Stop the presses and hold the phone. The trade winds, they are a-blowing. Allen Iverson reportedly wants out of Philadelphia. The man they call "The Answer" has apparently had it with the roster full of question marks the 76ers have surrounded him with. News reports say he has asked the Philadelphia front office to find him a new team. Papa Cass talks about whether or not the Cavs are a potential trading partner for the Sixers, what it would take to get him, and whether or not it's worth it.
Stop the presses and hold the phone. The trade winds, they are a-blowing.
The
man they call "The Answer" has apparently had it with the roster full
of question marks the 76ers have surrounded him with. News reports say
he has asked the Philadelphia front office to find him a new team.
It's
something Iverson said he'd never do. But as we all know, a
professional athlete's word and 75 cents will buy you a cup of
muffler-shop coffee.
Actually, this divorce has been more messy
and drawn-out than the one conducted by Prince Charles and Lady Di. All
offseason, there were rumblings that it would be in the lottery-bound
Sixers' best interest to trade Iverson and start a new rebuilding
project. The rumor mill churned out scuttlebutt that Philly management
was talking to the Celtics about a possible Iverson deal, but nothing
ever came of it.
Now, it appears that Iverson is, in fact, going
to be headed somewhere between now and the February trade deadline. The
Celtics keep appearing as a logical choice.
There aren't really
a lot of destinations that would satisfy both Philly's desire to clear
cap space and get young talent/draft picks, and satisfy Iverson's
desire to get back in the title hunt before his undersized body finally
gives out.
But, one of those places could be ... Cleveland?
Ridiculous, right? Playing with fire? What have I been smoking? Go on, yuk it up.
Iverson
would fill two very valuable needs for the Cavs: a reliable backcourt
scorer, and a tough-as-nails leader by example who will make his
teammates look bad if they aren't giving 100 percent effort.
That hard-nosed veteran who still has some game left that I've been writing about? That's Iverson.
Now, about constructing a deal that would land him...
To
take on Iverson's $17-odd million salary this year, it would require
the Cavs to give up one of their top two highest-paid players, either
the $9-plus million being earned by Zydrunas Ilgauskas or the $13-plus
million being earned by Larry Hughes.
Obviously, Hughes would be
the better of the two because the salaries match more evenly and it
would be a guard-for-guard trade. The NBA requires the financial
give-and-take of all two-team trades to match to within 15 percent.
The
Cavs would likely have to take on another long-term salary in the deal
to entice Philadelphia to take something besides draft picks, which the
Cavs don't have a lot of in the near future. Steven Hunter and Kyle
Korver would be the two most logical choices.
Besides Hughes or
Ilgauskas, the Cavs would have to load up the package with an
attractive combination of expiring contracts or young players.
The Cavs' expiring deals include Ira Newble, Sasha Pavlovic, Anderson Varejao, Scot Pollard and possibly David Wesley.
One
of the Cavs' two rookies, either Shannon Brown or Dan Gibson, would
likely also have to be included. Brown makes more money and would help
even out the deal, but Gibson is almost certainly the more attractive
of the two at the moment.
If Danny Ferry can piece something together out of all of that, the Cavs can become the new home team for A.I.
There
would be a significant amount of risk involved, and the Cavs would have
to part with players you don't want to see them part with. But the
combination of LeBron James and Allen Iverson could be a lethal one
that propels the Cavs to the top of the East.