Pharmcat wrote:One_and_Done wrote:Klomp wrote:They had a dominant run, but I don't think the hit rate is as high as people might think in recent years outside of drafting Victor.
2022 wasn't great.
2021 was a failure.
2020 was fine.
2019 was decent.
2018 was not great.
Well the GM changed in 2020. The rest of the league has also caught up alot too. There aren't many bad, old school GMs left. They're still clearly a very competent front office, and this trade will probably be a good example. I'd quibble slightly with 2022 being 'not great' and 2020 being merely 'fine'. Those look like 2 good picks to me, particularly Vassell. It's also kind of tough to blame them for 2021, that's a pretty hard thing to predict happening.
They did get cute with this trade. They should’ve drafted edey as the big guy next to Wemby who can protect him and help him out in the paint. A pick in 2030 does nothing to help wemby grow now.
Using the #8 pick on a back-up who will play 10-15mpg at best is a horrible idea.
Spurs made a very justifiable move. They said:
1) We don't love anyone at #8
2) We have a bunch of young talent now and coming up, we can only develop so many young guys at a time,
3) We'll continue to need cheap infusions of young talent 6-7 years from now when we're very good and have limited pathways to adding new talent to sustain the team around Wemby, and
4) We like the odds for the Wolves to suck again by then, like they have for most of their history. Even if the Wolves don't suck, the odds of us liking a player in those 2 future drafts exists, whereas this draft sucks and we are sure we don't love any of the players available. 2 non-zero chances are better than 1 known zero chance.
OKC and Boston are cautionary tales when it comes to holding too many picks over a short period and ultimately wasting some of them because you lack playing time and roster spots to develop them. Sometimes rolling the asset over is the right move. The Spurs could get 3-4 firsts next draft alone, and That's just a fraction of the picks they're owed the next 6-7 years. Rolling the asset over makes sense if you don't love what's available.
Let's review the Spurs rotation shall we?
PF - Sochan/Keldon
SF - H.Barnes/Champs
C - Wemby/Z.Collins
SG - Vassell/Castle/Branham
PG - CP3/Tre/B.Wesley
So looking at this the Spurs have a solid starting 5, and good back-ups at the 1-2 spots being developed. Wemby, Vassell and probably Sochan are future starters moving forward, while they're expecting Castle to become a 4th starter to replace one of CP3 or Barnes. Based on his very limited SL footage I'd say he's a good chance to do that. So they need 1 more starter, and maybe a few bench pieces.
That leaves relatively limited space to develop young guys in the future. OK, if you get a superior player to what you have now, but who at #8 fit that description? The talent at that spot looked like back-up talent. Meanwhile they might have 3-4 draft picks coming next year, at least 3 of which could be lotto picks. Better to roll it over IMO.