Skybox wrote:Adding established players who aren’t just “mentors” is the middle ground. You can’t just develop half your team together. Better to invest in the 3 or 4 that will carry you into the next decade by getting them some real help. Paolo can score, Paolo can create, etc…but why make it exceedingly difficult by not having outside scoring support? We see it every night…defenses gamble to crowd Paolo (& Franz) and dare the rest to beat them. It’s an excellent bet. We’re all pleased when Paolo puts up 22…but it could have been 30 if he wasn’t having to beat 2 guys all night. Same for playmaking. Having a legit scoring threat in the backcourt helps Paolo (& Franz) develop AND win now.
“Taking shots away” is not the way to think…it’s “taking double teams away”.
That’s winning, that’s development, that’s just good basketball…also respect and player retention. These guys aren’t stupid. He and his handlers recognize the heavy lifting needed because they don’t give him the support his game warrants. He’s an Alpha and he knows that he’s worthy of that respect and it’s short-sighted to ignore that. Like watching Troy Aikman getting hit on every play his rookie year because he had no offensive line or weapons…the rest of the team caught up but he also could’ve washed out with injuries or demanded out if the team didn’t get proactive for his protection (in basketball, at least advancement if not protection). Paolo plays bully ball, but that’s not sustainable against multiple defenders.
I couldn’t agree with this more.
It’s not impatience that’s causing people like myself to want the Magic to make consolidation trades. I know there’s not a trade out there that can make the Magic into a title contender *right now*, but no one is realistically suggesting that either.
It’s not even a desire to *just* be in the playoffs either. That’s not a good enough outcome.
Why people are stumping so hard for trades is because there’s an understanding what’s coming in the future in terms of the currently very clean cap sheet becoming not so clean in relatively short order.
The Magic have a TON of money to spend this offseason and on paper there isn’t a whole lot going to be out there to spend it on. So the Houston option, spending big on unrestricted free agents like FVV and Brooks, doesn’t seem like an super viable or appealing option for the Magic.
So what does that leave? Two paths…
Path No. 1 is that they opt to keep playing the “give the incumbent veterans like Fultz and Gary big year 1 salaries with a team option on year 2 just like they did with Ingles and Moritz and just kick the can down the road on actually adding real talent
again.
Path No. 2 is they actually cash in some of their chips (expirings, picks, swaps, etc) for some established veterans in their primes who can assume big minute roles either as starters or rotation players and are better than the guys currently filling those roles.
Guys who can raise your floor while still having Paolo, Franz, Suggs, Black and potentially Jett’s long-term development to determine where your overall ceiling ends up.