Antonio is a Raider

My Oakland, soon to be Las Vegas, Raiders traded 3rd and 5th round 2019 draft picks to the Pittsburgh Steelers for wider receiver Antonio Brown.

Initial reaction, great… We’re adding a prima donna receiver and giving him more money on top of a three year contract. What could go wrong? A lot.

While no receiver of Brown’s caliber or contract length has ever been traded, I have reservations about the move putting the Raiders back into the playoff hunt.

This team needs improvement at every position, including quarterback. It’s uncertain how committed the team really is to Derek Carr. The vibes feel off however if Carr takes full advantage of Brown’s top tier talent he’ll solidify the position.

There’s a lot to breakdown here. Who won the trade? Ultimately both teams. The Steelers get off Brown’s money and personality, opening an opportunity to unquestionably feature Juju Smith-Schuster and build upon their team with more cash.

The Raiders get perhaps the best receiver in the NFL forfeiting two picks this year. I hate to see the 3rd rounder go; however, you have to give something of value.

Is a 3rd and 5th equal to Brown? No, so the Raiders paid of less value in compensation.

Adding Brown will serve as a litmus test for Carr’s future with the team. Carr’s performance was awful last season but deserves another opportunity after a year of transitioning with Jon Gruden and a sorry offensive line.

Look… This team still needs work everywhere, but this line should be better. Gruden claimed injuries dogged the line, somewhat true, yet the team reached on guys like Kolton Miller. OL coach Tom Cable did not produce results as he had in the past.

They’ve had a full season and an new off-season. There should be some improvement, enough to give Carr to throw it. If he still can’t do that it’s time to move on.

I expect Brown’s first year as a Raider to be solid to great; unfortunately, that’s where I foresee his antics replaying themselves.

If the team isn’t competing as he’s used to or Carr doesn’t throw his way lookout for drama. Carr must perform well or the organization has to hope Brown buys into Gruden’s vision…

Whatever the hell it is, and there lies my biggest concern as a fan. Gruden clearly orchestrates every aspect of football operations yet I can’t see or feel the team’s identity, culture, or what its plan(s) are.

If Antonio Brown is your foundational piece to establishing those aspects history is against us.

Perhaps times are changing. Chiefs’ receiver Tyreek Hill might get a $100 million dollar contract. Cannot deny his value to the team’s system and young QB.

Receivers historically just don’t equate to win shares, for example Odell Beckham Jr.

While it’s flashy to have Brown on my team now, certainly the biggest star we’ve had in over a decade, I worry this will mean nothing when it comes to winning games.

Fit For a King

I’ve been a LeBron James hater for most of my life. He cries every time he doesn’t get a call. He falls short in The Finals. Arguably two lucky breaks away from only having one title to his name, yet today The King has now taken his talents to Downtown Los Angeles, my favorite team.

From all media reports and just overall vibes, it seemed LeBron would end up here but not today. I thought they’d have to acquire my favorite player Kawhi Leonard first from The Spurs, but by joining The Lakers now, $154 million dollars for four years, with a fourth year option, he’s bought them time.

They’ve already moved fast signing Lance Stephenson, a bitter rival of James, and have no pressure to trade valuable young players and draft picks away to The Spurs. They should keep all their young pieces at all costs. If they can trade Lonzo Ball to the Hornets for Kemba Walker it would be a miracle. Ball and his family bring too much drama to a team that now employs the greatest player since Michael Jordan.

Next, if needed, trade whatever draft picks you have over the next three years. With LeBron in the fold we’re in win now mode. He’s best suited with three point shooters around him. They’ll have to find players to surround James and fill up their bench.

There’s still Luol Deng’s dog shit contract to either stretch or somehow (likely impossible) trade. They’ll have to figure out what to do with Julius Randle. I watched Bobby Marks on ESPN talk about either extending him or outright renouncing him to make salary cap room. I’m not sure that’s the move. It’s in their benefits to retain him, finding other ways to make room, and/or just waiting to next season.

Whatever happens in the next few hours and days, The Los Angeles Lakers have returned. We are no longer in the genesis of rebuilding. LeBron James acts as the keystone to build a contender around.

I’m not certain we can win a championships with him. He’s 3-6 in The Finals, The Laker’s front office is unproven, and our team is made of players younger than me. Tonight however has given credibility to the organization. Co-general managers Magic Johnson and Rob Palinka can more easily recruit players to come play with James and a promising young roster.

At first it felt cheap to have added LeBron, but this is our history. From Kareem to Kobe we’ve always embraced premiere players. Yes, James is older and due for at least some deterioration, yet after what he did this past year I won’t doubt him again. Bringing that sorry Cavs team to The Finals is his greatest professional accomplishment besides winning championships. Even better than 2007.

Welcome to Southern California LeBron James. I hope your family thrives out here and selfishly I hope this will allow your son to realize all our collective dreams of facing off against you in the NBA some day soon.

Golden Luxury

Source: Stacy Revere / Getty

After falling behind to a tremendous Cleveland Cavalier effort The Golden State Warriors engineered a victory behind 43 points and 13 rebounds from Kevin Durant.

GSW fell behind early enduring a LeBron James triple-double, a great Kevin Love double-double, and 15 points from Rodney Hood off the bench. Hood particularly damaged GSW early into his minutes. Even with all those solid efforts the Cavs could never pull away by no fault of their own. They never commanded the game. No matter how well they defended him, Kevin Durant always made a bucket to keep GSW in the game.

It seemed Cleveland would just get this one. Steph Curry couldn’t hit a three with an Ohio hooker holding his prick and showing him the way. Thanks for the quote Four Leaf. Klay Thompson did not play well either. Andre Iguodala returned tonight but wasn’t the difference many believed. There wasn’t the usual third quarter surge tonight. JaVale McGee microwaved 10 points in 14 minutes but Durant’s 65 FG% carried the squad.

In third quarter GSW managed to catch up but neither team could pull away. Cleveland received contributions from several different players. It seemed like Durant was the only one scoring for his team primarily backing down defenders for fade-aways. With four minutes left in the fourth it was winning time.

Curry finally hit a big three, Iguodala and Draymon Green had massive dunks, but Durant’s three from 30 ft away, reminiscent of last year, slayed The Cavaliers with less than a minute left.

Golden State now needs one more game to win three titles in four years. We should remind ourselves Kevin Durant’s decision two years ago made this possible. He’s the ultimate extravagance. When the two greatest shooters arguably ever go cold they turn to Durant. When he struggles, the splash brothers inevitably overwhelm the opponite.

In the Houston series I had concerns with his play. Durant himself admitted displeasure with his performance. Curry up until tonight lead the team, but when he couldn’t the golden luxury took over. This team seems impossible to defeat and will add another title Friday night.

Golden State can play average but as long as they’re engaged with either Curry, Thompson, or Durant leading the team they will undoubtedly win, every time.