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Rule #1

Pacers Digest is intended to be a place to discuss basketball without having to deal with the kinds of behaviors or attitudes that distract people from sticking with the discussion of the topics at hand. These unwanted distractions can come in many forms, and admittedly it can sometimes be tricky to pin down each and every kind that can rear its ugly head, but we feel that the following examples and explanations cover at least a good portion of that ground and should at least give people a pretty good idea of the kinds of things we actively discourage:

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Now, does the above cover absolutely every single kind of distraction that is unwanted? Probably not, but you should by now have a good idea of the general types of things we will be discouraging. The above examples are meant to give you a good feel for / idea of what we're looking for. If something new or different than the above happens to come along and results in the same problem (that being, any other attitude or behavior that ultimately distracts from actually just discussing the topic at hand, or that is otherwise disrespectful to other posters), we can and we will take action to curb this as well, so please don't take this to mean that if you managed to technically avoid saying something exactly like one of the above examples that you are then somehow off the hook.

That all having been said, our goal is to do so in a generally kind and respectful way, and that doesn't mean the moment we see something we don't like that somebody is going to be suspended or banned, either. It just means that at the very least we will probably say something about it, quite possibly snipping out the distracting parts of the post in question while leaving alone the parts that are actually just discussing the topics, and in the event of a repeating or excessive problem, then we will start issuing infractions to try to further discourage further repeat problems, and if it just never seems to improve, then finally suspensions or bans will come into play. We would prefer it never went that far, and most of the time for most of our posters, it won't ever have to.

A slip up every once and a while is pretty normal, but, again, when it becomes repetitive or excessive, something will be done. Something occasional is probably going to be let go (within reason), but when it starts to become habitual or otherwise a pattern, odds are very good that we will step in.

There's always a small minority that like to push people's buttons and/or test their own boundaries with regards to the administrators, and in the case of someone acting like that, please be aware that this is not a court of law, but a private website run by people who are simply trying to do the right thing as they see it. If we feel that you are a special case that needs to be dealt with in an exceptional way because your behavior isn't explicitly mirroring one of our above examples of what we generally discourage, we can and we will take atypical action to prevent this from continuing if you are not cooperative with us.

Also please be aware that you will not be given a pass simply by claiming that you were 'only joking,' because quite honestly, when someone really is just joking, for one thing most people tend to pick up on the joke, including the person or group that is the target of the joke, and for another thing, in the event where an honest joke gets taken seriously and it upsets or angers someone, the person who is truly 'only joking' will quite commonly go out of his / her way to apologize and will try to mend fences. People who are dishonest about their statements being 'jokes' do not do so, and in turn that becomes a clear sign of what is really going on. It's nothing new.

In any case, quite frankly, the overall quality and health of the entire forum's community is more important than any one troublesome user will ever be, regardless of exactly how a problem is exhibiting itself, and if it comes down to us having to make a choice between you versus the greater health and happiness of the entire community, the community of this forum will win every time.

Lastly, there are also some posters, who are generally great contributors and do not otherwise cause any problems, who sometimes feel it's their place to provoke or to otherwise 'mess with' that small minority of people described in the last paragraph, and while we possibly might understand why you might feel you WANT to do something like that, the truth is we can't actually tolerate that kind of behavior from you any more than we can tolerate the behavior from them. So if we feel that you are trying to provoke those other posters into doing or saying something that will get themselves into trouble, then we will start to view you as a problem as well, because of the same reason as before: The overall health of the forum comes first, and trying to stir the pot with someone like that doesn't help, it just makes it worse. Some will simply disagree with this philosophy, but if so, then so be it because ultimately we have to do what we think is best so long as it's up to us.

If you see a problem that we haven't addressed, the best and most appropriate course for a forum member to take here is to look over to the left of the post in question. See underneath that poster's name, avatar, and other info, down where there's a little triangle with an exclamation point (!) in it? Click that. That allows you to report the post to the admins so we can definitely notice it and give it a look to see what we feel we should do about it. Beyond that, obviously it's human nature sometimes to want to speak up to the poster in question who has bothered you, but we would ask that you try to refrain from doing so because quite often what happens is two or more posters all start going back and forth about the original offending post, and suddenly the entire thread is off topic or otherwise derailed. So while the urge to police it yourself is understandable, it's best to just report it to us and let us handle it. Thank you!

All of the above is going to be subject to a case by case basis, but generally and broadly speaking, this should give everyone a pretty good idea of how things will typically / most often be handled.

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If this is done the wrong way, those comments will be deleted, and if it's a repeating problem then it may also receive an infraction as well.

Rule #3

If a poster is bothering you, and an administrator has not or will not deal with that poster to the extent that you would prefer, you have a powerful tool at your disposal, one that has recently been upgraded and is now better than ever: The ability to ignore a user.

When you ignore a user, you will unfortunately still see some hints of their existence (nothing we can do about that), however, it does the following key things:

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Regarding infractions, currently they carry a value of one point each, and that point will expire in 31 days. If at any point a poster is carrying three points at the same time, that poster will be suspended until the oldest of the three points expires.

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Author's Name
Indianapolis Star

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The legal means of watching or listening to NBA games are NBA League Pass Broadband (for US, or for International; both cost money) and NBA Audio League Pass (which is free). Look for them on NBA.com.

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We prefer self-restraint and/or modesty when making jokes or off topic comments in a sports discussion thread. They can be fun, but sometimes they derail or distract from a topic, and we don't want to see that happen. If we feel it is a problem, we will either delete or move those posts from the thread.

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Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

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  • #16
    Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

    GMs sometimes make decisions for the long term while sacrificing the short term.

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

      Originally posted by Shade View Post
      So then, the DD for JO trade was a bad deal for us? DD was the better player at the time.
      I just typed a reply but it didn't post correctly, so here goes again.

      I didn't think it was a bad trade at the time. We can obviously say it turned out better for us over time as JO turned into a superstar and a top Pacers player of all time.

      At the time of the trade, Dale was leaving his prime and JO had been sitting on the bench because Dunleavy Sr didn't like him and JO had better players ahead of him at his position.

      By giving it several years to judge the trade, you're basically saying, "If Rush and Jack are better than Bayless, then it was worth it. If Bayless turns into a superstar, then the trade was a bust." Any kid can figure that out. The tough part is judging a decision on the information that was known at the time.

      For example, if the Pacers knew (or should have known) that Bender's knees were what they are, then they made a bad call. If doctors and/or training staff had no reason to believe that Bender didn't have any real knees, then you can't hold that against Donnie Walsh years later.

      This is a basic logical fallacy -- outcome bias.

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

        Yeah, too early to draw any conclusions. Except to say, so far so good. But in three years who knows

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

          You all know how I feel about Bayless and the trade, so I reserve the right to say "I told you so" if it doesn't pan out for us.

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

            Originally posted by Shade View Post
            So then, the DD for JO trade was a bad deal for us? DD was the better player at the time.
            I'll say it. Yes, it was a bad deal for us.


            Basketball isn't played with computers, spreadsheets, and simulations. ChicagoJ 4/21/13

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            • #21
              Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

              I agree with Peck and will go one further by saying the AD for JB trade was the snowball in what has become an avalanche of poor decisions by this franchise. I'm aware that both AD & DD expressed desires to be traded etc...This team has made bad coaching choices. I say that not necessarily meaning the coaches were bad but probably not the right guys at the right time. For example Carlisle should have been the choice after Bird not Zeke. But Brown should have replaced Thomas not Carlisle. There have been drafting problems, trade problems, free agent snafu's, bad contract extentions, questionable public comments etc...They've been Donnie's, Larry's, Simon's, Morway's etc...Then the coaching staffs have made their share of poor decisions when it comes to discipline, rotations, favoritism, public comments(or lack thereof). Of course the players haven't lived up to expectations, which most of the time were conservative. Nobody expected Jamaal to be a perennial all-star or Jackson to fill the shoes of Reggie etc..but they could have at least been men.
              I'm in these bands
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              • #22
                Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

                The Portland trade looked bad at first. Now I'm just undecided. Jack isn't the long term solution to backup PG. We'll have to see how Rush & Bayless pan out, so far Rush has a tremendous advantage. Of course he's getting minutes on one of the worst teams in the NBA and I'm pretty sure Bayless would be seeing the court for the Pacers too.
                I'm in these bands
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                • #23
                  Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

                  Originally posted by Dr. Goldfoot View Post
                  I agree with Peck and will go one further by saying the AD for JB trade was the snowball in what has become an avalanche of poor decisions by this franchise..
                  So you thought it was a bad trade at the time? I don't see how. We took depth and traded it for fair market value -- that's how teams

                  There's no way you were down on the trade on the last game of the regular season when Bender went up for that alley oop dunk. The crowd couldn't believe the play even though he missed it. So many fans in my section made comments about Bender being the real deal.

                  To me, it gets old hearing people bash moves after unknown issues come out. Like I said, if the team had no way of knowing about Bender's knees, then you can't hold them accountable for that.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

                    I was 23 and remember the trade announcement during the draft. Hated it. Hated it even more when Bender did nothing to get us to the finals and AD could have been a tremendous help during that series against Shaq. That trade marked the onset of the core of that team being dismantled.
                    I'm in these bands
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                    The Bar Brawlers
                    ME

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                    • #25
                      Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

                      Originally posted by Dr. Goldfoot View Post
                      I was 23 and remember the trade announcement during the draft. Hated it. Hated it even more when Bender did nothing to get us to the finals and AD could have been a tremendous help during that series against Shaq. That trade marked the onset of the core of that team being dismantled.
                      Come on -- Antonio was not a Shaq stopper and wouldn't have changed the outcome. No one could defend Shaq then.

                      How could you have expected an 18-19 year old rookie to help a team of veterans go to the Finals? Why would you expect that?

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

                        If Antonio was still playing, we wouldn't have made it past the Knicks to get into the finals. No way AD duplicates Croshere's performance.
                        This space for rent.

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

                          Originally posted by Dr. Goldfoot View Post
                          The Portland trade looked bad at first. Now I'm just undecided. Jack isn't the long term solution to backup PG. We'll have to see how Rush & Bayless pan out, so far Rush has a tremendous advantage. Of course he's getting minutes on one of the worst teams in the NBA and I'm pretty sure Bayless would be seeing the court for the Pacers too.
                          I think Jack is more likely to be the long-term solution at backup PG than Ford at starting PG.



                          I frankly thought Brandon Rush should have been a top-10 pick. Trading down to get him + Jack is okay with me.
                          Why do the things that we treasure most, slip away in time
                          Till to the music we grow deaf, to God's beauty blind
                          Why do the things that connect us slowly pull us apart?
                          Till we fall away in our own darkness, a stranger to our own hearts
                          And life itself, rushing over me
                          Life itself, the wind in black elms,
                          Life itself in your heart and in your eyes, I can't make it without you

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                          • #28
                            Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

                            The only reasonable argument I've heard is imawhat's statement that you don't give away a star for "good players".

                            But this philosophy has two very big flaws:

                            1) None of us are time travelers. We can't take for granted that Bayless is a star in the making. We don't know anything about him really other than that he'll be riding pine for some time to come and he has NBA promise. I can only imagine the hurling of insults on PD about how we wasted a pick on a guy that isn't producing in two years. Keep in mind, I'm a very poor judge of college talent in that I don't follow the college game. Bobby Knight cured me of that permanently. I will never go back.

                            2) This isn't fantasy league. This is real life. You don't combine stats and think it translates into wins. You need to consider culture, personality, maturity, social dynamics, intelligence, knowledge, athleticism, skill, work ethic, and general team zeitgeist. Mix in how things will change in the future and how your move will also alter present circumstances. Look at the Clippers and Philly. This is not fantasy basketball. There are only so many points and opportunities to go around, and building a team with stats and "talent" as your only guide can seriously backfire. Now, I don't want this to go super-crazy off topic, but look at the talent here: Artest, ONeal, Jackson, Tinsley. That's one heck of a lot of basketball "talent". Goodness gracious talent is not the only answer.

                            One side note on the term itself: I never really liked the word "talent". The word is obtuse and overly simple. Talent is unquantifiable, it is a ghost, it is a term used when you lack the vocabulary to truly describe in detail a person's qualities and assets. teh meaning of the word is constantly shifting. One person might use it to describe a person's untrained ability, while another might use it as an umbrella term that covers the total package. So let's not use the term too much.

                            - - - - -

                            So, all that said, I'm lukewarm about the trade. I love Rush and McRoberts seems fine, but it only took watching Jack for a couple of games before I was ready to ship him off for a future second rounder. But the trade made sense for many reasons, not the least of which is it was founded on a team philosophy that I can endorse: we want good hearted, currently capable ball players here and we have a chance to turn Ike and a couple of slots difference in the draft into THREE players that all conform to those standards.

                            In the end, I believe that we got back more than we gave up, so the deal was a good one in my book.

                            - - - - -

                            PS - this doesn't even consider one important aspect: I believe the deal was set in stone before Bayless fell in the draft, and renegotiating a deal after you've shaken hands on it is unforgivable in this world. Yes, Bayless fell to a pick we had already promised elsewhere. Not much you can do about it.
                            “Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.” - Winston Churchill

                            “If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to serve as a horrible warning.” - Catherine Aird

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                            • #29
                              Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

                              Getting a top-5 pick in a strong draft out of Antonio Davis is a hell of a deal. The problem was who we used the pick on and the injuries which ruined his career.

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Re: Looking Back at the Recent Portland Trade

                                Originally posted by Los Angeles View Post
                                The only reasonable argument I've heard is imawhat's statement that you don't give away a star for "good players".

                                But this philosophy has two very big flaws:

                                1) None of us are time travelers. We can't take for granted that Bayless is a star in the making. We don't know anything about him really other than that he'll be riding pine for some time to come and he has NBA promise. I can only imagine the hurling of insults on PD about how we wasted a pick on a guy that isn't producing in two years. Keep in mind, I'm a very poor judge of college talent in that I don't follow the college game. Bobby Knight cured me of that permanently. I will never go back.

                                2) This isn't fantasy league. This is real life. You don't combine stats and think it translates into wins. You need to consider culture, personality, maturity, social dynamics, intelligence, knowledge, athleticism, skill, work ethic, and general team zeitgeist. Mix in how things will change in the future and how your move will also alter present circumstances. Look at the Clippers and Philly. This is not fantasy basketball. There are only so many points and opportunities to go around, and building a team with stats and "talent" as your only guide can seriously backfire. Now, I don't want this to go super-crazy off topic, but look at the talent here: Artest, ONeal, Jackson, Tinsley. That's one heck of a lot of basketball "talent". Goodness gracious talent is not the only answer.

                                One side note on the term itself: I never really liked the word "talent". The word is obtuse and overly simple. Talent is unquantifiable, it is a ghost, it is a term used when you lack the vocabulary to truly describe in detail a person's qualities and assets. teh meaning of the word is constantly shifting. One person might use it to describe a person's untrained ability, while another might use it as an umbrella term that covers the total package. So let's not use the term too much.

                                - - - - -

                                So, all that said, I'm lukewarm about the trade. I love Rush and McRoberts seems fine, but it only took watching Jack for a couple of games before I was ready to ship him off for a future second rounder. But the trade made sense for many reasons, not the least of which is it was founded on a team philosophy that I can endorse: we want good hearted, currently capable ball players here and we have a chance to turn Ike and a couple of slots difference in the draft into THREE players that all conform to those standards.

                                In the end, I believe that we got back more than we gave up, so the deal was a good one in my book.

                                - - - - -

                                PS - this doesn't even consider one important aspect: I believe the deal was set in stone before Bayless fell in the draft, and renegotiating a deal after you've shaken hands on it is unforgivable in this world. Yes, Bayless fell to a pick we had already promised elsewhere. Not much you can do about it.
                                I'm fine with Jack, we're just using him too much. His disposition, like Haywoode's before him, is to try to do something, to make something happen. As a result, he makes a lot of mistakes. Unfortunately, he may be the only player on the team that is that assertive, which is a problem.

                                Regarding the bolded, I would bet money that both Portand and Indiana knew, or at least strongly suspected that Bayless would be there. There were rumbles a day or two before the draft that he could fall that far. I think Rush was the guy Bird wanted, and, had the deal not gone through, we probably would've take Rush over Bayless.

                                I'm not saying that's right, wrong, or indifferent, I'm just saying that's my take on the situation.

                                I generally agree with the rest of your post (except for the Jack part).

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