jbk1234 wrote:
I mean, let's say that they made the Ingram/Miller trade (and this assumes the Hornets agree of which I'm skeptical). As nice as Miller looked in a developmental setting, he would not have replaced Ingram's production in the regular season. He couldn't have started in the playoffs. The Pelicans wouldn't have made the play-in last season and the odds of them making the playoffs this season would still be heavily dependent upon Zion's health.
Either get all the way in or all the way out IMO. Be good enough to make the playoffs, even if Zion misses regular season games, and pray Zion can be healthy for the playoffs, or, move Zion and reset.
All hypotheticals & assumptions geared to perception.
Charlotte accepting BI for Miller is irrelevant. The point was about directional choice, I don't know if Hawks would accept trading Sarr either but it's the same approach & goal of a soft reset. As mentioned, if my target last year was Scoot instead of Miller, the approach would have had an unfavorable result because every decision has it's own risk.
Pelicans would have had a lotto pick, a cost controlled Miller over BI's 50m extension & not been swept because Zion got injured. Instead you self among other posters telling me about BI's contract risk. Guess what I was trying to avoid last year when BI held more value coming off the Suns PO run.
My modus operandi is don't force things, progress is made in a collection of good decisions not rash ones.
Success & failure exists in every decision made. Pushing all in with Allen guarantees what?