It's probably a good bet that third-year shooting guard O.J. Mayo wore out his welcome with the Memphis Grizzlies soon after he got into that fight with Tony Allen over a gambling debt in the middle of a team flight.
Either way, it hasn't exactly been a secret for a while now that numerous clubs around the NBA have inquired what it would take to acquire Mayo. One of these clubs was the New York Knicks, who tried to include Mayo in a three-team deal with the Denver Nuggets that would have landed them Carmelo Anthony, which was ultimately nixed.
With the news coming out Thursday that Mayo has been suspended 10 games by the NBA for testing positive for dehydroepiandrosterone, a kind of naturally occurring steroid that he claims to have gotten from an over-the-counter supplement, it could very well be that Mayo is actually untradeable at this point.
Grizzlies GM Chris Wallace has apparently set that asking price for Mayo pretty high, and he's obviously not going to be able to make a deal now unless he lowers the standard a little bit. Given that Wallace has already made one ridiculous deal in his Memphis career (see Pau Gasol to the Lakers), this is not entirely out of the question.
A better question at this point would be whether or not anybody still wants Mayo, as it seems like the guy has pretty much become a walking locker room cancer.