Knightro wrote:Considering 30 and 34 both got traded in 2018, it stands to reason that the Magic could have gotten involved in a move up from 35 if they *really* wanted to.
If the argument is "the Magic didn't value Graham enough to give up additional future assets to ensure they got him", that's fine. I can understand that. If they had Okobo, Brunson, Carter, Graham and Fraizer all rated pretty similarly and were just going to pick the guy who made it to 35, so be it.
But if the argument is "the Magic were locked in to Graham and expected him to fall to 35" and they allowed someone else to leapfrog them when they could have avoided that with a little bit of proactive thought, that's what people take issue with.
The problem is we don't know for sure what the Magic's board actually looked like. There was a report that said they were going to take Graham at 35, but there's no way to really prove it.
I think it's safe to assume that our front office simply doesn't value 2nd-round picks. I'd imagine that it is a philosophical thing as much as anything else. For me, there should always be a few spots on the roster designated for developmental types. Our roster isn't full and we still have room on it for Birch, MCW, and Jefferson. These are guys that aren't (or shouldn't be) in our rotation and neither are they prospects. This is what we have done with our deep bench.
I'm not going to argue that any of the potential players that we have neglected in the draft over the last few years would really make much of a difference, but I honestly can't see how any of them wouldn't be a better use of a roster spot than the aforementioned players. If you are relying on your 10-15 slots to keep you afloat in the event of injuries, the season is probably already lost.
Some teams use the end of their bench to stash and develop guys like Carson Edwards, Monte Morris, Jalen Brunson, Jevon Carter, Devonte Graham, DeAnthony Melton, etc... We decided to sign MCW and forced him into the rotation. What's the upside here? I don't want to nitpick everything our front office does, but this is pretty damned difficult to defend.





















