Crymson wrote:I believe the actual details of the draft-night trade strongly bear mentioning here. This was not a trade of Bey for Kennard. The #19 pick came to Detroit by way of a three-team deal including the Nets, Clippers, and Pistons, and was originally owned by Brooklyn. The Clippers didn't give up Bey or the chance at Bey; they traded Landry Shamet for what they reportedly perceived as a ball-handling upgrade in Kennard (plus four second-round picks). Brooklyn opted for the known quantity and immediate contribution of Shamet over the uncertainty of a draft pick. Both teams were focused upon the winning in the moment; the Pistons were looking to the future.
Beyond that, I'm unclear as to why the fact that Kennard isn't playing would figure into the notion that this was some bamboozle of a trade in any event. Kennard is a useful NBA rotation player. The reason he saw only a minor role in the regular season and has seen none thus far in the playoffs is that these Clippers---at upwards of 41% on nearly 35 attempts per game in the regular season---are one of the greatest perimeter-shooting teams in NBA history. They haven't needed his shooting, and they've got options who can play better defense; rotations shrink in the playoffs in the first place, and, thanks to the increased focus upon isolation offense, weak defenders are more of a liability, and this drops him even further in the rotation.
The Clippers have thus far lost this trade in the sense that they traded away Landry Shamet for a player whom they paid and ultimately have not needed, not in that they missed out on Bey; he was never on the table for them, and Shamet would presumably have ended that draft night still a member of the Clippers (they reportedly still liked him a lot) had the Pistons not made Kennard available.
zeebneeb wrote:Turns out this was a homerun of a deal. Always best to see how things turn out before passing judgment.
I feel obligated to bring up that you aggressively hailed the Griffin trade at the time it was made and have yet to revisit your stance now that the outcome is known.
Go find the thread, and ill get down with that. I have zero issue admitting I'm wrong. I'm used to it. At the time, it seemed like a deal trying to land a superstar(let's also not forget his first full year here was also his best year and an all-star for the first time since 14')and see if this team can not only get into the playoffs, but go far.
That was the last attempt at keeping Andre around, and seeing what he could do. It failed, and failed pretty miserably.
This on the other hand, unless the vaunted 2nd round picks all turn out to be amazing, is a great deal, as of now and arguing against that is absolutely ridiculous.
Bey would be drafted in the lottery if that draft was redone, and probably would be top 5. If that's not worth 2nd round picks and Kennard, then I'm nuts. Find me a GM who wouldn't give up second round picks, and a 2 gaurd with wobbly knees for a top 5 pick. I like Kennard and was sore when we traded him. I still think he can be a playmaking 2 gaurd, and start on some teams. With that said, Bey's rookie season was amazing, and there is no arguing it.
For some to still hold on that it was not only a bad deal, but the Pistons got "destroyed" is just ego at this point. Great deal, and has now set the Pistons up at SF for the future.