montestewart wrote:I butchered nate33's comment, and should have confined my comment to the second half stretch he was discussing. I hate seeing Seraphin on the floor, and even when he gets hot shooting, he always seems to be hurting the team in other ways. But I'm trying not to assume all of Wittman's choices regarding Seraphin are the equivalent of a deer staring into the headlights.
I wonder just how ready EG thought the team would be this year. Maybe he assumed a playoff run but in no way thought the team a serious contender, and an interim goal for this year was to either truly develop Seraphin or to at least promote his trade value and get something in return for their investment. I'm barely hoping for the latter.
I don't see how running a guy out there who's playing badly would boost his trade value, but there doesn't seem to be a large number who know how bad Seraphin is playing. And, it's not just announcers from other teams or comments from fans of other teams who see Seraphin's 1-in-5 decent games. Folks like Mike Prada and Kyle Weidie (sp?) "aren't as down on Seraphin" (from Twitter) as I am. Glenn Consor has said at least a couple times that Seraphin is doing a "terrific job" off the bench.
So, there seem to be people who think Seraphin is doing just fine. I'm bewildered by this.
Also, I don't think Grunfeld brought Seraphin back to trade him. I think they brought him back because they hoped he'd be a decent backup center. Given that he's getting consistent playing time ahead of a guy who's proven to be an average NBA player, it would seem that they believe he's at worst their best option for a backup center, and/or that he actually IS a decent backup center. Again, I'm bewildered by either conclusion.