720 wrote:Danny1616 wrote:720 wrote:
In this thread we see our limitations and want the team to make the necessary steps to get better.
Saying we’re still elite and we’re only one decent center away from contending for a championship it when it gets problematic.
Lowry is 34, Norman is a 26 year role player thats gonna warrant a big commitment. We’re at a crucial point in the trajectory of this franchise.
We either fizzle out (which is where we’re heading) or we make the necessary steps to expand the window.
First, that's not far fetched, but I do agree we need more. Last year we were on pace for 60 wins, and had Siakam not been a complete disaster we beat Boston and have a shot at beating Miami.
Second, I do agree something needs to be addressed with both Kyle and Norm. This is a transition year, but it doesn't mean that if we don't do something big our team will fizzle. Siakam, Fred and OG are proving to be a pretty damn nice core. It's about surrounding them with good complimentary pieces or maybe packing one of them for an all-star in the future if that arises.
The thing is, if you let Lowry go for nothing and pay Norman/let him leave then we are going to fizzle out. We might have a 2-3 year window where we are at the middle of the pack but nothing elite.
Packaging one of them for a superstar would be cool but not likely. Either we that’s not the problem. We both agree we should keep Siakam.
I do think that it's a bit of disservice to our management and player development program which has proven time and time again to be elite.
In 2016, it looked like our window was closing (stuck with aging Scola, Patterson, Carroll on bad contract etc.) Masai manages to flip Ross for Ibaka and get mid-late draft pick ups like Norm, Siakam, Delon, Fred, OG etc. and extend that window and even use those assets to get other great pieces (Kawhi and Gasol). None of those guys became who they are right away. It look them 2-3 years of slow development, with time in the G League to become solid contributors to our roster.
For example, we now see Boucher has a great product of our development program. Boucher is averaging 14ppg and 7rpg on 53% shooting this year and is in the race for MIP. That's a testament to our organization slowly grooming players into solid roles, and not just throwing 19 year old's straight away onto the court on teams with bad cultures where they don't learn to play the right way and develop bad habits.


























