Hardwood Knocks podcast

Hardwood Knocks

Sep 20, 2017
58 minutes

The New Orleans Pelicans are approaching perhaps the most important season in franchise history. - This slant is neither hyperbolic or inflammatory. It's the truth. So much is riding on how the Pelicans fare this year, after missing the playoffs in each of the past two seasons. - Pretty much everything starts with DeMarcus Cousins' free agency. He will hit the open market in 2018, and while the Pelicans get to dangle a fifth year that no one else can, his return is hardly guaranteed. If they fall out of the playoff picture or get the sense he's itching for a relocation, they'll have to look at moving him around the trade deadline.  - And if he leaves, Anthony Davis' future is suddenly shrouded in mystery, if not butter-thick panic. The notion that the Pelicans must shop him now is overblown (read: stupid). He cannot explore free agency until 2020 (player option), and the designated player exception he'll surely qualify for could keep him in town no matter what.  - Lose Cousins, and the Pelicans are forced to confront Davis' future head on. They can give it another go in 2018-19, then reevaluate the situation when he's one year out from free agency; shop him around the league as a top-10—verging on top-five—player with two years left on his deal next summer; or keep him and hope for the best. - All this, of course, could become a non-issue if the Pelicans make the playoffs. But will they? Bourbon Street Shots' Mason Ginsberg (@MasonGinsberg) joins Hardwood Knocks to preview New Orleans' 2017-18 go-round, and all that's on the line beyond it. - As always, be sure to subscribe to and rate Hardwood Knocks on iTunes. You can also find us on Stitcher and BlogTalkRadio. And as 50 Cent's biopic suggests: Follow Andy Bailey (@AndrewDBailey), Dan Favale (@danfavale), the show (@HardwoodKnocks) and NBA Math (@NBA_Math) on Twitter or die trying. - - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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