YogurtProducer wrote:douggood wrote:720 wrote:Thunder proved once again why Tanking works.
they got lucky with a once in a decade trade.
Yep. It was Boston with the KG/PP trade and now OKC with the PG13/SGA trade.
It never was, and never will be, a formula any team can even try to replicate. It is the ultimate "right place right time" type deal. I am 99% sure every single person on this board would have been on board to trade Siakam / FVV / OG if it meant getting back 7 or 8 first rounders and a sophomore coming off a great rookie season.
Reality was, we were not ever in that situation.
i will add KD trade to the list, so far its netted them 9 1sts + cam johnson and multiple swaps. how it turns out for them is to be seen. todays espn article basically made fun of the trade and matt isbia.
https://www.espn.com/nba/insider/story/_/id/43443542/nba-intel-5-players-most-likely-traded-deadlineWindhorst: One executive joked about implementing a new rule similar to one on the books about dealing first-round picks.
Named after former Cavaliers owner Ted Stepien, the rule forbids teams from trading firsts in back-to-back years, though plenty of loopholes remain. Stepien famously traded four consecutive years of first-round picks as part of three transactions to the Dallas Mavericks in the mid-1980s.
"Everyone knows about the Stepien Rule. I don't know how this is all going to play out, but depending on how that KD trade ends up, there might be an 'Ishbia Rule' proposed where new owners can't make a trade for six months after buying the team," the exec quipped.
In the Durant deal, the Suns traded four first-round picks and a first-round swap to Brooklyn, plus Mikal Bridges and the aforementioned Cam Johnson. The Nets subsequently traded Bridges to the New York Knicks for five first-round picks. That currently has the Durant haul at nine first-round picks for the Nets -- and that's before a potential Johnson trade over the next few weeks.
Dangling those future Suns assets got the Rockets to bite and hand the Nets' picks back to them, wagering the Suns' picks could be more valuable in the medium term and clearing the way for the Nets to full-on tank this season.
If the Nets' tank ends up scoring big and they land Duke's Cooper Flagg or one of the other top names this summer, or perhaps a 2026 top prospect, those gems could be traced to the Durant trade as well.
























