dougthonus wrote:coldfish wrote:2012 - Draymond Green, Jae Crowder
2013 - Gobert, Plumlee
2014 - Lavine, Capela, Anderson, Nurkic, Jokic
2016 - Siakam, Murray, Brogdon
2017 - Mitchell, Adebayo, Allen
2018 - Bridges, SGA, Brunson
2019 - Cam Johnson, Herro
2012 / 2013 agreed
2014 - I don't think there was a reasonable way to get Jokic, so wouldn't blame them on him, but it was a loser for trading up for McDermott when staying put gave you Gary Harris and Nurkic, and trading up could have gotten you LaVine, so still a big loss
2016 - Wouldn't blame them so much here, those guys were better, but none were in the reasonable draft range
2017 - Actually drafting Lauri ended up being fine, not as good as Mitchell, but he's become an all-star at 7, not a bad pick
2018 - Agreed - big loss at both picks #7 SGA/Bridges, #22 Brunson but even closer guys like Shamet, Robert Williams, Mo Wagner were way better than the Promise
2019 - Don't blame them much here, not sure Herro is really anything all that much more than Coby White to be honest, and Cam Johnson was viewed as a massive reach when he went at 11 and while his arch type is more valuable, he's not much of a star
Either way, even with my minor quibbles, that's still 2012, 2013, 2014, 2018 x2 that there guys you could have taken on 5 out of 8 picks that were in your range that might have been franchise changing, and on the other 3 picks, there were franchise changing guys that probably weren't reasonable guesses. The 2004-2012 version of the front office probably wouldn't have gone 5 for 5 in 2012-2019 on those reasonable picks, but probably wouldn't have gone 0-5 on them.The AKME years:
2020 - Halliburton
2021 - Didn't draft
2022 - No one of note taken after Terry
2023 - Didn't draft
2024 - Jury is still out on Matas
This gets back to the comment about swings at the plate. AKME basically doesn't have any.
I give them medium grief on Haliburton, though he was a reasonable pick based on the mocks, and would have been in consideration, the reality is he went 8 picks later and I typically would say that means not in the reasonably close range. Also out of the guys between 4-12, only him and Vassell (11), taken today still seem like better picks than Pat. Maybe a couple other guys you could argue as toss ups.
One really bad thing about them is the misjudgment around Lauri (not that they were alone here). Ultimately, if they had believed in Lauri and developed him, they don't trade for Vuc (because Lauri fills the stretch big role) and they don't draft Pat (because Lauri is their starting PF) and would have been may more likely to have taken Haliburton instead (PG was a bigger need with how they entered the season).
in 2022, it's worth noting Christian Braun and Walter Kessler were both selections within 4-5 spots of Terry and both of those guys would have likely been much better picks. Kessler in particular would fill a big need for us as an interior shot blocker, so I would say Terry was a miss. Maybe there wasn't a near "superstar" type miss, but those are still big misses, especially because interior shot blocking is a massive problem at the time we pass on Kessler for Terry, and even at this moment, the roster is packed with guards.
But as you say, the real elephant in the room here is the strategy. The execution doesn't look great, but Ayo was a really huge selection that worked out well (even if it seemed super obvious at the time), so maybe their overall drafting is fine (Terry looks like maybe he'll turn into a role player, Pat is maybe a low rung starter, so not total busts), but their strategy put them in a spot where they are both missing the playoffs and not getting draft picks. If they had been a 6 seed the last 3 years, I probably still wouldn't be excited about it, but at least you'd have something even if you never advanced. To get no playoffs and then also not have a way to even have a chance to restock your talent base is really bad.
In comparison, the last regime up until the Jimmy build frequently had extra picks, and made the playoffs virtually every year up until they went into a purposeful rebuild and then had mid lotto picks every year. They also screwed up when they went rebuild by not leaning into it hard enough, but they didn't land in complete no man's land like this group.
I think that we are on the same page. To stick with the baseball analogy, what you want is the most quality at bats as you can get. Statistically you are eventually going to get a few big hits. People say that Derrick Rose was luck. I don't see it that way. The Bulls had a ton of high draft picks in the 2000's. Eventually one of them was going to work out.
The current Bulls don't get to the plate enough. The post 2012 Bulls got to the plate plenty but had some flaw in their system (more likely than not, Gar chasing fads) that caused them to come up empty.
Going forward, we can assume the Bulls are never going to go the Lakers route and try to buy a team. As such, they have to build through the draft like the pre-2012 Bulls did. In order to do so, you need to get as many swings as possible (accumulate picks, not give them away) and do a good job taking the best player available.













