These guys had little to no value when they were traded, and they haven't played a single game since then. I don't see how we'd suddenly be able to flip them for anything useful now.
I'm also going out on a limb and predicting that Humphries will end up having a lot less value than some people are anticipating. Even a contender wanting to pick him up would have to send back an inferior player on a similarly bad or worse contract, but there just aren't that many such players/teams. I think in general teams have gotten much smarter, and there aren't as many bad players on horrible contracts as there used to be. So, the value of expiring deals will naturally fall too.
ddb's idea about acquiring a good player by pairing Hump with other assets makes sense to me, but I don't see us pulling off a deal for anyone in the Love/Gasol/Aldridge tier. Guys like David Lee, Danny Granger, Javale McGee, DeAndre Jordan - maybe.
I might suppose we have enough picks available to sweeten almost any deal, if the contract weight is there in an expiring.
The idea of players like Aldridge and Granger being available is pretty wild. a team with enough assets in a dream world could put together a nice Granger-Aldridge-Lee front line.
Lee would be a pretty great addition to our team at C. Aldridge is an incredibly solid, talented, proven 1-2 option PF.
Could Wallace and sweetener net Granger, and Hump and sweetener land Lee? Do we haven enough sugar?
i can pretty much guarantee you that Ainge isn't interested in David Lee
Furthermore, why would GSW even trade him? They are a playoff team looking to go deeper into the playoffs. They're not looking to shed payroll. They consider Lee a part of that group. Same reason I don't see Denver parting with McGee(not that we should even want him) or LA parting with their starting Center(unless he flops...in which case we shouldn't want him either).
The Love/Aldridge ideas are based on the same concept that got us KG. Danny capitalizing on a team's need to start over because they couldn't get their group over the top. And/or their star may leave and they don't want to be left with nothing to show for it.
After their success with their small ball lineup with Harrison Barnes at the 4, I'm pretty sure David Lee is expendable.
Also, there's data out there that says that Lee hurts his team when he's on the floor despite the fact that he's a 20-10 guy.
Harrison Barnes at the 4? In the playoffs? Against Serge Ibaka, Blake Griffin, and Tim Duncan? That's really what you're going with? I'm pretty sure you're wrong.
Harrison Barnes played 38 minutes per game in the playoffs.
In the playoffs, Golden State's most used lineup (the lineup that saw the most minutes together) was Steph Curry, Jarrett Jack, Klay Thompson, Harrison Barnes, and Andrew Bogut.
http://stats.nba.com/leagueLineups.html?pageNo=1&rowsPerPage=25&SeasonType=Playoffs&sortField=MIN&sortOrder=DES&MeasureType=Advanced
So, yes, according to the facts, the Golden State Warriors get down with Harrison Barnes at the four, in the playoffs.
I believe this is the part where I say "scoreboard."
(Also, Tim Duncan's secretly been a center for the last decade or so)