Randle McMurphy wrote:DelAbbot wrote:Randle McMurphy wrote:Fantastic news for the Raptors who have been in a mediocre cycle for almost a half decade now.
Ed has put a ton of money into the Blue Jays in recent years which helped them make the playoffs in 3 of the last 5 years (and would have been 5 out of 5 with a better manager/FO).
There’s also no way he will continue paying Masai Ujiri that much to make mistake after mistake in basketball operations given their history. We may finally get some real much needed change in the front office again.
This cannot NOT be sarcasm.
No, just someone who isn’t willing to give Masai a free pass of terrible management for life because he traded for 1 year of Kawhi Leonard. Having an owner who is not going to just hand him blank cheque after blank cheque for his mistakes is massive for this franchise.
Masai managed treadmill teams in both Denver and Toronto for many years before that title. If you're going to praise Shapiro and Atkins for building a treadmill team that lasted a whopping two seasons (and missing the playoffs the one year they actually had a contending roster), sandwiched between five years of awful baseball, I don't see why you don't do the same for Masai.
I get being critical of Masai (he's **** the bed since 2020), but claiming that Shapiro and Atkins somehow did better than him during their tenure in Toronto is comical. Shatkins **** the bed from 2017-2020, then **** the bed in 2021 despite actually building a strong team with a one year window due to Semien's contract situation, then treadmilled for two seasons, and have now gone back to **** the bed. This is the same Mark Shapiro who spent 15 years in the mediocre AL Central, accomplishing nothing with Cleveland (he made the playoffs just three times, once with an inherited team).
In 24 years as an MLB executive, Shapiro's teams made the playoffs 6 times, winning zero titles. I'm also being extremely generous counting 2020 as a "playoff" berth given it was 60 game season and the Jays got in with a negative run differential.
In 15 years as an NBA executive, Masai's teams made the playoffs 10 times, winning one title.