Kizz Fastfists wrote:cjmcallist wrote:I'm also still pissed that he moved the goalposts on 'appearance' vs. 'arrival'. This team definitely arrived last year.
Arrival means to make an appearance. Did he change the goalposts or just admit his illiteracy? I'm actually less concerned about him being illiterate than him saying he thought trading for Haward was improving the team and admitting that he is still learning how to be a GM, is incompetent at evaluate his teams and incompetent at evaluating established NBA veterans.
It's not illiteracy, it's spin. There's a major difference. He's painting with words and not all of it is pretty.
Just so, when he is talking about arrival/appearance he is using it not literally. I hope we're all on the same page here. It's the creative narrative he's spinning. (an appearance equating to a single playoff appearance, and an arrival equates to long-term playoffs staying power) However as explicitly defined in our English it doesn't quite work out that way.
I'm not defending his diction, but yeah, he wants team/franchise consistently getting to the playoffs. Then he can objectively say "we've arrived" (in his opinion, mind you, this isn't my opinion.) I'd say, like Cj, that we arrived last season (22-23).
His admission of guilt on the Hayward thing seems interesting to me because I also think he pushed back at Hayward's public commentary from GH's post-season press conference.
It's a bit weird that one of the longest-tenured GMs in the NBA would say he's 'learning', so my way of reading between the lines here see it as a shot at Hayward. GH said what he said in his post-season presser and Presti said he missed 'on that one' and is 'still learning'. I mean, that's basically Presti saying 'I thought that Hayward was an NBA player but actually he's not', but without actually saying it. I see a deflection basically.
If this is a situation where Presti is actually demonstrating a truthful, on-face, statement, I'd be just as worried as you Kizz but this feels like a low-blow from Sam. The Hayward move, as we pretty much know, was to free future salary up. There was no defensible basketball reason that GH should have been on our team at all.