Senin, 21 Februari 2011

Winderman: "Melo" trade "Knicks now target Chris Paul, Dwight Howard - ProBasketballTalk

Yet not even think about breathing.

Trade Carmelo Anthony of the Denver Nuggets, the New York Knicks put not after all the focus on the field.

Not accurate in the NBA today, or more, tomorrow in the NBA.

Think of the last few months were the lessons in Denver abject cruelty?

So think about what comes next in Orlando and New Orleans.

While experts do not doubt its instant analysis on this mega-monstrosity Melo (we offer our reputation here in Denver for the maximization of opportunity) to solve this problem, at least offer prospects of a bow, deserves more incomplete , no.

Part of the manufacturing or interruption of this trade through a point of view of New York, just down the road, with the potential to free agency in 2012, both Chris Paul and Dwight Howard. With this new machine, and Chauncey Billups a contract that you rest of the year, the Knicks should run positioned to Paul and Howard are doing something more than a year.

When trade is now Anthony is the most resonance in New Orleans and Orlando. The Knicks are coming for their next stars.

And if Paul and Howard on what is currently reflected in more and then you see the possibilities with Stoudemire and Anthony, how could their desire not start ticking clocks travel a little faster?

Maybe the Knicks handed such a severe degree of commercial packaging because the introduction of a "franchise" tag in a new NBA collective bargaining agreement, would have considered one that Carmelo afraid of their mating choices.

But such a label could eventually franchise the opportunity to follow step by Paul Howard and costs.

Not for the Knicks - the absolute desolation of a list of the playoffs - to make sense at this stage, it means that the trains to start and share Chris Paul and Dwight Howard. (And who said the two were not found with dinner at Isiah Thomas in South Beach on Monday night?)

For Denver, the nightmare is over.

Orlando and New Orleans, it seems only the beginning.

Ira Winderman writes regularly for NBCSports.com and covers the Heat and the NBA for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. It can follow on Twitter at http://twitter.com/IraHeatBeat.

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