DCZards wrote:PIF, you've only listed the players drafted 8th. But if you’re drafting at 8 you don’t only have available to you the players drafted 8th but also any player that is drafted after 8.
So, if for example, the Zards trade the 8th pick for the Nets 21st & 22nd picks, you miss out on the opportunity to draft any players taken between and 8 and 20...not just the player drafted at 8.
Here are just some of the players drafted between 8 and 20 since 2012:
Devin Booker
Giannis A.
Donovan Mitchell
Bam Adebayo
Malik Bridges
John Collins
CJ McCollum
Zach Lavine
D. Sabonis
Michael Porter Jr.
Myles Turner
Tyler Herro
Cam Johnson
Devin Vassell
Terry Rozier
Trey Murphy
Andre Drummond
Donte DiVincenzo
Zards...

You just cherry picked 18 of the best out of 130 players taken from 8-20 in 10 drafts! & you didn't even include SGA. Oh, & of course you didn't include Jerome Robinson!

Trading down, one would also have "miss out on the opportunity to draft" Jerome.
Here's the thing: if you know how to take the best, go for it! That's obvious!
The problem is that you don't; you simply don't. I.e. GMs don't -- & that's my premise. We have to deal with the reality as it actually went down, not the hindsight-driven knowledge of what would have been best.
Thus, in 2015, with "the opportunity to draft any player
s taken between and 8 and 20," Detroit's then GM picked Stanley Johnson not Devin Booker.
Whereupon, with the same opportunity minus only one choice, Charlotte's GM took Frank Kaminsky.
Then Miami's GM took Justise Winslow.
Whereupon Indy's GM took Myles Turner -- a better pick than the previous two, to be sure -- yet Turner's pick makes my point rather than contradicting it, because not only has Turner been better than Johnson, Kaminsky & Winslow, he's also been better than the guy taken at #2, the guy taken at #3, the guy taken at #4, the guy taken at #5, the guy taken at #6, & the guy taken at #7.
& yet, he's still not as good as Devin Booker, tho he went before him -- which proves my point again.
Oh, & then came the Jazz at 12. Utah's GM took not Devin Booker but Trey Lyles. Then, finally, Booker.
That's reality. As is the fact that of the guys taken in the 26 picks after Booker, only one of them has played as many NBA minutes as the guy taken #40.
In short, you want to make your argument based on Devin Booker. Try to make it based on Stanley Johnson; try to make it based on the guy who actually went #8. Can't be done.
Because, GMs simply can't reliably pick the best player on the board at 8 or any other pick, it is inherent that trading down gives a GM a hedge against failure. Doesn't mean it always gives a good result. But nothing Dat or anyone else says can change the facts.