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Chris Paul

Danny Granger, Chris Paul and the Miami Heat

by Jared Wade on August 13, 2010 at 11:21 am

I’m just going to excerpt very liberally from this wonderful post because (a) Shoals weaved together a cohesive fabric of insights that can’t really be separated and remain as salient, and (b) you should be reading The Works regularly and maybe seeing this in its entirely will compel you to do so.

It remains to be seen whether Trevor Ariza will do right by NOLA. Or, to put it another way, whether Chris Paul will be one step closer to not leaving, and the era of the super-teams kept at bay. Certainly, the Hornets think so; in trading Darren Collison, they parted with the league’s ultimate contingency plan. But the Paul situation was getting thorny, the man wanted some help, and circumstances demanded sooner, not later.

Except while all eyes were on Paul, wondering if he would squander valuable prime on a team treading water, we forgot about Indiana’s Danny Granger.

It’s okay, most people do. And unlike Paul, Granger isn’t in contention for greatest ever at his position. Yet the new, harsh logic of the NBA goes something like this: the finest players are entitled to quality teams, or else, they will join forces and form encampments of their own.

Just because Danny Granger wasn’t asking for a trade, or seen as likely to make trouble before his 2014 free agency, it doesn’t mean he lives in a different league.

Chris Paul may have Trevor Ariza to toss alley-oops to, but Granger — who should see the playoffs a few times before he retires — is the star whose needs were really addressed. The irony, of course, is that we had all spent the last month guessing at Paul’s state of mind.

Granger, however shoddy the Pacers were, never raised a fuss or forced the issue. And yet he ended up the biggest winner in the trade.

Okay, it was the Pacers who won, since the team filled their most glaring need with a top-flight player. Teams are bigger than their stars; Collison could go on to surpass Granger; no one man is bigger than an entire roster, a whole that a point guard can bring real coherence to. Yet getting Darren Collison showed that the Pacers have been paying attention.

You can’t take your stars for granted, or leave them high and dry as other teams load up. Hate the Heat if you want; it’s because of them that Indiana made sure to make a move. In the end, it’s not about player demands, empowerment, expectations, or labor issues. It’s not about competitive imbalance. It’s about teams realizing that players want to win.

Yes, I know, making it too easy to win is a sin against the sport. The more important principle at play, though, is that talent is a terrible thing to waste. That goes for players who never become who they are; it should hold equally for franchises lucky enough to land Danny Granger late in the first round. He’s shown them loyalty by committing long-term. The least they can do is reward him as they would a Chris Paul potentially looking to bounce.

I have nothing to add.

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My Second Favorite Team

by Jared Wade on August 20, 2009 at 8:17 pm

ESPN has reached out to the TrueHoop Network to get some perspective on which teams are our favorite teams other than our actual favorite teams. For those scoring at home, that means “Who is your second favorite team?” For me, it’s a tough call between Miami and New Orleans because they employ my two favorite players in the league to watch, Dwyane Wade and Chris Paul. Ultimately, however, considering how much I love the city of New Orleans and the fact that I’ve never been to Miami (in addition to the fact that I’ve watched more Hornets games than Heat games over the past three years), the decision wasn’t all that hard. My second favorite team to watch is definitely NOLA.

TrueHoop will be posting some of our responses in the coming days, but I wanted to share this with you in advance since me and you are tight like that. So even though this isn’t Pacers-related at all, here ya go: The reason I love watching the Hornets.

chris-paul-i-believe

The devastation that Hurricane Katrina caused throughout New Orleans in 2005 represented the most unforgivable breach of fiduciary duty I had ever witnessed. So it was through the lens of recent tragedy that I was delighted to watch, just a few short months later, the all-world ascension of Chris Paul, a player to whom I would donate both my kidneys if necessary. Basketball, of course, is no elixir for recovery, but if there was one place that deserved the unique joys that only a pure point guard can provide, it was NOLA.

I was instantly hooked.

In Paul’s third year, I must have watched 40 Hornets games and, much to my surprise, David West and Tyson Chandler evolved into more than just role players. They were legitimate forces in the NBA. The CP3-to-Chandler alley oop, aka the Crescent City Connection, became my nightly highlight delight as West’s mid-range accuracy and Peja’s Barry-Pepper-in-Saving-Private-Ryansque marksmanship spaced the floor for Paul to dribble wherever he wanted, whenever he wanted.

As we now know, however, the wheels came off the ‘07-08 Nawlins’ team in Game 7 against the Spurs. Then, last season marked a downtrodden decline back to mediocrity as injuries decimated the roster and Tyson Chandler became a shell of his former self.

Still, with Paul at the helm, Emeka Okafor bringing new blood to town and the city still enamored with the NBA, there’s no other team I would rather watch win than the Hornets — aside from my beloved Pacers that is.

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