winforlose wrote:babyjax13 wrote:winforlose wrote:The only I thing I disagree with is your incentive post. If you truly believe that John Collins and Walker Kessler are the missing pieces that will save Minnesota, then you are 100% correct. That said, I don’t see how you get there. Kessler is a project, and Collins is not exactly world beating. I would be more inclined to get Randle off of Minnesota for fear he does start to play defense and figure out the offense and helps Minnesota do better in the next few years.
To everyone else, I agree. This is a very low sell on Zion, and the season is already pretty far off the rails. The only reason I suggested it is because whoever takes Zion is doing so with the hope they can fix him. A healthy Zion and Markkanen plus another high draft pick and some of the young guys they are developing is interesting. I don’t think the Pels just cut out the Wolves because Randle is better than the package coming to MN, it just happens to fit us better than Randle. Either way, I don’t see the Pels doing it. That is why the trade was more bare bones needing pieces to make it make sense. Thanks for the good feedback

Kessler really is not a project and Collins has played like the second coming of Christ this season (I pray we sell high on him - and by that I mean take literally any expiring contract and maybe even grab a 2nd rounder or two). Kessler is averaging 11p/10r/3b on 73% shooting, he's physically overwhelming for other teams, and this includes a game in the sample where his minutes were cut short by injury. I'm betting he finishes the season around 12/10/2.5b on 68%+ shooting. He's very, very good.
John Collins going for an expiring is a second comings worth of value? I am baffled by this. To assume that any team is going to give value for Collins or see him as anything more than salary matching is IMO wishful thinking. That said, my opinion could be wrong.
Kessler has had an up and down career, and having good numbers on a 4 and 17 team makes me wonder what his cleaning the glass numbers are. Are some of these stats coming when games are out of reach? I am honestly asking as I don’t follow the Jazz. To say he is playing well enough to go from project to valuable or even blue chip is an opinion, but a fair one. That said, if other teams don’t share the opinion then you guys will keep him, and maintain the tank. I just wonder at what point the tank ends and you actually try to win something. You traded your stars away in 22/23 and it is 24/25 and outside of Markkanen you don’t seem any closer. But again I don’t follow the Jazz so maybe I am missing things.
This was just posted about Collins this season. Just to give some context on his level of play this season.
John Collins:
— 17.8 PPG
— 8.7 RPG
— 1.2 SPG
— 53/40/91% (!!)
— Leading Jazz in points
— Leading Jazz in rebounds
— Leading Jazz in steals
The only player with 150+ points on 50/40/90% shooting this season.
Regarding Kessler. He is starting and primarily playing against other starters. As of now I would say last season was the fluke and this is who he is. He’s going to be a 10-14 ppg, 8-12 rpg, 2-3 assists, and give us above average to semi elite defense depending on his matchups. He easily could be on the Jazz when they actually start competing and for years to come barring injury.
As for the Jazz…they just screwed up not tanking enough the seasons after they traded Don and Rudy. Part of that is Hardy is a good coach at adapting. And the other part is Ainge thought he could go “big fish hunting” this offseason. The biggest mistake Ainge has made is not tanking fast enough. Most of us Jazz fans were saying it was an issue while it was happening. We know superstars aren’t coming here in general but it seems Ainge thought he could treat Utah like Boston. Ain’t gonna happen. So your assessment that we aren’t any closer than two years I would basically agree with. Of the 7 young guys we are developing the only one I feel confident will be on the team (unless a team “overpays”) when the Jazz are ready to compete is Kessler. Which is why I would want an overpay. Besides Kessler the only other two guys who have proven could be on a good team is Sexton and Collins. And I don’t think they will be on the team unless they tell Ainge they love Utah and want to stick around. Collins and Sexton are perfect 6th/7th men and would be amazing against second units on a winning squad. And they can fill in as a starter when injuries arise. So if we don’t get value I wouldn’t mind them sticking around. But we need to lose next season so trading them also makes a lot of sense.
The Jazz basically suck because we don’t have a bonafide floor general. Although the last ten games Keyonte has played much, much better than the start of the season. If he can keep developing and get his turnovers under control and get away from the midrange, he will be good. As of now…not enough sample size of him doing the right things to think we have our starting PG for the future.
The Jazz need to tank this season and next season and then push their chips in for a superstar at the trade deadline next season or after the season. That would be the fastest realistic timeline to build a competitive team. And we have to hope of the 5-6 players we draft the next two years we can get two star-ish level players with one of them with the potential to being a top 15 player at some point in their career. If not…it’s gonna be a long time until the Jazz do much and we could be bottom five for 4-5 more years.