once again Nick!

Unknown said...

Well Nugg Doc either you present a very thorough incite to the Nuggets as they stand today, or you surely passed Rhetoric 101 in college with an A+!! I choose the thorough incite. Still makes a fan scratch his head wondering if the Nugget brass is scratching their collective asses on this one. I think the most telling thing you covered was the loss of a shot blocker with little else defensively to go along with it. I hope K Mart realizes he is looked at as such a cancerous thug the Nuggs couldn't even give him away. And AI gets to collect millions for...well...being the, and I choke on this,,,new second to Melo, team leader???? There has to be a block buster deal in the works. Maybe we give AI and KMart to the 14ers for the rights to Manute Bol.

Nugg Doctor said...

btalk,

I did well in that course! But seriously, I'm with you on the blockbuster deal idea. There just has to be more going on then appears on the surface. Unless, like you said, Nuggs brass is scratching their collective asses on this one.

And as far as Manute Bol goes... SIGN HIM!!!!!

Thanks for reading,

The Nugg Doctor

Unknown said...

In regards to you asking why they would extend Iverson without something in the works is an easy answer for me, the $21 million dollar investment puts asses in the seats, and sells jerseys. I think they are scrapping next year, hopeful to get a nice draft pick, and rebuilding for 2009/10 and 10/11.

Mordecai

Arthur said...

The nuggets did not extend Iverson, it was a player option. Iverson wanted a contract extension and the nuggets refused. As it stands, if the nuggets stand pat, they'll have $20 mil coming off the books next year, and they'll actually be under the cap.

Unknown said...

i agree with all you said, good Dr., except i think Kmart deserves more credit than he is given- he was playing real man to man defense when very few others were.

the other thing i like about this move is that its going to force the Nugs to play a different style of D. I think the sort of open defense that brought people in to be swatted by Camby was causing everyone problems- he was a stop gap that allowed Melo and Co. to think it was ok to have such big ass gaps.

i like camby though, as a man, and i wish him well.

but i really hope the nugs lock JR down, he's my favorite nugget these days.

radar said...

OK, Nuggs, you put the spin on it in the best way possible...the logical reaction of a fan who feels dismayed over what seems to be an idiotic move. Yes, CottonCamby was always an injury risk. But not compared to Nene.

To be real, this likely means Denver scores points, is fun to watch, and misses the playoffs next year and hope to be in a position to make some major moves for two years down the road.

Or, it could be just a salary dump driven entirely by luxury tax revulsion and with no regard for the competitive result for the team at all.

Guess you guys will be the Enver Nuggets next year, huh? *wink*

Unknown said...

With the denver nuggets being one of the worse defensive teams with camby i can't imagine how they are going to play without him. It was a horrible move on denvers part to trade camby for a 2nd round pick.

deb said...

They must be dreaming. They traded Marcus?! I'm going to need a Doctor to get over this news. I'm traumatized! Never been much of a Clippers Fan, but I LOVE MARCUS CAMBY! What were they thinking?!?!