IMAGE--Changing the Wizards
Posted: Fri Nov 1, 2013 6:50 pm
You may recall I wanted something like a 30 for 30 done on how much fun Juwan Howard, C-Webb and later Blatche, Javale etc. had in the district so it would be more attractive to free agents. I think Washington also boasts better restaurants than 2/3's of the league and better culture (museums, live performances etc.) than 3/4 of the league and these facts never come out.
One author has a slightly different take on the same thing, I agree with his as well and do think it starts with the fans controlling/influencing what we can control/influence:
http://www.bulletsforever.com/2013/10/3 ... -john-wall
"But winning isn't enough of a difference-maker for a team like the Wizards. There are other teams in similar spots that are pursuing the same strategy. Atlanta has gobs of cap space after Danny Ferry remade the team. Cleveland, led by Kyrie Irving, has a similar number of young, buzz-worthy players and flexibility for years. Detroit just made two big free-agent moves and has a brilliant young frontcourt. Portland has last year's Rookie of the Year and a retooled bench that can convince its superstar to stay. New Orleans has the league's most intriguing backcourt and a former No. 1 pick coming into his own up front. And just wait until Masai Ujiri does his magic in Toronto.
The key, then, is Q rating. The Wizards are competing with those teams not only for wins, but for national attention. The top free agents in the league will have plenty of up-and-coming teams to choose from when their contracts end, so why should they sign with the Wizards? The only way is because they think the atmosphere is exciting, the infrastructure sound, the surrounding talent complimentary. And the only way for them to even notice and start to think about those qualities is if their new franchise vaults its way into the national conversation.
So, this is my call to fellow Wizards fans. If SportsCenter's highlight package of a Cavs-Wizards game shows Kyrie Irving more than Wall, complain about it. Lobby for more Wizards inclusion. Carry out a public campaign to get people to recognize Wall, Bradley Beal and the rest of the team as a rising club."
One author has a slightly different take on the same thing, I agree with his as well and do think it starts with the fans controlling/influencing what we can control/influence:
http://www.bulletsforever.com/2013/10/3 ... -john-wall
"But winning isn't enough of a difference-maker for a team like the Wizards. There are other teams in similar spots that are pursuing the same strategy. Atlanta has gobs of cap space after Danny Ferry remade the team. Cleveland, led by Kyrie Irving, has a similar number of young, buzz-worthy players and flexibility for years. Detroit just made two big free-agent moves and has a brilliant young frontcourt. Portland has last year's Rookie of the Year and a retooled bench that can convince its superstar to stay. New Orleans has the league's most intriguing backcourt and a former No. 1 pick coming into his own up front. And just wait until Masai Ujiri does his magic in Toronto.
The key, then, is Q rating. The Wizards are competing with those teams not only for wins, but for national attention. The top free agents in the league will have plenty of up-and-coming teams to choose from when their contracts end, so why should they sign with the Wizards? The only way is because they think the atmosphere is exciting, the infrastructure sound, the surrounding talent complimentary. And the only way for them to even notice and start to think about those qualities is if their new franchise vaults its way into the national conversation.
So, this is my call to fellow Wizards fans. If SportsCenter's highlight package of a Cavs-Wizards game shows Kyrie Irving more than Wall, complain about it. Lobby for more Wizards inclusion. Carry out a public campaign to get people to recognize Wall, Bradley Beal and the rest of the team as a rising club."