Chandan wrote:TheFutureMM wrote:Kind of wild that he came clean and said that he really felt this team needed another chance. That he really loved Siakam and didn't want to move on from him. I used to laugh at dude's here who said Masai got blindly attached to his players but they were ultimately right haha.
As I've said at least 10x, they needed to move Siakam/FVV earlier. It's clear that this wasn't working. The next 3 years of Raptors ball will be very interesting but I do truly believe we are on the right track now.
Moral highground is the easiest high ground to stand on. You can admit to being wrong and make it appears as if you had no choice because it was the right thing to do, and come out looking like a winner.
Ultimately if he could find a better way to win he would have taken it. Giving who and who chances is just plan B.
For sure. His whole press conference, while probably genuine, was a little bit dramatic. I truly believe he looks at Siakam much more like a friend or even family member, and his success does reflect on Masai (whose team believed in him, drafted him, and developed him) but at the end of the day that doesn't excuse not moving him when it became obvious it made sense.
I think, like most people here, the Raptors front-office is always looking for the net positive move. They don't make net negative moves to start the tank (even though in the aggregate it might lead to the most utility). They were probably looking for a net-positive move (4 draft picks plus a young prospect) to give up Siakam as that's what they percieved his value to be. Turns out, no, that deal never materialized and they were forced to take a little bit less and excused it as "giving them a chance".
Anyways, all this is showing me is that the league has gotten smarter. Everyone has the same numbers. Everyone is looking for the same deals. No one is making moves to make moves. Deals have to make sense for both sides.