The Rest, Only Noise

Chapter 756: The end of Klaus

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At this point, the draft has just proceeded to the first round of the 14th overall selection.

The Knicks and the Bulls have reached a deal again after four years.

The Knicks sent the 27th pick in the second round and 50,000 cash to the Bulls in exchange for the other side's 8th pick in the second round.

If it is replaced by other teams, it will be suspected whether there is a shady secret in private.

But between the Knicks and the Bulls, it was a **** feud.

It is impossible for Louis and Klaus to cooperate on this kind of thing.

So, everyone can only think of this as one of the weird things that happens in a weakly competitive draft year.

In the Bulls' general manager's office, Jerry Krause felt like he was being led by Louie.

Too humiliating, too passive!

Moreover, he couldn't trust Louis, even if it was a trivial matter, he couldn't trust Louis.

So, he decided to break the original plan and use the 27th pick in the first round from the Knicks to select Tony Kukoc.

Even so, Klaus was still worried, and he was worried that Louis would tear up the verbal agreement between the two sides.

That's just a verbal agreement!

Even if it is an agreement in black and white, if you meet a real hooligan, people will not recognize it if they don't recognize it, let alone a verbal agreement?

Krause, increasingly concerned, asked around to find out if the Knicks had any plans to initiate a trade.

The result gave him a sigh of relief.

Louie seems to be just coveting their second-round pick, not really trying to get Tony Kukoc.

The Kukochi is a diamond found by Krause that was left in Europe.

Claus saw in him the shadow of the tragic master.

In the 1987 World Youth Championship, Kukoc played on behalf of Yugoslavia and defeated the Soviet Union twice. In one of the games, he made 11 three-pointers. It was that game that made Krause admire him so much that he immediately decided to bring him back to Chicago to match with Barkley.

However, Kukoc has not voluntarily signed up for the draft until this year, when he was automatically eligible.

Who would have thought that he only mentioned this matter to a few people, but he still leaked the news and let LittleLu get the news.

In order to ensure that Kukoc could come to Chicago, Klaus accepted Louis' snatch.

But he was still worried.

Too many things have happened recently. Barkley openly broke with management, clamoring to change teams, and the owner has a lot of dissatisfaction with him. If he can't achieve something this summer, he is likely to lose his job.

Just when Klaus was uneasy.

It's the Miami Heat's turn.

With the eighteenth overall pick in the first round, the Heat will, logically, choose an immediate force to join the team to supplement the depth of the interior.

result...

"In the 1990 NBA Draft, Miami selected...Tony Kukoc! From Split, Yugoslavia!"

Klaus's self-restraint is destroyed by ruthless facts.

How did the Heat choose Kukoc?

Or use the 18th pick in the first round? Are they crazy? Use the 18th pick in the first round for a player who won't land in the NBA in the next two or three years?

Krause couldn't understand the Heat's approach, and he believed that Louis must have planned this matter behind the scenes.

He didn't know what role the Heat played, but he knew what role Louie was.

That's the black hand!

It was all planned by him! From that call.

Klaus had a grim expression, bloodshot eyes bursting out of his eyes, and blue veins could be seen on his face that was so fat that he couldn't even see his neck.

At this time, he was like a mad beast.

But what can he do?

The Bulls' two draft picks all came from the Knicks, the 27th pick in the first round and the 27th pick in the second round.

What can he do with these two **** picks?

At this moment, the phone in his office rang again.

Klaus picked up the phone feebly, "Hello?"

"Hey, Jerry, I didn't expect this kind of accident to happen." Was it that voice, or that grouchy voice that made Klaus feel physically sick when he heard it, "I'm so sorry for you guys, didn't know what you had in your hands. Are draft picks still useful? If you don't know who to pick, why don't you sell them to us?

The emotionally broken Klaus grabbed the phone and roared hysterically: "Fuck you! Even if I choose these two draft picks as a homeless man, I won't sell them to you! You damned devil, go to hell! !"

※※※

"I don't know if it's his problem or my problem. I was scolded by that fat fat man. Not only did I not feel any anger, but I felt a little better."

Not only Klaus, but also Zhao Yuanzheng felt that Louis was like a devil.

Who would dare to provoke him after this?

Klaus is also a cheap talker, and shies the responsibility of taking the second place to pick the dead man on Louis, and then he is marked by Louis, and he will blow the hammer if he has a chance.

Last year, Krause was playing tricks on the expansion draft without knowing how to play, and after Louie found out, the revenge continues from that summer to today.

Now, Krause's draft plan has been destroyed. Barkley is either verbally having a relationship with Krause's mother all day long or arguing for a trade. The Eurostar he was thinking of has also been intercepted, and the draft right in his hand is basically selected. Without good seedlings, even the boss lost patience with him.

It can be said that Klaus has failed miserably.

The way for the Bulls to reinforce was blocked by Louis, and Klaus' future was also destroyed by him.

If this team wants to rebuild, it needs to do two things first.

Fire Krause or Louie won't stop getting his revenge; send Barkley because he has lost faith in the team.

"Old Lu, why is Miami so cooperative with us?" Zhao Yuanzheng asked inexplicably.

"Do you cooperate?"

Louis asked with a smile.

"Very cooperative." Zhao Yuanzheng said dangerously, "almost like our ally."

Zhao Yuanzheng's words may be unintentional, but Louis has a heart to listen.

Yes, it does look like that.

In order to engage Klaus, the Heat didn't want him in the first round, and Bowie's sign-and-exchange would naturally be put on hold. It will be up to the Heat to free up space to sign Bowie. If they could, they could still sign Bowie.

Louis originally wanted to have a wave of ultimate disgust after that, and traded the second-round pick from the Bulls and the Heat for the signing rights of Kukoc.

Look now, forget it.

On the surface, at least, making the trade look like a one-sided move by the Heat.

If Kukoc's signing rights are finally returned to the Knicks, even if Louis can turn the black into the white, the Knicks and the Heat will collude with each other secretly and cooperate to suppress other **** in the trade market. team suspects.

Neither for their personal reputation, nor for Lewis Shafir's, they can't carry the stigma.

Forget it, that is to say, let's be less disgusting Claus at the end, he is about to collapse anyway.

Louis decided to talk about Wude, and he let Claus and the bull go.

After the draft, Louie initiated another trade.

He took the eighth overall pick from the Bulls and sent it to Utah along with $100,000 in exchange for the 25th overall pick in the first round.

The Knicks selected Clemson center Eldon Campbell with this pick ~www.novelmt.com~ Louie has a vague sense of familiarity with Campbell.

He really couldn't think of an instance of this person, but the familiarity of the name convinced him that the person's name had entered his ears in a previous life.

Zhao Yuanzheng also believes that Campbell is the best player that can be selected in this draft.

On the Heat side, Lewis Shaffer, under the guidance of Louie, got one of the biggest beads in the second round of the 1990 draft - Antonio Davis.

Davis was also one of the few players in this draft that Louie knew.

In Louie's previous life, Davis was an important inside pillar for the Pacers in the 1990s, and he was also known as the black-and-white two-headed monster with Schmitz. But in 1990, when he signed up for the draft, he gave the impression that he was not very powerful and needed a long period of training.

So instead of choosing him, Louis chose Campbell and recommended him to Shafir.

Shafir's trust in Louis has reached the point where he has no doubts, and he doesn't even want to choose directly.

As a result, Davis wasn't sure whether he could gain a firm foothold in the NBA, so he didn't seek to sign with the Heat and went to Europe.

Of course, that's another story.

The 1990 draft contained a lot of tidbits that fans didn't know about.

Louis' pursuit of Klaus caused him to lose confidence in his work. It just so happened that the boss was impatient with him.

After the draft, the Bulls announced that general manager Jerry Krause was leaving for personal reasons.

The super architect who created the Bull Dynasty in Louis's previous life left his post more than ten years earlier.

Louis, the initiator of the collapse of Claus's career, felt a little boring.

Is this gone? He hasn't had enough.

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