League Circles wrote:You do make a lot of good points here, but I'll counter on some of it.
First of all, "all -star" is kind of a meaningless designation IMO. We currently have FOUR multi time all stars in what should be their primes (no health or extreme age issues). And we are not good.
I agree, but these would be all-stars you draft and have in their prime during their all-star years, not washed up guys.
Second, I think it's a specific problem to have too much youth. Like holding so many lottery tickets that when you finally get a winning one, you can't find him in the pile. 2 firsts every year? That would mean more than half of your roster is guys on rookie deals trying to make a name for themselves. That rarely works and they'll all suck and the team will suck. We saw this catastrophically from 99-04.
I also agree it is a specific problem, and you have to be good at developing and choosing guys and moving other guys for future picks to keep the train going, you can't afford to fully develop two every year year indefinitely.
It's not true IMO that the only strategy to win a title is to het lucky and get a superstar. IMO we've had 3 title teams this century that didn't have a superstar. Just built really well balanced rosters.
Who? The only one I see is the Pistons in 2004, and while they had no stars, they had a 4x DMVP and four more two way players and I think averaged what 3-4 all-stars every year? Either way though, my strategy is also the best way to building a team that has above contract value players that I can think of which would make it most likely to build that type of team too.
[Third, a player absolutely may take 5/50 over 4/45 even if he thinks he can make more later. We've seen like 5 significant players take less with us in recent years. Not sure why you think the landscape is a pure high bidder market cause it's not. And 5/50 is a better contract for the team than 4/45 in most cases.
Anything is possible, but high bidder explains probably 98% of the outcomes. No reason to think zebras if you're on a farm and hear the beating of hoofs. Either way, our ability to add an extra year still just means we can offer a worse contract in more ways. Caruso will take the contract that benefits him the most from his perception which will likely be the most expensive contract for the team he signs for.
Drafting in the late first would give us "a lot of good quality starters"???? Based on what. Let's take your all star numbers. Ok, so we have a 1 in 12 chance at a fringe all star. Fringe all stars are NOT typically players who are, for their entire prime, guys who are top 6 at their position (24 all stars per year from 150 starters). And even if they were, big deal.
What "all stars" actually are are roughly the 24 top scorers in the league, mostly wings. They are guys that get opportunities to score. They are, sadly, the Zach Lavines, Demar Derozans, Bradley Beals, Corey Maggettes, Lady Lillards, Jason Richardsons, Jalen Roses of the world. Those guys don't really drive wins and are VERY often not actually top 24 players in the league.
You mean the same types we have now, except we have the 34 year old versions of them that are declining and won't even hold steady value? But I agree, these aren't the types of players that drive wins. They are the types of players that allow you to win if you get lucky with the star player. Having players like these in their prime instead of trying to build around the geriatric version of them allows you the flexibility to move them for different assets, maintain a .500ish team, be prepared if you get a star, and have not crap basketball, and some flexibility to mix things up.
I agree with the importance of finding young talent, but once I do, I want to add sure talent around them ASAP and compete, like we did with Rose. You named 5 teams and 3 of them aren't any good. It's presumptuous to assume they'll become good just because they may have "future assets".
I don't think they'll be good just because they have assets. I just said they were the five teams that are following my strategy, and so they provide data points to watch this strategy play out. The Thunder are the ones whom have followed it most purely and are also in the late stages of reaping the rewards. Not sure the Magic really followed as much as they just completely screwed us over in one trade. The Spurs have definitely been implementing it as have the Jazz/Pelicans.
There really aren't a group of teams trying to do what we're doing, because it's just so dumb that no one would try it. The last example I can think of is the Nets trading for KG/Pierce a long time ago.
Maybe to put it this way, I don't think you have to build assets through the draft, just when you're really bad and don't have sustainable value, and time is against you, and you are set to miss the playoffs for likely two years no matter what you do, that's a time to sell off assets that won't have high value or consistent value in two years and to turn them into assets that will. Draft assets are the most straight forward way to do that.