Reaction on the Battier trade
Friday, June 30th, 2006
by John
Upon hearing about the Rockets trade of #8 draft pick Rudy Gay for Shane Battier on Wednesday night, I’m probably one of the few people who thought the trade was “okay” rather than a disaster. I liked Gay, but didn’t feel the Rockets could take chances and wait for him to develop. Battier isn’t spectacuclar, but is solid and should help out Yao and T-Mac in many regards. He’s still relatively young at 27, and his accurate shooting, good defense, and sound fundamentals will come in handy since the Rockets lack in those areas. Look for Battier to raise his career scoring average from 10.5 points per game to 15-ish for the offensively challenged Rockets.
There is an article in today’s Houston Chronicle with more reaction from Battier, T-Mac, and former Memphis Grizzlies coach Hubie Brown which I recommend reading. Here is an article that says Jeff Van Gundy was fine either way with Gay or Battier.
Also thrown into the trade and shipped off to Memphis was Stromile Swift, who I thought wasn’t as bad as people believed. Sure, he was a disappointing rebounder, but when he was aggressive and had one of those amazing dunks of his, he brought alot of energy to a relatively lackluster bench. After getting off to a slow start, he just seemed to placed in the doghouse with the Houston media and couldn’t rid himself of the baggage he brought from Memphis.
Underappreciated was Swift’s ability to hit the 12-15 foot jump shot, pleasantly surprising me with his shooting form. Knowing the Rockets luck, what will probably happen is that once he’s back in Memphis, he’ll probably thrive and win the Most Improved Player of the Year Award in 2007, and show how the Rockets gave up on him too soon, kind of like Boris Diaw of the Phoenix Suns, who was a throw-in last year on the Joe Johnson trade with the Atlanta Hawks.
What’s disturbing is that the Rockets courted Swift heavily and was able to convince him to sign with Houston for a much lower salary than he probably could have commanded from New Jersey or other teams. Remember that he was one of the most sought after free agents during the 2005 off-season. He came here more for the chance to win a championship than to make top dollar. Now after one year under the “bad fit” of playing under a slow-it-down coach like Jeff Van Gundy, they give up on him and ship him off, and he has a contract that is paying him less than he could have signed last year. I’d be a little peeved if I were him.
I wonder if this will end up hurting the Rockets’ reputation among agents around the league who may not believe the Rockets when they want to sign a player at a discount in exchange for a better chance to win a championship with Yao and T-Mac? Before T-Mac was on the scene and the Rockets had Steve Francis, the same thing kind of happened when the Rockets signed players like Eric Piatkowski and Adrian Griffin, along with Mike Wilks (who had just signed a contract), and then traded them for Dikembe Mutombo. I liked the trade, but they seemed to give up on Piatkowski and Griffin pretty early, too.
Anytime you’re dealing with Jerry West, you have to be cognizant that you may have been snookered when it comes to trades. Remember West was the mastermind in L.A. who traded Vlade Divac for Kobe Bryant. Everyone thought Divac was a solid pro who could help out Charlotte (kind of like Battier for Houston) and that Bryant had loads of potential. We all know who won that trade.
Upon hearing about the Rockets trade of #8 draft pick Rudy Gay for Shane Battier on Wednesday night, I’m probably one of the few people who thought the trade was “okay” rather than a disaster. I liked Gay, but didn’t feel the Rockets could take chances and wait for him to develop. Battier isn’t spectacuclar, but is solid and should help out Yao and T-Mac in many regards. He’s still relatively young at 27, and his accurate shooting, good defense, and sound fundamentals will come in handy since the Rockets lack in those areas. Look for Battier to raise his career scoring average from 10.5 points per game to 15-ish for the offensively challenged Rockets.
There is an article in today’s Houston Chronicle with more reaction from Battier, T-Mac, and former Memphis Grizzlies coach Hubie Brown which I recommend reading. Here is an article that says Jeff Van Gundy was fine either way with Gay or Battier.
Also thrown into the trade and shipped off to Memphis was Stromile Swift, who I thought wasn’t as bad as people believed. Sure, he was a disappointing rebounder, but when he was aggressive and had one of those amazing dunks of his, he brought alot of energy to a relatively lackluster bench. After getting off to a slow start, he just seemed to placed in the doghouse with the Houston media and couldn’t rid himself of the baggage he brought from Memphis.
Underappreciated was Swift’s ability to hit the 12-15 foot jump shot, pleasantly surprising me with his shooting form. Knowing the Rockets luck, what will probably happen is that once he’s back in Memphis, he’ll probably thrive and win the Most Improved Player of the Year Award in 2007, and show how the Rockets gave up on him too soon, kind of like Boris Diaw of the Phoenix Suns, who was a throw-in last year on the Joe Johnson trade with the Atlanta Hawks.
What’s disturbing is that the Rockets courted Swift heavily and was able to convince him to sign with Houston for a much lower salary than he probably could have commanded from New Jersey or other teams. Remember that he was one of the most sought after free agents during the 2005 off-season. He came here more for the chance to win a championship than to make top dollar. Now after one year under the “bad fit” of playing under a slow-it-down coach like Jeff Van Gundy, they give up on him and ship him off, and he has a contract that is paying him less than he could have signed last year. I’d be a little peeved if I were him.
I wonder if this will end up hurting the Rockets’ reputation among agents around the league who may not believe the Rockets when they want to sign a player at a discount in exchange for a better chance to win a championship with Yao and T-Mac? Before T-Mac was on the scene and the Rockets had Steve Francis, the same thing kind of happened when the Rockets signed players like Eric Piatkowski and Adrian Griffin, along with Mike Wilks (who had just signed a contract), and then traded them for Dikembe Mutombo. I liked the trade, but they seemed to give up on Piatkowski and Griffin pretty early, too.
Anytime you’re dealing with Jerry West, you have to be cognizant that you may have been snookered when it comes to trades. Remember West was the mastermind in L.A. who traded Vlade Divac for Kobe Bryant. Everyone thought Divac was a solid pro who could help out Charlotte (kind of like Battier for Houston) and that Bryant had loads of potential. We all know who won that trade.