Stratmaster wrote:jnrjr79 wrote:Stratmaster wrote:
Everything you are describing is based on hoping for luck. Neither hope, nor luck, are strategies.
This is maybe the silliest thing I've read on the board in a while. All strategies require luck, but they are still strategies. If anyone seems to be relying on a team-building framework that's hope-based without identifying an actual strategy, it's you. Your whole thing seems to be "keep everyone around knowing we can't contend, but hope something good eventually happens."
If you are saying you are sick of Vuc and Zach and it's time for something different, those are your feelings and are, of course, perfectly valid. But that in no way indicates it is the best way to build a quality team from where the Bulls sit right now.
I am not "sick" of them and think Zach is really good. I'm just accepting of the reality that the Bulls tried, it didn't work, and they are trapped until they move on to the next phase of the team.
I said nothing like that. I was saying the Bulls need to trade some of the young assets they have already accumulated to fill a position of need and improve the team.
It depends on what "young assets" you're talking about, but given the quality of the team's young assets, any trades of them (Ayo, Coby, PWill, etc.) for immediate contributors are likely to be a step backward, not forward, in the scheme of things. It obviously depends on the specifics and we're just talking in the abstract here, but I struggle to see what kinds of players you could acquire for those guys that would improve the team in the short-term.
What you are saying about all strategies relying on luck is what is silly. Strategies can fail due to bad luck but all strategies don't RELY on luck to be successful. I'm not sure what you do for a living, but in my career if I had suggested a strategy that is entirely reliant on luck, followed by failing miserably for at least 3 years I would have been fired on the spot.
What I do for a living and what you do for a living have zero bearing on this discussion, unless you're in an NBA front office. I'm not saying all jobs in the world require luck, but the idea that GM-ing a pro sports franchise does not depend hugely on luck is so obviously nuts that I am not sure how anyone could even respond to that. It's like trying to respond to someone saying the sky is green.
All an NBA front office can do it implement a smart plan and hope it works out. But there is luck involved in every free agent signing, every trade, and every draft pick - will young players develop, will the front office select the right prospect, will people stay healthy, etc.
We root for a team that had massive setbacks because Jay Williams decided to engage in reckless motorcycle riding, because the team got lucky with a 1.7% chance of getting the #1 pick, yet got it anyway, Derrick Rose suffered an early-career catastrophic injury, Lonzo Ball had one of the most unique and serious knee injuries the league has seen, etc. etc. How any Bulls fan could say that luck doesn't have a massive impact on whether a GM succeeds is really wild to me.
Luck probably matters more than any other thing in terms of NBA success. People don't like to believe that because they like the illusion of control. But a GM can make correct decisions
for years, and it still may not pan out. Conversely, a GM can actually be untalented, but luck their way into a transformational player that turns them into a contender despite themselves.
All the Bulls can do is make good decisions and put themselves in the best position possible to improve the team. They can only control what they can control, and we can evaluate them for those decisions. But there are no guaranteed outcomes regardless of the decision-making. Just improving or reducing your odds.
It should be the same for an NBA GM. It's only pie in the sky fans of tanking that allow the ownership and GM of pro sports teams to get away with this crap. "It's now OK to be horrible for a few seasons. We will sell the gullible on the promise of an unknown player who will be the savior"
Nobody makes anybody watch a particular sports team. I'm certainly not arguing that tanking (whether a short-term mini-tank or a prolonged stretch of horribleness) is the right move in all situations. I'm arguing that
right now, given the moves that have gotten the Bulls here, the best shot at future success is trying to keep the draft pick this season, and maybe next, while getting value for the veteran players
who you already know can't take you to contender status. If you prefer another path, it seems incumbent on you to identify how it would be possible to get a #1 option on this team that would work with the existing vets and take you to contender status. I don't see you doing that; you seem to be arguing to sell off some of the younger guys for a short-term boost that doesn't have any viable path to going anywhere notable, then just sort of grinding it out for the foreseeable future hoping some later opportunity happens to pop up. And my impression is that preference is informed by the fact that you find it really unappealing to take a step back and suck for a while. I get that. I just disagree that it's a good idea.