Trade of the Season: McGee to Nuggs / Nenê to Wiz
So, the trade deadline has come and gone. The giant blockbuster we were all expecting to happen didn't. Dwight is not only still on the Magic, but he signed a waiver saying he must stay with them until the end of the 2012-13 season. Tough break for the Nets, but I'm honestly pretty happy about it. I don't want him to be in Brooklyn next year. I don't want the next generation of New Yorkers to grow up to be Nets fans, although that seems inevitable (especially for Brooklyn and fans of Jay-Z). Jamal Crawford has stayed in Portland (but their coach has been fired - good news for him). Surprisingly, Monta Ellis was traded for Andrew Bogut giving the Bucks, if anything, an entertaining backcourt. But it remains to be seen how well Jennings and Ellis will play together. Mike D'Antoni resigned as the coach of the New York Knicks. I am EXTREMELY happy about this. But this is not the time nor the place. I'm here to talk about the McGee/Nenê/Young mini-blockbuster. Most importantly, the McGee/Nenê part. That's not to say that adding Nick Young to the Clippers isn't a good or bad move, but we all know what Nick Young does - create black holes. That is not what I'm interested in. This is the most intriguing trade of the year because it contains the most intriguing player - JaVale McGee.
To many, McGee is a joke. He has created that name for himself by constantly getting benched for his poor attitude. He also has quite the blooper reel under his belt for this year (see video below for some examples).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgSYA3Gb7oI
He is incredibly immature and can be an off court problem as well. But he also has some serious talent, and I like him, especially when all the Nuggets had to offload was Nenê, whose numbers never really got to where they should be. He is the definition of injury prone (I credit him immensely for overcoming his battle with cancer). He is a fighter. He has heart. But from a purely basketball standpoint, I'm taking McGee every time.
McGee puts up solid numbers. Like most big men, his FT% is poor, but other than that he is a stat machine. His rebounding, scoring and blocking have all increased this year (averaging 11.9 PPG, 8.8 RPB, 2.5 BPG respectively), even under the disaster that is the Washington Bullets Wizards. Under George Karl, his numbers will continue to rise. Karl will also keep McGee in check better than whoever is coaching the Wizards (John Wall?). (Side note: I love John Wall and have nothing but respect for the kid. Article on him in the works). Regardless, JaVale will mature faster and learn more from one of the most prolific and well respected coaches of the last 20 years, than he would have if he stayed with the Wiz.
Nenê, on the other hand, is the center that never was. Every year I've watched (and hoped) for him to explode. I was banking on all-star numbers. I'd tell all my friends to 'watch out for Nenê this year.' That year never came, and doesn't seem like it will ever come. He is injured too often to ever have a serious chance at getting in a groove. While he is a beast when healthy, those times are becoming more and more uncommon. That's not to say his numbers aren't respectable (13.4 PPG, 7.4 RPG, 0.9 BPG), but there is no upside. This is where Nenê will settle, and if anything decline. He also has 5 years left on a 13 million dollar contract that will inevitably lead to more time on the bench than on the court.
My prediction for McGee is a terrible adjustment period, then possibly some more bench time for immaturities sake, but then a sky rocket. I'm seeing him at 15 PPG, 10 RPB, and staying relatively level at 2.8 BPG within the next year or so. Those blocks are the difference maker. All it will take is for McGee to care more and grow up, and putting him on a playoff driven, well rounded, veteran-filled, very deep team may be the solution. The bottom line is that McGee has tremendous upside, while we all know what Nenê and Young can (and can't) do. Great move for the Nuggets.
Salvatore











