Friday, March 4, 2011

Audigy Card Front Headphone

Mood: these buy-outs that spoil my enjoyment

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--- See Boston and Miami commit Troy Murphy and Mike Bibby shot me a small grin. Because it's not funny. Paris and the bold choice of Boston (the exchange Perkins against Green reinforces his bench and his offensive potential at the expense of the center position and his defensive potential) and Miami (put most of his chips on three big stars in knowing he will not have much to invest in the rest of workforce) lose their piquancy if these franchises can mitigate these risks taken by retrieving the players of the caliber of Troy Murphy or Mike Bibby also easily.

--- Every year, I delight to see unfold before my eyes the tasty game of transfers and other means of recruitment and the strategies associated with them, to see franchises decide to cut a piece of their external sector to strengthen their domestic sector, or vice versa because they think it will make their team more efficient, to see more sacrifice their future for the benefit of this by exchanging a pair of ultra-ups promising against a veteran producer of a good behavior to the next evening to see the most desperate accept being plundered mercilessly with Hope you can rebuild everything from scratch, etc ... However, this tendency for some clubs to release elements of values so that they can reach large stables shower just my pleasure. All the charm of this game full of tribulations, dilemmas and gamble that has built around the idea that a franchise can not normally acquire a reinforcement without leaving something back, loses some of its substance.

--- This is my way of seeing things and I do not criticize the decisions of the four players (franchises and players), they are a logical and relentless relevance. Moreover, I claim not good that more steps be taken to reverse this trend. It's just that it's less funny.

StillBallin