Merit wrote:YogurtProducer wrote:Scase wrote:Yeah but why bother, when you can toil away on a treadmill for years. Don't worry guys, we're gonna get the team to be better with all those FA signings that work out all the time, and the 2 trades we do every 6 years.
Posts like this is exactly what I mean.
The odds of selecting a player in the mid-lottery or as a low playoff team are very clearly low. The odds of getting a stud in FA or through trade are also low. Anyone who is on more of a "try and be competitive and see what happens" mind frame is capable of acknowledging and recognizing those facts.
So why do we mock that avenue while we can see the stats laid out by OP show that the odds of getting elite players through the draft are also low? Especially when the odds even plummet further when you recognize you still have to build up the rest of your team after tearing it down.
And to add, why are we forcing a tank when we’re closer to contention than to the extreme bottom with players who can grow with us.
This is why, despite my advocacy for a soft tank next season, I still push for established talent like Wiggins (and to a lesser extent Zach LaVine) while also looking to add complementary pieces such as a backup guard (THT) and a big wing (Derrick Jones Jr.).
I think you need to define "contention". Contention to me, means a contender, as in for the chip. If that's what you mean by contention, we are absolutely in no way, closer to contention than the bottom of the league.
If you meant
playoff contention, I still don't think we are, but that makes more sense. We are likely going to be around 9-12th in the east next year, but more than half of the entire conference makes the playoffs, so it's not exactly a ringing endorsement.
But being "closer" doesn't matter IMO, our ceiling is what matters. And this team as currently constructed has a very low one without some massive developmental leaps, and/or us lucking into a very very good player exceeding expectations in the draft.
This team has had the most success with draft picks, not FA signings, not trades, not undrafted players, but draft picks. Yet everyone is always seemingly so adverse to playing to our strengths for a couple years. Everything that got us to our chip was built off the back of lotto talent and development. Not rolling into a season with 4 NBA calibre starters under contract, and hoping something magical happens in the next couple of years.
If we want to talk about the odds posted in the thread, how about we talk about the odds of the 19th and 31st picks panning out into actual NBA calibre players, instead of how going for a top 5 pick is stupid cause we can't guarantee an MVP level player. Yet all I hear is "if we do some smart drafting this year we'll be in a good spot" and so on, yeah lets forecast the future based on picks that routinely result in players out of the league after their first contracts instead.
No one is calling for 5-8 years of bottoming out, people are hoping to try and get lucky for a year or two, and then go for there. If we're going to be mediocre, we might as well be bad for less time, and have an actual chance to break into the good-great categories.
ConSarnit wrote:YogurtProducer wrote:ConSarnit wrote:
This is just part of the equation. These are the draft success rates of everyone. It doesn't factor in the success rates of someone like Sam Presti vs Rob Babcock. If you had the #3 pick three years in a row, who would you trust more to make the better selection? If you have Vlade Divac running your team you're in trouble. If you have Danny Ainge making the picks you're probably going to be alright.
Tanking as a viable strategy can't just exist in a vacuum. You need high drafts pick + someone capable of evaluating those picks. I am not opposed to going for a high pick this year because Masai & Co have a history of drafting well. It's a risk but it's also a risk to hope that another Kawhi-like deal will ever materialize. I would not take this "tanking" position if Rob Babcock or a new GM who hasn't proven their draft acumen were in charge.
I agree that there is no surefire recipe for success but that applies to every method of team building. I think you can improve the above odds by having good scouting in place and a investing in development.
IMO savvy drafting is more relevant later in the drafts. The top 5-10 picks seem to be pretty chalky with what even ESPN analysts fiure out.
Differentiating between those picks still has huge impact.
Green over Mobley and Barnes (over Suggs)
Wiseman over Ball
Ayton and Bagley over Luka
Fultz and Ball over Tatum
If you have a GM drafting aligned with ESPN rankings you're probably going to screw yourself outside of the clear cut #1 years (like 2023).
Slight sidenote: for whatever reason it seems like savvyness really comes into play between picks 10-15. I have no idea why.
Well yeah, that's where the goalpost shifting comes in. Masai & co. get all the flowers for picking Scottie over Suggs, but then savvy doesn't matter until the 5-10 range?
It matters from top to bottom, outside of years with players like Wemby. Otherwise why is Luka on Dallas, instead of Phoenix or Sactown? Savvy matters at every single pick, and if we want to keep trying to scream about how great we are at drafting, how about we load them up with the best picks possible and let them cook.
A Michelin star chef can be given basic ingredients from a loblaws and make a fantastic meal, but you give them world class ingredients, and they can make a world renown meal. Like you said, I'd rather Danny Ainge be picking with a top 3 pick repeatedly than Babcock 100 times out of 100.