madmaxmedia wrote:NO-KG-AI wrote:Ron Swanson wrote:The Ainge worship is getting a bit overzealous considering he clearly whiffed by not taking that superior Knicks package as reported, because he was so stubbornly set at his outlandish original asking price. He's been often referred to as "Gun-Shy Danny" for a reason. Honestly think that Sexton and Agbaji are the best assets he got here. 
But a lot of people do seem to love these "trade a star for quantity over quality picks" deals that are always lauded as some 4D chess type moves. When in reality I'm pretty sure the teams that "get fleeced" (Bucks, Lakers, Clippers) are pretty fine with the outcome of those trades when they've banked a championship or two. As a Bucks fan, sign me up for getting "fleeced" again if I'm getting another All-Star caliber player to extend our title window....
People look at it as "getting fleeced" because they can't fathom how a trade can be great for both teams, somebody has to get jeered as a loser.
 
I thought the Mitchell trade was roughly fair value and the deal terms didn't really surprise me at all. I think people were a lot more surprised at the Gobert deal, given Gobert's age and position. In retrospect perhaps it's not too surprising, because after Gobert was traded the writing was on the wall and teams were trying to get best terms possible for Mitchell.
If you have 2 star/superstar level players in their primes (especially Mitchell who is very young) and trade them both, yeah you're going to get a haul, and Utah came out well in the end. Not sure where any schooling took place though.
A proper schooling would have been if they somehow landed a superstar in the offseason while keeping Mitchell and Gobert.
OKC was ultimately the winner of the best superstar trade, because they leveraged the fact that Clippers needed PG to sign Kawhi. All the picks will end up probably so-so (a combo of Miami and Clipper picks), but they also got SGA in the deal.
 
I really like what we got for Anthony Davis, considering he was basically nuking deals with every other team.  Ingram, Lonzo, Hart, #4 pick, #9 pick this season, a pick swap next draft (where their team has a ton of turmoil and question marks with age and injuries..) and the choice of their 2024 or 2025 pick.  Not bad for how much they were strong arming us, I think we only got as much value as we did because LeBron was not going to sit around and wait another summer for Davis to get there and possibly change his mind.  The LAkers got a superstar that was a great fit and a great friend to LeBron, hard to call it a loss for them, and it is in question now, but the idea was that Davis transitions into the megastar beyond the LeBron years and they attract him another partner later.
I think we got a lot of value out of Jrue, who was a non all NBA player entering his 30's, and who we also wanted to do a solid and get him somewhere he wanted to be.  Worked out for both parties, it won't pay us any dividends now, but for a team who was obviously hinging on building around Zion, Ingram, and a bunch of lotto picks we already had, having future picks creates flexibility and the ability to bring on cheap labor later when all of our guys are on bigger deals and we have less flexibility with the roster.   If even 1 of those ends up a lot better of a pick than anticipated, it's a massive win and the reason we kicked the can downthe road is that it coincides with the last of the Lakers picks coming the same year we start getting the Bucks picks.
Giannis will be coming up on 30 when we receive our first pick from them and near 33 when we get the last of them, with a lot of hard mileage due to his physicality and play style.  Jrue will be 34-37 when we are receiving the picks, and Middleton 33-36, neither guy has particularly great health either.  If Giannis misses any significant time, we might end up with a top 5-10 pick from them, even Giannis is there for the rest of his career.
The Bucks got a great deal because they can keep their present picks and help build around these guys in their primes, and might hit some late gems that keep the train rolling along into the time when they start giving picks away.