One thing has been apparent since Vivek Ranadive became the
new owner of the Sacramento Kings and hired Pete D’Allessandro to be the
general manager - there is no such thing as being too aggressive.
D’Allessandro came through on his promise to build a young,
athletic contender by trading for Rudy Gay and then persuading him to opt in to
the final year of his $19.3 million contract.
I think it's fair to say that the entire Kings fan base and myself are happy about that.
It seems like the next move for the Kings and Pete D'Allessandro would be to re-sign Isaiah Thomas to a long-term deal.
Yet, there is another question that I have for the Kings.
Is there any possibility that D’Allessandro could land the
most coveted free agent in NBA history in LeBron James?
It’s not very likely. However, I wouldn’t be extremely
shocked if it did happen.
LeBron wants to go to a team filled with young players who
he can mentor and grow with.
Anyone who watched the 2014 NBA Finals quickly
realized that LeBron was the lone star of a team with no bench or other star players who could take over. Statistically, the
2007 Cavaliers team that LeBron took to the Finals had a better 7-man rotation
than this years’ Heat team. For those who don’t believe…. Check out this
article (http://bit.ly/1l9l8Lo).
It’s pretty hard to believe that the Miami Heat’s supporting
cast played worse in the championship than the 2007 Cavaliers, whose best
players outside of LeBron was Larry Hughes, Drew Good and Zydrunas Ilgauskas.
However, the numbers never lie.
With that being said, LeBron could go anywhere and
completely tilt the scales of the basketball universe.
Pat Riley’s post-Finals press conference definitely didn’t
help. In fact, it only took a few days for LeBron to respond by opting out of the
final two years of his contract.
LeBron didn’t want to be challenged by Riley to stay. James
wants to see Riley become more visible in the organization and get him younger
players and a bench that can compete with the likes of the Spurs and Clippers.
James is best friends with Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh, but I think that he realizes now that they've yet to fit and jell as a tandem. For whatever the reason, they haven't made it look as easy as skeptics thought they would.
It doesn't help that the Heat have old and beat-up players like Shane Battier, Greg Oden and James Jones who literally did NOTHING in the championship.
James definitely had reasons to opt back in with Miami.
LeBron was set to earn $20.5 million next season and a $22.1 million player
option the following year.
It's up to Pat Riley to fulfill his promise and keep building a roster around James. It's yet to be seen if Riley's pompous attitude will be his benefit or his downfall.
It's like deja-vu how LeBron is doing this four years after his initial free agency fiasco.
Whatever LeBron does, one thing is for sure. Every
basketball fan will be checking ESPN every day to see where he ends up.
Because love him or hate him, we would all love LeBron James
to be on our favorite NBA team.