Scase wrote:Duffman100 wrote:mdenny wrote:
You are encapsulating the deterministic flaw in tanking theory though lol.
I mean...we've all been over this a million times but I'll take another kick at the can.
Point:
"If tanking worked than we'd see regular power shifts in nba standings and teams like Detroit, Houston, Minnesota, Knicks wouldn't spend 10 or more years at the bottom of the league"
Counter-point:
"When a team spends more than 10 years at the bottom of the league it means they didn't know how to tank effectively. Tanking is only effective when combined with good management"
The counter-point is a fallacy. It could be called "no true scotsman". Or it could be called "circular reasoning". In regards to the latter....suppose someone said "the best strategy is to achieve treadmill status and then execute a trade for a top 5 player". (Ie raptors and kawhi)
The response might be "if that was the best strategy....then we'd see more treadmill teams succeed by doing it". Which leads to the counter-point: "those treadmill teams just didn't execute the strategy effectively. Look at the 2019 raptors. The treadmill plus trade strategy has to be combined with good management".
Any proposed strategy "combined with good management" can potentially be successful. It's the "good management" part that determined the success....not the specific strategy.
Exactly.
As I've been saying for a year, there are MANY ways and strategies to build a team.
I didn't say there was a right or wrong way, I said this current method is a bad way to do it. You can steer a car using your knees instead of your hands, still technically steering it, but it's a bad way, or rather not ideal way to do it.
If you guys want to try and say that there is no positive benefit trading players when they have more years on their contract, or closer to when they play a better season, rather than expiring UFAs. Then there is no point to having this conversation.
Tanking has it's benefits and draw backs, as does literally everything. Same as players. But much like building a team, and how you must mask, or compensate for player shortcomings, you need to do the same with tanking.
Part of that, and it's a doozy, is not trading away your own picks, and tanking in that year. You literally end up with nothing to show for it. So again, if you are going to try and suggest that, that, isn't a bad form of tanking. Then there is no point to having this conversation.
There were better ways to pull off the tank job, and there are worse ways to do it, but that doesn't mean you should defend bad moves or mediocrity just cause "well it could've been worse" or "it's in the past". Bad is bad, and it should be discussed and labelled as such.
I have already stated that I think this core has the ceiling to match the 2016-2018 raptors, in so far as, they can probably swap a couple of the high performers to swing for the fences and grab that coveted superstar. The thing is, getting those trades and still having a competitive team, those are very far and few between.
So no, we are not the Pistons, but that doesn't mean this has been executed well either.
I would bet that almost EVERY team that starts tanking owes at least one draft pick from their pre-tank moves.
The raptors are missing one solitary FRP and it's likely conveyed this summer.