phrazbit wrote:Yes, they could have started the rebuild when they did anyway... but my point is that they would not have. With over 60 million still left on Amare's deal they would have kept plugging away. The only reason they finally let Nash go was because his contract ran out, and even then their answer was more vets, only the front office was so grossly incompetent that the team bottomed out anyway.
I'm one of the more positive posters in general, but even I cannot see them simply swallowing Amare's disaster of a contract via amnesty or stretch... no, they would have been stuck with it. As far as his PER goes... wonderful, he still put up decent individual offensive numbers... while hardly playing and being worse defensively than he ever was here. They had no interest in rebuilding, they SHOULD have started it right then in 2010 when Amare left, but instead they delayed 2 years trying to make it work with Nash. Had Amare still been there they would have dragged it on another 3.
People are fine with Amare leaving because that team had clearly peaked, had virtually no way of improving itself and then Amare's career went off a cliff, his new franchise became a joke and he was the punchline.
If I had a time machine would I go back and do it all the same? Heeeeeell no, but I'd still take the misery I know over the obvious misery and potentially far worse in the long term (which is where we now are) that 5 years of the team limping around, literally and figuartely, in an effort to build around a player who's career was toast.
There was no way they were going to do a rebuild the year after nearly winning the WCF with an incredibly deep team. I get it, you wanted to blow it up after 2010 and that WCF run, but that would have likely not gone over well with 99% of the fans and would have been inexplicable to most of the team.
It could be years until we ever even get close to the WCF again, and could have been if we started the rebuild back then. I would have surveyed the landscape to see if there were any worthy free agents to replace Amare, and if there wasn't a solid plan in place, taken another couple of swings at a championship, since you only build a team that good about every 20 years if you are lucky.
We luckily had a finals run in 76 and made it to the WCF a couple of years later (these were not great teams..they luckily got as far as they did)and then we had a team get to the WCF three times between 89-93, and then three times between 2005-10.
So in close to 50 years, we've had three teams get to the WCF 2-3 times each. It's not an easy place to get to by any means. Even if we blow the last three years, like we did anyway, two years at a chance for a championship, or at least a memorable time getting close would have without a doubt been worth it to me.
It amazes me how many just want to blow up a VERY good team just because they failed against a better team. I see Hawks posters saying blow it up because they can't beat the Cavs though they had the best record in the east two years ago and lost in the ECF and lost to the eventual champions this year as well. Sure they got swept, but they are a LeBron injury away from possibly getting to the finals either year and maybe this year (though I think they do take a step back depending on what Howard brings).
Back to us, if Amare did really suck in year 3, it wouldn't have mattered, because even if we had Nash, he would have gotten injured, played in 50 games and even if we were trapped with contracts on both of them, we would have been forced to rebuild through the draft and gotten high picks anyway, and likely not had the money to spend on players like Beasley, etc.