For the second time in less than a year, Rudy Gay has been traded. Once the Grizzlies’ franchise player, Gay has now been sent from Memphis to Toronto to Sacramento in the span of 11 months. As Tom Ziller noted, the return package for Gay has dwindled each time, to the point where this is mostly a salary dump for the Raptors.
Rudy Gay trade reaction: SB Nation’s panel of experts assess the deal
What do we make of Rudy Gay getting traded to the Kings? Our panel of experts, including Raptors and Kings fans, weigh in on the deal.


Nevertheless, Gay is still a well-paid, well-known player and he could bounce back in a new environment. To assess the damage, we’ve brought on the following people to join me in answering some questions about the deal.
- Ricky O’Donnell, assistant editor, SB Nation NBA (@SBN_Ricky).
- Seth Pollack, SB Nation NBA League manager (@sethpo).
- James Herbert, SB Nation contributor based in Toronto (@outsidethenba).
- Greg Wissinger, Associate Editor, Sactown Royalty (@gwiss).
- Adam Francis, Editor-in-chief, Raptors HQ (@raptorshq).
1. What is the first word that comes to mind when you think of the Rudy Gay trade?
O’DONNELL: Redo. The trade Toronto made to acquire Gay from Memphis last season was the type of move that ran counter to everything Masai Ujiri has shown in his time as an NBA executive. The last Toronto braintrust only seemed to operate on the surface-level, chasing short-term gains and showing an inability to think three or four moves ahead. That’s what Ujiri is doing here. He’s been the Raptors GM for six months and he’s already traded away $60 million owed to Andrea Bargnani and Gay. Toronto was obviously flawed even with Gay, but the overall crumminess of the East gave them a good shot at making the playoffs and missing out on a loaded draft lottery. Ujiri took that situation into his own hands. What’s next for the Raps is uncertain, but they should feel comfortable being led by Ujiri.
POLLACK: Deckchairs.
Bookmark This
HERBERT: Rebuilding. This starts the demolition job in Toronto, and it picks up the pace for a Kings’ front office looking to distance itself from the previous regime.
WISSINGER: Change. The Kings front office isn’t making moves in a panicked attempt at more wins, they’re changing the culture in Sacramento. And while there are valid arguments on whether or not Gay will contribute positively, the Kings sent off several mistakes of the past regime. Removing John Salmons is enough of a change to satiate Kings fans, at least until Gay starts stealing shots from DeMarcus Cousins.
FRANCIS: The first? Relief. The second? Disbelief ... as in, disbelief that Rudy could be moved.
PRADA: Splash. Splash because that’s what new Kings owner Vivek Ranadive ostensibly wants to make with this move, where he gave up some spare parts for a name player that casual fans will know. Splash because of the shameless way Ujiri’s Raptors are tumbling into tanking position. He has no care for grace, so long as he ends up jumping into the water successfully.
2. Raptors HQ’s summary on its initial post suggested that “Christmas comes early for many Raptors fans.” Is this trade really as much of a coup for Ujiri as most think?
3. And yet, many Sactown Royalty readers are in favor of this deal for the Kings. Why might Sacramento want Rudy Gay?
4. Most think this is the first of many dominoes to fall in Toronto. Who do you think is the next player to go?
More from SB Nation NBA:
• The Hook: A tale of two Rudy Gay trades
• Kobe Bryant returns: "It was really weird"
• NBA power rankings: Pacers roll while Heat sink



















