imagump1313 wrote:G R E Y wrote:imagump1313 wrote:
I know exactly what you're saying.
The biggest thing I love about him though is his price tag. Like I said earlier, if we want to speed up this rebuild we are going to have to maximize Poeltl.
We all see the holes in his game. But this is the exact reason we have our starting center on the cheap and even if we sign him to an extension I'm guessing it will be in the 18-25 million range.
For us to get some all around polished center of even ones with holes in their games themselves(Gobert, Ayton) we are going to be paying 35-45 million plus gutting whoever on our roster is decent to get them. By keeping Poeltl we are potentially paying half the price and not giving up a bunch of other assets.
We can make it a priority to be a better FT shooter and try to get him to be more aggressive around the rim. For the price and what we are getting from him we are making out like bandits because he shows flashes of being just as good or even better than those other more expensive guys.
IMO we need to use the money we save on Poeltl on overpaying to get some big FA's to come here instead because if we spend it on a center we are just spinning our wheels.
Actually Ayton's max is here somewhere a few posts prior. His final top year would be mid-30s and he would be around Jakob's age now when it finished. And he's already averaging more than Jakob on a rookie contract. Much higher ceiling.
Counting college, he's had NINE years of trying to improve his FTs. Only once did he break the .600 percentage. At some point we have to accept the ceiling here, especially on FTs.
Jakob on 18-25 would be insane lmao the higher end is John Collins territory. MUCH rather have Ayton than Jakob on their next contracts who fits our timeline, whose broader skill set we can utilize more, no longer have to be handcuffed by Jakob's O limitations. We're not paying double for Ayton than Jakob, but you do have to give something up to get something. With where Suns are and where we are, they could use a workman C who doesn't need the ball as much whereas we can use Ayton more than he was utilized on the Suns who prioritize three guards. I can see how for them it makes less sense to max out Ayton given how they use him.
And for waiting for true FAs, well when you get a chance at RFA and it costs you some short contracts and no one from our long-term core to secure higher talent, it's hard to pass up.
I'm going on the assumption that Poeltl isn't going to get 30+ a year on a new contract. What Im saying is that we can try to improve big time in other areas instead of breaking the bank just to improve a little bit at the 5. We aren't going to be able to do that otherwise.
Honestly, how much better are we going to be with Ayton instead of Poeltl and no other changes? Instead of a fringe play in team we win a play in game then get swept in the real playoffs? We have way too many areas that need improvement than just throwing it all at one position.
Well there are still several unknowns, starting with Jakob's next contract though we know Ayton wants a max which will range from around $30M to around $35M for four years if we were to sign him. We can afford it.
You started with assuming we'd get another deal on Jakob's next deal to thinking it would be in the 18-25 range to now expecting under 30M - I should bloody well hope so!
An interesting comparison is Valanciunas who for the first six years didn't take 3s and for the last four has extended his range and is good for a couple a game at mid thirties percentage. BUT, and this is important, he's been consistently good at the FT line ranging from high seventies to low eighties percentage throughout his career. He's also averaged double doubles several times in his career (highest PPG was the last two seasons with 17, also on highest MPG -- and it also corresponds to expanding his game, after being traded for Adams who though younger plays a far more traditional style, no 3s).
Valanciunas has averaged around $15M for the last several years despite being a more lumbering C but one who also has some post moves.
Jakob's defense is near top of the league, and with a more limited O is attractive to teams that need P&R and rim protection without prioritizing a big on O, unlike Nuggets, Wolves, 76ers, Bucks, for example. When you have a quality big, even a C specifically, you adjust your game to suit theirs.
Caveat: all of the bigs on that list are quality two-way players, MVP-calibre.
Simply put, Ayton has a broader skill set that Jakob and it opens up our game.
Your other question, how much better can we get with Ayton at his max than Jakob at whatever is negotiated? Well that's also tied to the second part: "... and no other changes."
The latter part is almost certainly going to be different. Case in point: Lonnie is RFA; Wiesy's and Cacok's two-way contracts were converted to guaranteed ones; Woodard and Stewart were then signed to two-way contracts.
We're already signed Barlow to a two-way contract and I expect Hall and Days to fight for the other one, if not get a guaranteed one which puts the four mentioned players' tenure with us in question.
Here's a list of our guaranteed contracts:
Note: every one of those players is 3&D except for Jakob. And they all love to compete. And have great character. And are coachable.
The ONE main thing with Ayton is whether his motivation and some friction with Monty is a character issue or him lashing out at the slight of being one of the few RFAs not extended by their teams, particularly stinging for a #1 selection.
So we almost certainly are going to have a different roster once the season starts. In the post-draft presser that mzfk69 posted above, Brian Wright mentioned we're trending towards multi-position high floor, high ceiling players. Also, check out the wingspans on our team! (Not listed are Barlow's 7'3", Hall's 6'10", Days' 7'1").
So that's without even using our max. But we've carefully protected that max for a reason. And using it on a player with a higher floor and higher ceiling that fits a more varied style of play, a #1 pick who is just scratching the surface of his talents at $30M is not exorbitant, especially with an upcoming new TV deal that will raise the cap.
As a contrast, there was talk of us trying to lure LaVine who is four years older and whose contract starts at $40+M and goes up. DJ's, incidentally, will be around that much in a couple of years. Meanwhile, where Ayton's will end is lower than where DJ's will start.
These contexts matter.
And I'm not even against keeping Jakob and using the cap elsewhere if that's what we deem is best. But I don't think using a max and consolidating players not part of our long-term plans (ie/Doug) in a S&T on a player whose game we can expand, one who will be a benefit in the playoffs (he won a series for the Suns) is not a waste of money.
And that's not even considering the return we may potentially get should we trade DJ... but even with him, getting Ayton who can go up against stronger bigs and stretch the floor and make FTs at the very least makes us a far better team.