It's a family dispute and it can definitively be overcome, and at the very least should be attempted whole heartedly. However, if it can't, then Poole, undoubtably, is the one who should be traded, not Draymond. If Greene is traded, that seismic shift in dynamics would be akin to the "jumping the shark" death knell felt by TV shows who kill off a favored character. The demise of the Warriors would be precipitous and immediate, and there would be no coming back from it either. We can't put a statistical finger on why Dray makes the Warriors better, but we know that he does. Likewise Dray would never be that impactful on another team either. His career would die and whither the moment he dons another uni. Likewise Curry might still be a statistical juggernaut, but his team would whither under the weight of mediocrity until his retirement, and poor Clay will will become a forgotten footnote in annals of the NBA. However, Jordan would thrive almost anywhere else. In fact it might be his best option. He isn't integral to the chemistry, and it's obvious that his personality is somewhat grating, at least to Draymond. Let him go and make a name for himself somewhere else if he and Dray can't put this behind them.
Thanks for the perspective and you could be entirely right on both accounts. They could simply get over it and if not they might get worse if they trade Dray away.
I think the problem though is Draymond still feels what he did was merited as his apology looked more like formality than true remorse. Not sure if you saw my previous article after the video dropped
And I think giving a Green the near max extension that he's been publicly asking for (and the true cause of this altercation) would be a seriously long term mistake, especially since the best closing unit is Curry, Poole, Klay, Wiggs, Loon as we saw in the Finals - Dray no longer is the rebounder he once was.
It's a family dispute and it can definitively be overcome, and at the very least should be attempted whole heartedly. However, if it can't, then Poole, undoubtably, is the one who should be traded, not Draymond. If Greene is traded, that seismic shift in dynamics would be akin to the "jumping the shark" death knell felt by TV shows who kill off a favored character. The demise of the Warriors would be precipitous and immediate, and there would be no coming back from it either. We can't put a statistical finger on why Dray makes the Warriors better, but we know that he does. Likewise Dray would never be that impactful on another team either. His career would die and whither the moment he dons another uni. Likewise Curry might still be a statistical juggernaut, but his team would whither under the weight of mediocrity until his retirement, and poor Clay will will become a forgotten footnote in annals of the NBA. However, Jordan would thrive almost anywhere else. In fact it might be his best option. He isn't integral to the chemistry, and it's obvious that his personality is somewhat grating, at least to Draymond. Let him go and make a name for himself somewhere else if he and Dray can't put this behind them.
Thanks for the perspective and you could be entirely right on both accounts. They could simply get over it and if not they might get worse if they trade Dray away.
I think the problem though is Draymond still feels what he did was merited as his apology looked more like formality than true remorse. Not sure if you saw my previous article after the video dropped
https://stevierayzendejas.substack.com/p/drays-sucker-punch
But IMO its not something that is overcome.
And I think giving a Green the near max extension that he's been publicly asking for (and the true cause of this altercation) would be a seriously long term mistake, especially since the best closing unit is Curry, Poole, Klay, Wiggs, Loon as we saw in the Finals - Dray no longer is the rebounder he once was.
https://stevierayzendejas.substack.com/p/the-trade-the-warriors-need-to-make
But like I said, you could be right, but, I've been trying to push for Dray's exit long before this situation, so there's my bias.