YosemiteSam wrote:What I’m trying to express is that here we go again at 1-6 and this is actually consistent with how we’ve played before and we are losing games often by 8 to 10 points which is not really keeping them close.
But it would be factually incorrect if you're trying to correlate it to the past two years though unless it is solely by wins/losses and no other context. It's technically only been
one and a half seasons since we've started our second rebuild and people are already losing their minds because they can't handle a team building for the future and not doubling down on a Vucevic-Fournier-Gordon future part deux. As much as some posters would like you to believe, it hasn't been ongoing for 10 years. We've been unable to field a team people can believe in for 10 years, but there wasn't a rebuild for all of those. Big difference.
We made the playoffs for two straight seasons with a flawed, low ceiling roster that many are clamoring for again because of.. reasons?
In 2021 we started 6-2.
In 2022 we started out equally as badly but got blown out in three of them.
The only game that felt out of reach so far this season was the Knicks game, but even then, they cut it to a 6 point game with 4 minutes left. Detroit down to the wire, Cavs they were down 5 with 4 minutes left, Hawks game same thing (5 with 4 minutes left), Celtics game tied at 4 minutes. Literally a two possession game in all of these losses sub 5 minutes, all without 5-6 rotational players against legit playoff teams and contenders.
If people are
ONLY box score watching, and correct me if I'm wrong, you seem like you have been, saying a game being lost by 8 or 10 points means the games aren't close is just factually incorrect. Teams have pulled away during the last 2 minutes of the game, which is where we've faltered the most,
YosemiteSam wrote:I do not see much potential for us to be much better, even when the so-called injured saviors return. I think the main difference here is having a couple infrequently, promising players, and another season of 20 to 25 wins with a hope that the next savior is in the draft even if we get one of the top 2 picks we want, which is statistically improbable, and is no way to root for a team, especially within the first five or six games to open season. I’m complaining not because I’m surprised, but because I am not surprised.
Progress is not solely made through the draft. We currently own some very nice draft capital from our own pick and Chicago's pick, as well as some young guys who people may try to poach as reclamation projects. All of these things should be factored in instead of just assuming it's Wembanyama/Scoot or bust.
I feel like even if you assumed every player who is out for us now (Suggs, Fultz, Cole, Gary, Isaac, Moe) are low impact bench players/marginal starters at best (which, let's be honest, most probably are, but some can exceed that) .. then they'd still be replacing guys who wouldn't sniff the floor on most teams Okeke (current form), Bamba (spot minutes), Hampton, Houstan, K. Harris and Schofield, etc.
YosemiteSam wrote:And for those citing the difficult opening schedule, other teams that are rebuilding and dealing with injuries have at least managed to scrape out a couple more wins on any given night and have lesser differences in their scores (see Hornets, Jazz or Thunder).
The Jazz haven't had any big injuries to rotation guys and have 26 years of NBA service in their backcourt alone. Their youngest starter has 5 years of NBA service.
The Hornets are in a similar situation where their youngest current starter has 4 years of NBA service and the rest are veterans.
The Thunder are actually surprising, but beat up on a Clippers team insanely injured in both home games. They've also tanked with no remorse the last 3 years so it's a bad example of a team that we should be emulating in your argument.
YosemiteSam wrote:Another thing that I just can’t connect with what I see in these game threads is people saying we’re keeping the games close. Look at the scoreboard, a loss by nine points is not close in the NBA
Are you watching the games or not? If you consider games close or not strictly by what the end score is, then we can say no. If you watch the games and see them in a position where they can tie or lead with two possessions under 5 mins, then yes, they are competitive and close despite being undermanned and against way better teams. It's just amazing that nobody cares who or where we're playing and treat every opponent as a faceless, unknown team that we should be beating up on no matter the circumstances.