Nivek wrote:stevemcqueen1 wrote:Nivek wrote:I wouldn't want Calderon on a 4-year contract, but he's been one of the most underrated players in the league. His defense isn't good, but his offense is so efficient that he more than offsets what he costs on D. He'd be a perfect 3rd guard for the Wizards. If he was on a two-year contract...
Yeah he is a really fine player. I don't understand what Dallas was thinking in giving him a four year deal though. Even Webster's fourth year is a team option.
Several shooters made bank this offseason and I don't understand a lot of the four year deals given out. I don't understand why Kyle Korver and JJ redick got four years deals, or why they got more than the MLE. And yet Paul Millsap, a far better player than either got just two years and 9.5 million per. Courtney Lee's dollar amount was high. Chase Budinger got a third year player option and Kevin Martin got four years. The deals Steve Novak and J.R. Smith seem like big bargains in comparison.
Feels like teams are overpaying for shooters. And conversely, a lot of quality front court players went for fairly cheap, like Carl Landry, Millsap, Zaza Pachulia, etc.
Seems like GMs pay based on the latest fashion more so than on a robust and worthwhile assessment of the player's overall value. Like Leonsis and Grunfeld, I think many learn the wrong lessons from looking at other successful teams.
Continuity doesn't bring success, for example, it's a result of success. "Fit" isn't about getting the right assemblage of skills, but rather about acquiring good players with the maturity to play well together. And, one of my other favorites --
the Wizards' problem wasn't too many young players, it was too many IMMATURE players (who also weren't good).
I'm still not that impressed for the most part with what GMs pay for.
Too often, IMO, they go for athleticism and size in the draft and they pay for scoring potential in free agency. I agree with steve.
What they rarely do is consider chemistry, fit, and use something like WS/48 as a gauge of who might help them succeed. What I don't see teams do very often is craft a team of disparately skilled players. Bill Russell, in a book of his that I wish I could cite but just can't recall the name, said his Celtics contained a team full of really good specialists. Each guy had his own strength and his own skill. The Celtics were really well balanced and had well-defined roles. Guys more or less "stayed in their lane". (My way of putting it).
What I notice is GMs seem to pick the same kind of player over and over. I don't see a team that likes project/athletes go for a pure shooter. Some GMs will draft shot blocker after shot blocker. Some will have a ton of rebounders on the same roster. (Humphries with Evans last season comes to mind.) Others will add shooter after shooter, but not have a real athlete. I might be wrong, but I rarely see GMs DRAFT FOR NEED.
Seems to me OKC got it right with Steve Adams. The Wizards drafted Otto Porter after they already had Ariza and Webster. Only a couple years after they drafted Singleton and Vesely (to both be SFs). They also drafted Glen Rice, Jr. I complained about the guy's character but the dude is a real good athlete and he's yet to play. How can he on this roster?
I thought it was dumb as all heck for the Wizards to trade the rights to Nate Wolters. The guy is a BRAIN on the court and is a SCORER/REBOUNDER for a PG. Wolters makes few mistakes. He set all kinds of NCAA records, or was close. I know he's not an athlete. I'm aware his FG% is low. But I'm also not at all surprised he's starting (I said he would before the draft). He's not hurting the Bucks.
Teams like the Wizards are dumb to me. Sorry if that sounds smug, arrogant, condescending, etc. To me, with all the resources they have they should know better. I post stuff here year after year that may seem counterintuitive. It's not group think. But to me a successful basketball player doesn't fit a certain type. Seems to me they usually never want anyone like a Blair but they will take any veteran who's over 30 and who can score a bit or who had some reputation somewhere else. They like other teams to do the leg work and they prefer known commodoties. Washington also throws a lot of overlapping, redundantly skills guys into a crowded mix. They never seem to address glaring weakness in their current roster and they don't seem to give an iota of thought to chemistry. They just like the word "veteran".
As far as chemistry goes, I think Coach Wittman doesn't get it with Vesely. I think a game like today vs OKC is lost when the coach gets locked in to a short bench and he doesn't rotate in rebounding, size, and bigs who defend on the perimeter. Just because he has faith in some veterans is no reason to treat professionals like they can't play. Vesely started games two seasons ago. Now, he can't be trusted with seconds of play off the bench? Really?
Wittman has a guy like Temple come in against Brooklyn and it made some sense. But why is he on the roster and a guy like Rice, Jr. will never ever play? What's the point? To me, a guy the Wizards cut really quickly, D'or Fischer, had a requisite skill set this team now lacks.
I think teams need to consider function, skill set, diverse ability/mentality, leadership, etc. Instead, what I think I see is really narrow thinking on who can play and who can't. Guys like Rudy Gay are going to be max players. They'll bring in a Bargnani (at his height) but a guy like Steve Novak (deadly at what he does well) gets cast off. I don't get it. I can't see bringing in Bargs or Gay, because those guys tend not to help teams win. But they put up offense.
I love coaches like Brad Stevens. He's got an analytics guy who he brought with him from Butler What Stevens will do is totally scrap his lineup and expand his paradigm of what works based on numbers, if need be. I think the NBA will eventually become more numerically driven in time. I think the art is always going to be in figuring what key factors lead to wins and which combos of players make that happen. Teams need to think of players like a good cook thinks of spices in the spice rack.
Salt and pepper are the basics but the master chef can work in a whole lot more seasonings. Nivek, I agree with your statement about GMs favoring the latest fashion. I attribute that to saving face or meeting the expectation of peers. Staying within the normative culture just so as to avoid criticism or ostracism. It's safe to make certain moves. To me, Sam Presti is going to look like a damned genius in time. Just like Memphis did right by letting Pau go for picks, and Orlando did great letting Dwight go for picks; OKC is loaded for years to come. But it wasn't the "latest move" so they've been criticized for letting Harden blow up in Houston.
Funny thing: After they beat the Wizards tonight, Durant said that's some of the best basketball he's seen since he's been with OKC. The guy's on a complete team now. Not one with three stars and shaky cap forever. Sorry for the rant. I like when teams consistently make shrewd moves. Especially when they go against conventional wisdom and things work out well.
Tre Johnson is the future of the Wizards.