Asianiac_24 wrote:Slimjimzv wrote:Some weird takes on this thread. But the one I'll point out is that ALL trades have to be evaluated via hindsight. When the trade happens, you don't know if it was a good trade because you don't know the results. Once you know the results, you can evaluate whether it was a good trade. How else would it work? Teams can make a bad trade, even if they made the best decision they could with the information available to them at the time.
That isn't how the valuation of trade works though. Just because a pick you traded PRE-DRAFT turned out to be a great player, doesn't mean that pick is worth who that player eventually became. Each pick has its own value regardless of who it turns out to be because the draft is basically a lottery.
Suppose in the 2015 draft, pre-draft Cleveland trades the #1 pick for a second round pick, straight up. That's a bad trade right? But suppose instead of picking Andrew Wiggins #1, they used that second round pick to pick Jokic. Is that trade now a good one?
Or suppose I trade a Porsche 911 for $6. I then use that $6 to buy a lottery ticket, and the lottery ticket wins 5 million. Was the Porsche 911 trade a good one now that it turned out to be 5 million dollars? I don't agree with that. Those are two separate transactions.
Agree to disagree