Steve Nash's tenure with the Los Angeles Lakers began with visions of championship contention alongside fellow future Hall of Famers Kobe Bryant and Dwight Howard, but has been rendered an utter disaster by injuries. What started with a fractured fibula three games into his first season in Hollywood turned into nerve root irritation that just kept causing problems, limiting him to just 52 appearances in Year 1, only 15 before being forced to abandon his carefully documented comeback in Year 2, and a goose-egg this year, as any preseason optimism surrounding what he expected to be his final season was dashed just five days before the Lakers' opening game of the 2014-15 campaign.

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The nerve damage just wouldn't reverse, and the pain just wouldn't go away, and the body just wouldn't cooperate with the commands of the razor-sharp mind and willing spirit, and so, that was that. All that was left was for Nash to officially retire, shuffle off this NBA coil and wait for his enshrinement in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in a few years' time. But Nash didn't hang 'em up — at least, not officially. He stayed on the Lakers' roster and on their balance sheet, even as he stayed away from the team; this infuriated some Lakers fans who couldn't believe that Nash wasn't healthy enough to earn his money by playing basketball but that he was healthy enough to go golfing or rock-climbing, and was brazen enough to post photos of those activities on Instagram. (Nash has largely kept things quiet on social media since, though a recent return to live-tweet a soccer match led to some similar fan angst and an amusing Nash reply.)

While you might not have been quite as furious or ill-mannered as the folks who spammed Nash's social media accounts with rage at his supposed stealing of the Lakers' money, you might have wondered what, exactly, was going on. If this was the end of the line, and Nash wasn't planning another comeback attempt, and the Lakers weren't planning on trying to get him back, then why didn't the two parties workout a buyout agreement? Why no official retirement, with the customary press conference and fanfare befitting a two-time MVP and one of the greatest point guards of his generation?

The answer, according to Kevin Ding of Bleacher Report? Nash was doing the Lakers — going nowhere and trying to figure out how to get somewhere in the near future — something of a solid:

The only reason Nash isn't retired from basketball already, having put it all behind him, is so he could try to help the Lakers.

Nash was ready to call it a career before the season. After deep soul-searching to accept his body does not belong in an official NBA uniform any longer, he wasn't just out for the season.

He was, and is, done.

The Lakers asked Nash not to announce anything, according to team sources. They hoped they could trade Nash's $9.7 million salary, not only an expiring contract but also a giant coupon for another club to take and immediately save real dollars via insurance, to get a building block for the Lakers' future.

Fully aware how little he has given the Lakers since arriving in 2012, Nash agreed to do them a solid. He would put off his official retirement announcement and remain a member of the Lakers this season in name only. [...]

What was missing, alas, was a public celebration of all that mature thinking because the Lakers weren't able to make a trade using Nash's contract by the Feb. 19 deadline. So there was no payoff, which makes it emblematic of Nash's Lakers tenure: logical, earnest steps taken with the best of hopes and intentions...and simply no results.

I don't doubt that the Lakers kept Nash on the books in the interest of trying to package him in a deal, only to find that there weren't any takers for such a large expiring contract — not nearly as valuable an asset as it would've been in years past — who would be willing to part with the sort of quality young players or attractive future picks that the rebuilding Lakers would want in return. But this does seem like an awfully friendly reading of Nash's intentions ... especially since he himself said, in pretty clear terms, that he didn't plan to retire earlier because he wanted to receive the money he was owed.

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