NYPiston wrote:Manocad wrote:What's the in-between? It's not like the only possibilities are 20-25 wins (which I don't think is going to happen) or running up on 40 wins and the playoffs. What about 34 wins and the 9th draft pick, also a possibility?
I think people try to read too much into what the team's goal is for this season, as if every action is either trying to win every individual game at all costs (push for the playoffs) or losing every individual game at all costs (tanking). If two seasons of Weaver being in charge have showed anything thus far it's that he clearly has a plan of building a team geared for sustainable long term success. And that means building through the draft and taking chances on young players who may blossom here (read: basically nearly an entire team in the same age range), which he's done. What that does not mean is retooling on the fly/overpaying for the hot free agent du jour in order to rush to the playoffs, which he hasn't done and has explicitly said he's not going to do. So in all seriousness my prediction is that this season is going to play out with no specific goal other than to continue to improve the team--give the young guys minutes to develop, rest them if they're frustrated/struggling and need a break, and whatever happens, happens. I personally think they're too good to wind up with another shot at a top four draft pick and not good enough to make any noise in the playoffs if they managed to sneak in, so there's no point in either of those being a goal IMO.
So 30-35 wins, no playoffs, and somewhere around the 9th draft pick. Which I'm fine with; it's part of the process.
That's pretty much what I said. I said it's a win win season whether they're competing for a play in or finishing in the lottery again.
I don't think Weaver cares as much about wins and losses as he does about the process, incremental improvements with a team that is showing internal growth. If it leads to more wins, great, and if it leads to a bunch of close losses as the young guys continue to grow and learn the hard lessons, that's fine too. I think the only unacceptable outcome would be a team that's stagnating not only in the win/loss column but also in terms of individual development.
Either way, Weaver has a clear plan. One more development year then I think next offseason he will make bigger moves to supplement the core with an eye towards the playoffs the season after.
Got it. I guess my brain took "win-win" as meaning that there was a "lose" scenario possible.
Personally I'd consider finishing bottom 4 again kind of a losing scenario in the big picture since it would mean the team hasn't grown/improved a bit; I don't think it's in any way realistic that an intentional tank, i.e. keep the good players on the bench for a large part of the season in order to lose games, is going to happen. I'd rather see the team improving--and hopefully quickly--at the expense of draft position. Cap space and assets make trading up on draft day possible (as we've seen); 8-10 guys all improving and winning games/beating good teams is a lot more important in the grand scheme.
Unless the team is intentionally throwing games, finishing bottom 4 year after year after year means the team isn't going anywhere. Like I've said before, players don't have a "Get Better" switch. It's not like you can expect a bunch of high draft pick/promising young players to suck, suck again, and suck yet again in order to keep getting more high draft picks, then you just flip on everyone's "Get Better" switch and make a deep playoff run. It doesn't work that way.