Claud wrote:Year 1: KD out for season, Kyrie quits on team after minor injury and shuts it down. (Bubble year)
Year 2: KD balls out, Kyrie gets injured by Giannis, Harden being out of shape catches up to him leading to hammy injury.
Year 3: Kyrie doesn't want to get vaxxed and derails our season, Harden gets traded, KD gets shut down by physical Boston D.
Year 4: Ben Simmons Joins, Joe Harris is back, KD/Kyrie have final shot to see if they can at least make an ECF.
My question is, had we kept our previous core (Dlo, Fro, LeVert, Din, etc) do you think we could have done better?
I still think signing KD/Kyrie was the correct move to have our best shot at a title. ...
Can't disagree that it was the best shot at winning a title, but it was also a really shaky, disruptive shot at winning a title, and I'm not a big fan of those. Needing to install a novice, puppet coach was like an exclamation point on all that.
Could we have done better? Devil's advocate-- YES.
Kenny was a good coach and likely would have kept improving. Team culture, which Marks was meticulous about building in the beginning wouldn't have been dumped overboard as it was, catering to narcissists. Outside of Fro, our young guys weren't special, but when you don't have a gun pointed to your head, then you have the luxury of moving on from them far more easily, flipping pieces around, trying new assets out.
Let's not forget that Marks' greatest talent is arguably finding gems in the rough. When you have a certain amount of freedom to properly evaluate such talent, that's when that gift is maximised, and by the same token, when you're a 'win now' team, all that's more strained and difficult.
So we may or may not have won a single playoff series like the KI&KD experiment did across three seasons, but the team would have been sounder and more flexible in every way, naturally creating more paths to success, even if a title soon was unlikely. TBH, I'm also a fan of enjoying the team I'm rooting for, and this team has by and large not been enjoyable to watch the past three seasons, especially amidst the sky-high expectations.
But yeah, you look around the league at other long-term successful teams, especially teams that did it with fairly modest starting resources, and that's how you typically build perennial title contenders. Not this 'grasping at title straws' dumpster fire.





























