DCZards wrote:payitforward wrote:The problem is that you don't; you simply don't. I.e. GMs don't -- & that's my premise. We have to deal with the reality as it actually went down, not the hindsight-driven knowledge of what would have been best.
Whew… “Mr. Woulda, Coulda, Shoulda” talking about dealing with reality and not hindsight. I’m floored!

Hindsight is an important self-correction tool, at least in my experience.
Have you ever thought back on something you did, something in your own life, & regretted it? Can be for any reason.
I know I have.
Or the opposite, of course -- think back over a situation you dealt with well, & then try to learn from that?
No different in this case.
But, I took you to be doing something a bit different w/ your list of players. Of course we know who turned out well from the 2015 draft. But, we can't pick in that draft any more.
In any case, your argument proved my point rather than casting doubt on it. I.e. it illustrated that the best players in the league -- leaving out guys taken 1-3 -- don't come preponderantly from those oh so precious (people think so anyway) single-digit lottery picks.
In that 2015 draft, GMs took Jahlil Okafor, Mario Hezonja, Willie Cauley-Stein, Emmanuel Mudiay, Stanley Johnson, Frank Kaminsky, Justise Winslow & Trey Lyles before Phoenix nabbed Booker. &, really, I should include KP as well.
H*ll, Terry Rozier, Delon Wright, Bobby Portis, RH-J, Tyus Jones, Larry Nance Jr., Kevon Looney, Montrezl Harrell, Richaun Holmes, Josh Richardson, Pat Connaughton, & Norman Powell have all been better -- a whole lot better in many cases -- than most of those guys!
Of course, just as good players are found all over the draft, so too bad players are found all over the draft.
If I own the #8 pick, & I trade it back for, say the #15 & the #26 picks, am I likely to do better? You bet. Pretty much every single year.