garrick wrote:lilfishi22 wrote:bwgood77 wrote:
Well of course he is going to try to stay competitive and get better. Just harder to do without draft picks and trade assets. Got to get lucky in FA. You can be willing to spend but miss out on FA. We may be a destination but you had several destination teams going for Kawhi and he went to the Clips. The Lakers will be a team people want to go to post LeBron as well. We will just have so many fewer avenues to stay competitive after the next few years than most other good young teams in the west (and now we went from being young to being very old). I don't doubt his commitment but there are many GMs with experience who have pretty competitive teams already along with a lot of young talent and a ton of draft picks to use to get better or for a trade for a star at some point.
Yes and the draft isn't the only way to build a team. And we also have alternate year picks so we're not totally down to zero. Just based on what Isaiah Thomas tweeted about the Suns being a destination now that Sarver is gone, I do think we're in a better position than ever to convince a star FA to join us. As for the front office, I don't doubt there is likely a change incoming. With Jones getting promoted to President of Basketball Ops (and also still GM), he could be relinquishing the day to day GM role and another GM with more experience could be hired. Also wouldn't put it past Ishbia to move on from Jones altogether and bring in his own guys.
I'm not pretending, nor should anyone pretend this move isn't without risks and I presume Ishbia knows this is a big time gamble so it could certainly backfire and we could look like the Nets after they realised Garnett/PP were both pretty cooked but it is what it is. And even then the Nets were only out of the playoff picture for 3 years and made a couple of smart picks in the late 20's (Allen and Levert) before they started to make noise again. Deal is done and whatever happens, happens. I only hope we win it all to make Mikal's sacrifice worth it
Phoenix just isn't a major free agent destination even when Jerry Colangelo was the owner and everyone at the time raved about how a 1st class organization that the Suns were so I doubt Ishbia being the owner would change how free agents view Phoenix. Steve Nash was the last major free agent to sign with us and that was only because the Mavs were stupid enough not to resign him for what he was asking for.
Trades and drafting is really the only way to rebuild for most teams and signing away our draft picks is putting us in a bind as we no longer have any assets to use for the next 5 years.
It's also a very different time. Private air travel is easier, cheaper and more available than ever making commutes to LA more than doable. Phoenix itself has also slowly climbed the population ladder as well over the decades. Phoenix went from the 20th largest city in the US when Jerry became GM of the Suns in the early 70's to 6th largest when he sold the team to Sarver. Since then Phoenix has flipped flopped between 5th and 6th (with Philly) until now where Phoenix is now solidly the 5th largest city in the US. Phoenix is now a major city with an NBA team, great weather all year and only an hr and a half flight to LA.
With new facilities, a new owner, a certified homegrown star in Booker to anchor the team moving forward, I think there's a lot to like about the Suns as a free agent destination. I understand this may not equate to real meaningful increases star FA wanting to come to Phoenix but I'm only suggesting that this is a new start after two decades of Phoenix not being a super attractive place to play and we're putting ourselves in the best possible position to attract those FA's. Let's just remember for a second that our best chance at a star prior to CP3 was a "potential" meeting with Lebron before he chose to go back to Cleveland. That was literally our best attempt since the Nash days. In the past3 seasons alone, we've had respected HOF'ers like CP3 and Durant force their way to the Suns.














