Shwaguy wrote:Scase wrote:Shwaguy wrote:
I agree with you, that when we have the opportunity to sit guys, we should (And we have imo) or trade guys outside the core for futures (I'm not even against trading Poeltl if someone comes along with a great loss), and try to manufacture these losses where we can, but for me, when we're healthy and have our young guys all playing, I'd feel more confident about our longterm future if they were good enough to win us some games.
If we can have one of those situations where we end up with a really great record when Barnes is playing (Or Barnes + Gradey + IQ etc, whichever) and then a very very poor record that tanks us when he's not. That'd be really ideal. I'd never advocate for them keeping guys like Brown, Boucher, Poeltl even, long term though. Maybe would like to say Brown play well when he's back just so we can trade him a bit better?
The problem is this, the team is already good enough to win some games, the bigger problem is that they arent good enough to win
enough games for the team to rely on just their talent. Everyone being healthy for an average amount, this team isn't bottom 5, but as I've mentioned it mires us in treadmill land.
But those handful of wins could be the difference between a 100% chance at a top 5 or 6 pick, and a ~35% chance at a top 4 pick. Those wins are just not worth the massive drop off in lotto odds. You can't have it both ways, unless our coach intentionally sabotages those games by basically subbing out all starters to run a g league lineup in like the 4th quarter etc. Which I think is a touch too blatant.
Outside of any of the top 5 players in the draft turning into absolute busts, there is zero scenario where the current roster results in a better long term level of success, than the current roster + a top 5 pick. Even if they traded a top 5 pick, that still would put this team in a better position to win in the future.
We have a rookie coach, a team filled with tons of unproven talent and SRPs, and guys that were not seen as valuable enough to keep on their previous teams. We aren't in the position for this team to "show us what they've got", at the expense of draft slots. It's obviously too early to tell, but Ace or Flagg on this team, would immediately be the best, or 2nd best potential players on the roster, that should say enough.
I guess our fundamental point of disagreement is that I think there is a massive fundamental difference in outlook between the value of being in "treadmill" levels of goodness in an individual season when your core is comprised of 21-24 year olds like we are now, vs 28-30 years old like when we treadmilled with Pascal, Fred, and OG.
I do not think being a fringe playoff contender, or a playoff team not good enough to win the championship is the worst place to be when your team is young. I do think it is the worst place to be when your team is in their primes/past their primes. There are paths to take a young playoff team to a contender. I would not really say that is the case for a team of guys in their late 20s/early 30s though.
And I would argue, that, if we are bad enough to get Flagg or Ace, yes, they would be the best or 2nd best potential players on this team. For me the question is, if they were good enough to earn the 6-9 seeds, would I believe that still to be the case? I'm not sure, certainly not the "Best" but maybe still the "2nd best". Though personally I am very high on Gradey and believe his future in the NBA will involve scoring an efficient 25 ppg and being the type of cog that can give a team a humongous head up on being a top 5-10 offence.
Adding Flagg to that would be insane, for sure though. Like if there's a way for Scottie and Gradey to play really great this season (IQ too), with us still getting Flagg, Demin, Bailey, or even a guy like Maluach, I would take it! I just personally value Scottie and Gradey playing well over I value losses for better lottery odds.
The thing is, not all 6th-9th places are created equal. Being a play in, or fringe playoff team when the entire conference is dog ****, doesn't make you a good team. It makes you the best of the worst.
There is no parade to be thrown saying you are the 5th or 6th place team in the conference, when you barely have a .500 record. Your place at the end of the year isn't always indicative of team talent or success, this isn't the first time it has happened in the east and it won't be the last.
As for Scottie and GD playing well, this isn't something that can't be done while losing as well. Players can improve without impacting the W/L column a hefty amount so long as the correct levers are being pulled. Hence my comment about trading or sitting guys.
I'm not against seeing what the guys can do together, I'm against it resulting in needless wins. If a guy comes out and puts up 50 points every game and clearly shows what he's capable of, sitting him on the bench doesn't change his skill level, it just prevents the outcome. These guys aren't going to go from All NBA players, to bench scrubs from not grabbing a couple meaningless wins. Long term is what we should be aiming for, and the current roster has too many holes for this to result in long term gain without players taking unrealistic leaps, or us infusing the team with sorely needed high end talent.
It's not like we have some crazy high potential roster that needs time to gel and grow, we have an alright roster that needs time to gel. If this is, as our FO puts it, "Year one of the rebuild" then why tf would you aim for wins over potential high end talent to add. We aren't 3-5 years into the rebuild (apparently), so we shouldn't be treating it that way.