rsavaj wrote:I'm not sure what the average age of the RealGM poster is, but as I've gotten a bit older, the "championship or bust" mentality has grown less attractive to me. As a fan of the NBA's winningest franchise without a title/the 4th highest winning percentage in NBA history, winning a title sure would be grand, but I don't think the team is an absolute failure if they never win a championship. 29 teams don't win a title every year; does that mean that their fans shouldn't watch them? Shouldn't attend their games?
Sports are supposed to be fun. Watching the Suns lose isn't very fun at all. I don't know if I would continue watching the Suns if they decided to lose 60 or 70 games every year. Now that I'm closer to 30 than 20, I don't have the time/patience anymore to stress about the Suns potentially never winning a title. My priorities as a fan have shifted. Watching basketball is one of my favorite diversions when I need to check out of the real world for a bit. When I come home from work, I want to watch a fun, competitive team filled with guys I like rooting for.
Sure, I understand the logic behind "you need superstars to win a title-->one of the easiest ways to get a superstar is to get a top 3 pick-->let's lose for 5 years and get enough top 3 picks that we're bound to get a superduperstar!", but man...those would be 5 miserable years for me as a fan.
Maybe Philly wins a title before Phoenix does, maybe they don't, but I like the idea of watching a squad that has a reasonable shot at winning more games than they lose. Might not win Phoenix any titles, but it sure as hell makes my day a bit better.
i totally see your point, now let me show you mine.
most sixers fans would tell you the sixers havent won a championship for almost 40 years and who cares if the sixers suck for 4-5 years if it potentially makes them a contender. I get their point too, but that's not the reason why i'm watching
what satisfies people in life? Money, that new shiny iphone, cars, buying a home, a promotion at work? No. It's the path they chose that they ultimately reflect back on. Once you get that iphone, car, house, etc eventually it becomes stale and you move on to the next big thing that you covet.
in the NBA, the ultimate path, the ultimate prize, is a championship. Until you win one, and then the thirst for another quickly outgrows the joy of winning the previous one. And then you want a dynasty, to win multiple championships. But the path you took to win that championship, now that is what is truly interesting.
Chances are what hinkie is doing will never amount to anything, that's simple probability. His plan however is different/the road less taken because he got the green light from ownership to do whatever the hell he wants. Most GMs in the NBA, scratch that ALL SPORTS are content with trotting out a team that is at least respectable so they don't have to look behind their shoulder every second wondering when they'll be fired.
In sports, if you sport a team with an awful record, you're canned. But not the sixers, they want to lose, they want to be so bad so they can get as many assets/draft picks as possible in hope they'll hit on enough picks and eventually they'll have enough talent to win a championship.
That's the boring part. The interesting part is seeing the players develop, seeing if this will be either an epic success story or an epic failure. There is no middle ground here. It truly is championship or bust which you're not a fan of, but that's not the fun part, its seeing the process that excites me, not the result