drosestruts wrote:kodo wrote:drosestruts wrote:It is interesting when looking at AK/ME's attempt to speed run a contender and what Presti built over time
They both added Caruso
I'll argue forever that Ball was a good addition whose just had terrible injury luck, great POA defender and good 3-point shooter like a Lu Dort
Their high draft pick was Chet, ours was Williams. They did much better there, nice not drafting in the covid year I imagine.
Jalen Williams and Zach LaVine both very good young scorers
DeRozan was in the MVP conversation in 2020-21 during the first half of the year, obviosuly he's nowhere near as good as SGA in several areas (playmaking, defense) - but both are great midrange scorers who excel at getting to the line, both limit turnover and mistakes.
The biggest gap - yes even bigger than Chet/Williams - has to be OKC signing Hartenstein and Chicago trading two 1sts for Vucevic. A mistake they compounded on by re-signing him.
The difference between contender and pretender can come down to 1 or 2 players and some health.
We could have just signed Hartenstein in 2020 instead of trading for Vuc, and kept two 1sts, and probably kept Lauri.
The biggest difference is that Presti is OK with winning 22 games to win a championship eventually. It really was just a few years ago, 2022, that OKC was a 24 win team. The team that Billy didn't want to rebuild with.
If you throw out AK's first year as a transition year, AK has never won less than 39 games and averages 41 wins per season. I'm sure that's his goal to never be a bad team, and he's accomplished that. And I'm sure this has come up in whatever extension talks are happening / has happened.
But to take a break from bashing AK non-stop for years, he was literally a coin flip away from a probable championship foundation. Flagg, Matas, Giddey, Coby as a base (make whatever trades you want with Giddey / Coby, or keep one). Luck is always required, and you don't always have to be terrible to benefit from luck, like Giannis for Milwaukee.
I'm not even sure OKC was specifically trying to be bad that year.
It's also crazy to think a team with two future starters on a likely NBA champion, one of them being a league MVP could even lose that many games in a season
SGA, Dort, Wiggins, Kenrich Williams are all still on the Thunder
Giddey, Krejci, Mann, Waters, and Ty Jerome are still in the NBA
They won 29% of their games that season, our worst year was 2019-20 when we won 33% of our games. Not a large difference.
They were definitely trying to be bad. They sent Al Horford on an early retirement vacation... who since then has been a regular starter for a finals team for 4 years. The next season, the oldest guy in their rotation was 23 years old.
Strategically bad, as we call it. Could be a dicey game to play... if your draft core would be some mix of Giddey, Wendell, Patrick, Jalen Green... luckily for them, there was Shai. But also, Pax/Ainge style, a glut of incoming FRPs makes it easier to focus and gamble on drafting talent. Any time a GM offers you the FRP JACKPOT package for an aging all-star (or emerging overrated star), you take it and run. Of course it kinda backfired with Harden (not even a jackpot package).
Rest of the prospects were very good (and obviously JW is another star), but MVPs are another story.
I will forever say though... Presti is a fine GM, but he ran a hopeless 1st round exit for 4Y in a row.
Four 1st round exits in a row. That was a better team than these Bulls, but big picture... There isn't a single hot take way to GM a team. Took him a while to pivot to the Hinkie tank. The primary difference being, Presti's had a very good and fortunate 5Y run. Like, if PG13 tears his ACL as a Thunder, or had a repeat leg break that hampered his career ala Lonzo... And he became a zero-value trade chip... Well, history plays out very differently due to one trade.
Well, I'm not defending AK here. Really annoyed with him. But in his defense, after some clever moves, he had a few devastating turns (topped by Lonzo, but Zach's recurring knee tweaks, Pat/Coby's big injuries early in their rookie contracts). He had a chance to pivot. But still... that Lonzo injury alone kind of decimated whatever promising plans the Bulls had. The Zo/Zach/Caruso backcourt could've been a top 3-guard rotation in the league.