Be careful what you wish for, Stephen Jackson. Sometimes wishes do come true. Captain Jack got shipped to Charlotte for the equivalent of return bus fare.

Stephen Jackson had been demanding a trade since before the season started. His falling out with Don Nelson was well publicized in the days leading up to the season. Nelson even suspended him for 2 days for “conduct detrimental to the team.”

Despite leading the Golden State Warriors in points, assists, steals, threes and undoubtedly field goal attempts last year, the 10 year veteran got his wish and was drop-shipped to the Charlotte Bobcats (along with the disappointing Acie Law IV) for veteran shooting guard Raja Bell and forward Vladimir Radmanovic. The Bobcats are one of the worst offenses teams in the league and run the “slow it down,” Larry Brown offense that will challenge Jackson’s itchy trigger finger.

The trade looks like both teams had no other options and decided to move some cap space around. Golden State is giving away by far the most complete — albeit incredibly selfish — player in Jackson only to get guys that have no long-term future or upside. You could argue that this is the right thing for these organizations to do for this year: Jackson give a much-needed scoring presence to a flailing Bobcat offense; the Warriors get “addition by subtraction” removing a locker room cancer and freeing up space on their untested but talented roster. But you can bet by next season that none of the players in this trade will have any impact on either team.

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How is it possible that a first-ballot Hall-of-Famer and potentially the most athletic sub 6-footer in the history of the NBA can’t get a job? Has the NBA changed that much that a one-time scoring champ and a guy that averaged 20+ points just 1 season ago is unwelcome on any team?

If you ask Allen Iverson about his off-season, the “Answer” is YES!

So what happened from to The Answer in 1 season that makes him kryptonite to NBA GMs. Most will tell you it is chemistry. His foray in the Motor City did little to impress, as Iverson was unable to adjust to a smaller role. GMs want no part of a high-profile role-player if he doesn’t want to put the team first. Look at what “stars” have done for the LA Lakers with Lamar Odom coming off the bench; or the Boston Celtics’ Big Three sacrificing their individual numbers for team wins. If Iverson wants to succeed, he will have to adjust.

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