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To: SMALL FRY who wrote (113602)9/10/2000 1:17:29 PM
From: Pam Wooten  Respond to of 120523
 
Hi Small Fry,
Thank you and all for the helpful information. Finally
got my ISP to admit there was a backbone problem here
in the southeast (or so they said). Had no problem getting to many sites or connecting to internet, but could not get any microsoft, netscape, or pristine site the entire day.
Hopefully it is fixed now.
Thanks again.
Pam



To: SMALL FRY who wrote (113602)9/10/2000 1:46:04 PM
From: bobby is sleepless in seattle  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 120523
 
a potential trade looking better...

Report: Three-way trade not dead yet

September 9, 2000

NEW YORK (AP) -- A three-way mega trade thought to
be dead -- involving Patrick Ewing, Glen Rice and
Horace Grant -- is still alive.

Patrick Ewing would go from the New York Knicks to
the Seattle SuperSonics, Glen Rice would move to the
Knicks from the Los Angeles Lakers, and the Lakers
would acquire Horace Grant from the Sonics.

Unidentified NBA officials were quoted as sources for
the reports in Saturday newspapers in the three cities.

Ewing, Rice and Grant were the key players, but as
many as five others could be involved to make the trade
fit salary-cap requirements.

The Knicks and the Lakers possibly could swap backup
centers Chris Dudley and Travis Knight, The New York
Times reported.

For salary-cap purposes, the Sonics would have to ship
off such role players as Greg Foster, Vladimir Stepania
and Vernon Maxwell, The Seattle Times reported.

The Sonics and Lakers were described as ready to close
the deal, and waiting for the Knicks to sign off on it.

Messages were left for Sonics' representatives and
Grant's agent, Jimmy Sexton.

Neither Scott Layden, the Knicks' general manager, nor
coach Jeff Van Gundy could be reached for comment,
The New York Times said. A Knicks spokeswoman said
Saturday the team had no comment.

Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak, contacted in Hawaii by The Los Angeles
Times, would not comment.

Sonics general manager Wally Walker told Grant on Friday a trade was possible,
without giving him details.

``If I go to L.A., they might as well fit us for another ring,'' Grant told The Seattle
Times.

The trade started off last month as a four-team, 13-player deal that would have been
the largest in NBA history. But it fell apart when the Detroit Pistons backed out.

Ewing also was headed to Seattle in that trade. The Knicks in return, would have
received Vin Baker from the Sonics, along with Rice and Knight from Los Angeles.
The Lakers would have acquired Dudley and Detroit's Christian Laettner.

The Pistons pulled out because of fan backlash and because the Dallas Mavericks
offered Cedric Ceballos for Laettner on the day the deal was supposed to be
completed. Dallas and Detroit completed that trade two weeks ago.

Ewing was said to have become extremely upset at media and fan criticism of him
when it became known he had become trade bait. Several league officials said Ewing
is adamant about not returning to New York for his 16th season.

Just days after the four-team trade collapsed, Layden said the Knicks would continue
to try to trade Ewing. He added that Ewing and his agent, David Falk, had helped
orchestrate the possible trade and they would remain involved in future talks.

The Knicks were said to remain intent on getting Rice, an excellent shooting forward,
but the Lakers insisted on a solid power forward in return. Rice also is a Falk client.

Ewing will make $14 million this season, his last under contract. He turned 38 last
month. Rice and Grant are 35.