Downtown wrote:I wouldn't call matching for Crabbe horrible. It is becoming more normal for teams to match to keep their players. Definitely they paid a steep price for that, especially with the trade kicker, but wanting to keep him was okay.
Actually going after Evan Turner was okay as well.
sure you can isolate one of two decisions and try and justify them, maybe do so effectively
but that's not the way to judge a GM's job performance, IMO. You have to look at the aggregate of the decisions and do so in the context of the team
the team had just overachieved for a season and was in feel-good mode. But all that overachieving came with some asterisks; they had a hot streak that drastically changed their record, then they cooled off. And they drew a 1st round opponent that lost 2 elite players to injury (Paul and Griffin) while a 3rd starter was hobbled with a bad ankle (Reddick)
part of a GM's job is to not overrate a hot streak or success against injured opponents. Yet, he went out and signed 3 players that were average, at best, to 47M dollars a year. For chrissakes, the cap was only 94M and he signed 3 bench players to half of the damn cap for a team that was close to being a .500 ball club; three below average players (aggregate) added to an average team for half the salary cap...

That was the aggregate decision and it was stupid at the time and still is today
They were looking for a ball handler that was a good defensive player to help Lillard and McCollum and Turner had a really good year with Boston. The concept made sense. The troubling part was that they grossly overpaid and even Turner said he didn't know if he was worth $17mil or $12mil. My personal opinion is that because the better free agents passed on offers he panicked a little and made too generous an offer.
what bugged me right off the bat was the cost. Turner had a career TS% of 49% when the NBA average was over 54%; he had a career PER of 12.4 when the NBA median was 15.0; he had a anemic winshare/48 of 0.52; he had a career box plus/minus of right around negative 2.0; and his career VORP is negative as well. Overall, he was (and is) a below average player who was signed when the average NBA salary was under 6M/year and the newer adjusted average was going to be around 8M/year; yet he was signed for 17.5M a year, more then twice the average
and his one supposed offensive strength, ball-handling and play-making, came at the expense of him pounding the ball...a lot, which works against the strength of Portland's best player. And, unfortunately, his defense was overrated; while he can defend bigger players, he can't seem to combine the quickness and/or length to defend speed (neither does any other wing except Harkless); so his impact on the perimeter defense wasn't as big as advertised