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Keep Wallace a Bobcat


I feel like this may sound like a broken record, but I decided to go ahead and post these thoughts. There's no doubt a lot of chaos going on in the Bobcats universe, and we certainly have much to think about. The coaching change is keeping us preoccupied, and of course there's  never ending rosterbation, which has recently intensified due to the coaching change. While there's many things floating around in our minds, one of particular interest has been at the forefront for me: Gerald Wallace.

Star-divide

So there's a lot of talk of making trades and tweaking our roaster. Some even suggesting we blow it all to smithereens. And that's just fine. I understand and agree that changes have to be made. That being said, my concern is what becomes of Gerald Wallace

 

In these uncertain times, some proclaim that no one on this roster is untouchable. I would have to disagree, and even suggest that such thought could be dangerous. I think one of many problems that frequently plagues sports teams is that of continuity. How does one achieve and maintain successful continuity? Well friends, that's best left for another post, but for today's subject at hand, I would argue that Gerald Wallace is the best aspect of continuity that this team has and can have in the upcoming season or two.

 

                                                     Act_gerald_wallace_medium

via hoopedia.nba.com


 

 

Wallace is the Last Original Bobcat. Our first All-Star. The face of this franchise, and a true fan favorite. Is he valuable in a potential trade? Yes, of course. But even if you're rebuilding, you need to maintained a good veteran (a player who is both good on and OFF the court, like Wallace is) around your young core. You need a player to maintain continuity for the team and for the fans. Wallace is that player. He's quite possibly the only Bobcat that casual fans and the general public know about it. The real fan base enjoy seeing Wallace play, and that counts for something too. Across the country, NBA fans recognize Wallace's athleticism and hard work ethics.

 

Obviously, circumstances would be entirely different if Wallace was not a good player, but that's not the case. He's always been an important component to our team, and he broke through to national attention last year, and had arguably his best season during our first run to the playoffs. With that said, even the most loyal fan would admit that Wallace's output is down when compared to the previous season, but that's okay friends. Such things happen. Wallace still has much to contribute, and if we do enter rebuilding mode, I argue that Wallace would be the perfect veteran, and fan favorite, to maintain around a new, young core.

 

What's more, I rate Wallace's overall value with things other than statistics. Now stay with me here, friends. Stats are important in sports, there's no doubt about that. Some place to much emphasis on it, but that's a subject for another post. We know what Wallace's stats are. We know what his stats were last season, the season before that, and the seasons way back in Sacramento. There's a trusty thing called Google, after all. I recognize Wallace's stats, and agree that they contribute to his overall value, but I also recognize and admire characteristics that are not represented by cold statistics. You guys know what I'm talking about. Wallace's athleticism. His passion for the game. His passion to his team and his passion for the fans. This is a player who hustles and chases every loose ball. And then of course, there's his defense, something that is not always necessarily well represented by statistics. These are all characteristics that would serve a new young core well. There's much that many can learn from Wallace.

 

                                 Gerald-wallace-icons-pe-04_medium

via images.sneakernews.com


 

And what of Tyrus Thomas, you say? I feel that Thomas is another important piece to our Bobcats, and that he, along with Wallace, should be kept on. There's no doubt in mind that Thomas will probably see his minutes increase with the coaching change, which is good, because he definitely needs more experience. Thomas is a player with a lot of potential, although still with a lot of raw power. I think both players can coexist without a problem.

 

I hope the front office keeps Gerald Wallace a Bobcat. I acknowledge his potential trade value, but at this time, there's very little, if any move, that I would be pleased with if it involved Wallace. And that friends, would include any potential blockbuster trades that say, might involve Carmelo.

 

 

                                                Wallace_profile12_medium

via ryansarda.files.wordpress.com


Just a few rumblings. Sorry for the lengthy post.

 

 

 



Comment 38 comments  |  3 recs  | 

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Good read.

Sums up nicely the value of Wallace as a ’Cat.

by CharginChuck on Dec 23, 2010 11:23 AM EST reply actions  

What does Wallace want?

Does he want to stay around to rebuild again? Or would he prefer to be dealt to a team where he has a chance to win?

Oh no! We suck again!

by Bring Back Primoz on Dec 23, 2010 11:44 AM EST reply actions  

Hear, hear.

If there is truly just one “untouchable” on this roster, his name is Gerald Wallace.

Patiently waiting behind Dominic McGuire on the depth chart.

by Newsinz on Dec 23, 2010 12:03 PM EST reply actions  

The last original Bobcat doesnt mean sh!t!!!

Do the Lakes still have Kareem, Magic and Worthy? Or have they moved on?

There is a time when the team needs to move on, as well as the players. Wallace could net us some decent future pieces, and we cant get caught up in sentimental feelings.

Larry Brown- Common Sense's Worst Enemy

by T-TIME, I MEAN DUNK TIME on Dec 23, 2010 12:35 PM EST reply actions  

I understand your point, but you used some really bad examples.

James Worthy and Magic Johnson played for the L.A. Lakers their entire careers.

After Abdul-Jabbar was traded to L.A. from the Milwaukee Bucks, he stayed with the Lakers until he retired.

If you’re suggesting that the Bobcats should “move on” after Wallace retires, then great!

Patiently waiting behind Dominic McGuire on the depth chart.

by Newsinz on Dec 23, 2010 12:49 PM EST up reply actions   1 recs

A better example would be when the Charlotte Hornets lost Zo and LJ

They were two of the faces of the franchise, but the team became better after they left.

by Ft.Mill Bobcat on Dec 23, 2010 4:33 PM EST up reply actions  

The team also left town after they left

After fans gave up on the franchise, who lost its soul.

by ClipCat on Dec 24, 2010 12:22 PM EST up reply actions  

It wasn't because Zo and LJ left

Glen Rice & the later additions were more than enough on the court.

The newness wore off. Shinn & a few players had some off court hi-jinx and the media blew it way out of proportion. After a while the non-basketball fans stopped coming to games, the media grew more negative, and snowball kept rolling. The arena referendum was a stupid idea, Woolridge came on board, and the Hornets went bye bye. The problem was never the talent or on court play of the Charlotte Hornets. They had a great history in Charlotte.

by Ft.Mill Bobcat on Dec 24, 2010 2:05 PM EST up reply actions  

I was here, too

I know that the falloff in fan support didn’t come immediately after they left, and of course there were other important developments that killed interest. But if Charlotte had kept a talented and interesting team here, the fans wouldn’t have bailed so easily.

by ClipCat on Dec 24, 2010 2:24 PM EST up reply actions  

The Hornets had a talented and interesting team every season in Charlotte

True basketball fans never lost interest. The people who attended because it was a social event or place to be seen were the ones who stopped attending. When the Panthers arrived in 1995, this also brought some competition for the fickle casual fan.

by Ft.Mill Bobcat on Dec 24, 2010 2:34 PM EST up reply actions  

Definitely the Hornets lost all semblence of trendiness by the end

But by then a lot of true basketball fans gave up on them, too. It’s not like the only people who gave up on the Hornets were just the wine and cheese crowd.

Checking back, the Baron/Mashburn versions of the Hornets were better than I gave them credit for being, but they seemed very generic at the time at least to me. I was definitely a huge NBA fan, and the Hornets were one thing that attracted me to come to Charlotte. But I just didn’t have much interest in rooting for them by the end. I still came to games when I could, but it was mainly to watch other teams.

by ClipCat on Dec 24, 2010 11:55 PM EST up reply actions  

That's what was known as the Michael Jordan effect.

Although we were a top half eastern team most years, knowing that we would never get pass the Bulls always kept some people away from rooting for the team.

by Charlotte Bobcat on Dec 25, 2010 2:27 PM EST up reply actions  

I’m sure that was the case for some people, but in those days I rooted for two teams – the Clippers and whoever was playing against the Bulls. It kills me that Jordan is the owner of the Bobcats now.

by ClipCat on Dec 25, 2010 8:16 PM EST up reply actions  

I hated MJ when the Bulls came to Charlotte

Later in his career, the refs always gave him the calls/ non-calls.

When MJ came back to the NBA after Double-A baseball was over, he played 17 games with the Bulls. They improved and grabbed the 5th seed. The Hornets had a great season, but ended up with the 4th seed. Jordan ruined our dreams that season.

I am glad he is one of us now.

by Ft.Mill Bobcat on Dec 25, 2010 11:14 PM EST up reply actions  

I was there until the end (2/3 of home games) enjoying some of the best basketball Charlotte has seen.

The Charlotte Hornets went from leading the league in attendance from 1988 to 1998 with 23,000+ per game to the following totals.
1999-00 – 17,874
2000-01 – 15,010
2001-02 – 11,286
I believe the numbers for the last three seasons are overstated, but these are still good sized crowds.

by Ft.Mill Bobcat on Dec 25, 2010 10:57 PM EST up reply actions  

I don't think it was because the newness wore off.

It certainly wasn’t the players either. It was Shinn himself. He soured me and every other fan I knew at that time. As soon as we got all into a player, Shinn traded him away to save a few bucks. Although I’ve already had one person disagree with that evaluation elsewhere on RoF I still hold to it. ‘Zo, Larry Johnson, hell, even Mugsy Bogues, the heart, soul, and face of the Hornets, fell to Shinn’s constant player dumpage. Yes, Mugsy’s knees were fairly shot, but you don’t repay loyalty, dedication, and the millions of dollars Bogues put in Shinns pockets over the years by tossing them on the rubbish heap. Mugsy’s exit was the last straw for me.

That, along with the sexual allegations, the demand for a newer, more expensive building when there wasn’t a blessed thing wrong with the hive, and Shinn’s general distain for owning up to any of his actions were enough for me. Shinn never appreciated what he had here in the Carolinas. All he could think of was “more.” This community gave him sellout crowds for years only to be told that without many more luxury boxes and high-priced seats he couldn’t afford to maintain the team. He had revenue figures that were the envy of almost every other team in the league. Figures that now keep Michael Jordan awake nights as he tries to come even halfway towards duplicating them. When Shinn took his toys with him to NOLA a lot of people, myself included, lost interest in the NBA. When the Bobcats came to town my faith in the NBA was reborn with it.

Proud member of the creative team bringing you the Trade Street Post, the latest member of the Bobcats blog family.

by Ourdaywillcome on Dec 24, 2010 4:49 PM EST up reply actions  

Shinn pissed me off when he brought in Woolridge, demanded a new arena, and considered selling the team.

The roster moves are just part of the NBA. Zo and LJ were making huge demands. With the brilliance of Bob Bass, the disgruntled players were always parlayed into better replacements.

I didn’t like what happened with Muggsy, but the doctors were saying he had lost all cartilage in one of his knees. Muggsy was the type of underdog achiever that would never quit. He went on to play three more seasons. His numbers were never that exciting. His style of play always was. He tailed off during his final three seasons before hanging it up. Muggsy will always be a Charlotte Hornet.

I also gave up on the NBA when the Hornets moved to NOLA. And I was surprised when I regained my passion when the Bobcats returned.

by Ft.Mill Bobcat on Dec 25, 2010 11:05 PM EST up reply actions  

Perhaps you should have said...

Does Cleveland still have Lebron?
Does Toronto still have Bosh?
Does Phoenix still have A’Mare?
Does Washington still have Arenas?

Get it?

Can we call Karl Malone? I’d like him here…even at his age, he stayed in great shape and I think he may still have it(I heard he has those “special” Sketchers and is planning a comeback)
;-)

Wait for itâ„¢

"Proud member of the creative team at tradestreetpost.com - the newest member of the Bobcats blogging community."

by andrewlail76 on Dec 23, 2010 1:12 PM EST up reply actions  

It would cause too much trouble.

A crowd of women would show up to watch Gerald do things to his mouthpiece.
Another crowd of women would show up to watch the Mailman do things with his tongue during free throws.
All that heightened estrogen is going to result in a gigantic girl fight in the stands and not one guy in the house (including the players and refs) would pay attention to the game. They’ll all be watching the free show on the Jumbotron.

If it happened on “free pillow night” Perdue might have to call out the National Guard.

Proud member of the creative team bringing you the Trade Street Post, the latest member of the Bobcats blog family.

by Ourdaywillcome on Dec 24, 2010 5:25 AM EST up reply actions  

True Dat!

Agree 100% Lets hold onto a guy until he’s worth nothing just because he’s the last original Bobcat! Please! If trading him helps us start over imo i’m all for it!

by Clay Edge on Dec 27, 2010 10:28 PM EST up reply actions  

REC

Figure out how to move the bad contracts – Diaw, Jax, Diop, Carroll, Najera – before messing with Crash. Otherwise do nothing, and wait out the mess. This team should have learned by now that quick fixes don’t work.

by ClipCat on Dec 24, 2010 12:26 PM EST reply actions  

Lol, you too huh?

Shamefully, that’s my biggest reason to want to keep Crash.

by Charlotte Bobcat on Dec 27, 2010 4:06 PM EST up reply actions  

When we retire his number in a few years those shirts will be "vintage gear" even if we DO trade him.

And trust me – Charlotte WILL retire the jersey. Jordan never met a PR/photo-op he couldn’t exploit.

Proud member of the creative team bringing you the Trade Street Post, the latest member of the Bobcats blog family.

by Ourdaywillcome on Dec 27, 2010 6:39 PM EST up reply actions  

I just think it'll burn so bad the day we trade him.

I mean, if people that were “scrubbish” in Charlotte (Felton, Chandler, Okafor, Dudley, S. Brown) go on to have decent careers else where, imagine what Wallace could do in the spotlight.

I can hear it in my head now…………
“Wow, Gerald Wallace is proving himself to be one of the elite in the league. Quite possibly a top 10 player. What were the Bobcats thinking?”

by Charlotte Bobcat on Dec 27, 2010 6:55 PM EST up reply actions  

If he were 5 years younger, I'd agree with you 100%

Proud member of the creative team bringing you the Trade Street Post, the latest member of the Bobcats blog family.

by Ourdaywillcome on Dec 28, 2010 1:41 AM EST up reply actions  

Lol, yeah. I just don't think he's hit his limit yet.

I think he hit his limit in LB’s system, but I think he’s got a lot more to offer us in this new offense. I mean, giving Crash all the room to run around he needs. Can you imagine how many offensive fouls he’s going to pick up now?

by Charlotte Bobcat on Dec 28, 2010 11:13 AM EST up reply actions  

As long as he’s happy in Charlotte, keep him. It’s not like Jordan has proven himself a master of deal-making. Every night I go to sleep fearful that I awake to hear Crash was traded for a pile of rubbish.

by Tommy West on Dec 31, 2010 5:38 AM EST reply actions  

+1. I think this new look

offense will energize Gerald to a level we haven’t seen in a while. I mean, even better than last year. I don’t expect him to ever have those rebounding numbers over the course of a year again, but I think we’re on the verge of seeing a few 30 point performances from Crash.

by Charlotte Bobcat on Dec 31, 2010 8:13 AM EST up reply actions  

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