Eh, loš deal, ovisi šta daš za njega očito, koju cijenu misliš platiti. Bullsi imaju jako mladu i jako perspektivnu momčad koja je na pravom putu, to srušiti da bi doveli Bryanta bi bilo jako loše i nebi se približili novom naslovu već udaljili.
Evo dio članka koji je protiv tog trejda:
Meanwhile, the Bulls would have the requisite superstar in Bryant to
march through the East, but his cast of playmates may have Chicago
marching in quicksand. The survivors of this purge would include
All-Star-caliber point guard Kirk Hinrich, unrepentant gunner Andres
Nocioni at the three and bouncy power forward Tyrus Thomas.
At
least Hinrich and Nocioni would make more jumpers through attention
paid to Kobe than his cronies did in L.A. But the Bulls still would
lack anyone (Bryant excepted) who can score on the block.
There's
another decent piece or two under contract, but Bryant's early Chicago
supporting cast certainly would draw favorable comparisons to MJ's. And
that's too bad, because Jordan didn't reach the league's success summit
until several years of talent auditions had been executed.
Another
potential mine field could be Kobe's relationship with Bulls coach
Scott Skiles, who isn't exactly a free-spirited, karma-acknowledging
sideline boss who happens to be dating the owner's daughter and rockin'
a soul patch. No, instead of a hipster genius, Skiles looks more like a
bulldog with a Tae Bo addiction.
Despite the presence of the Cubs and Blackhawks, expectations always
are considerable in Chicago, which may be America's finest sports city.
The passion for a Bulls revival under the watch of a Jordanesque hero
may be too much for Bryant to deal with.
Windy City trash-talk hosts and print columnists also figure to be far less forgiving than their peers in L.A.
As suggested previously, the peripheral contretemps may be overwhelmed by Kobe's on-court challenges.
Hinrich
may be a swell sidekick, but he's no Scottie Pippen. Perhaps the Lakers
would throw in Kwame Brown, who — given the MJ parallels — could be
Kobe's answer to Luc Longley.
I'd love to see how each situation
would unfold, even if pretending that anyone could be Michael Jordan's
equal seems like a colossal waste of time.