League Circles wrote:It's hard to understand how you can believe these things simultaneously:
Being a .500 team that makes the playoffs with a team that doesn't deserve to be there (bad SRS) and thus eliminating a chance to get a top 4 pick is a good thing
Being one or two games worse with a better team (better SRS) while missing the playoffs and having at least a small chance of getting a top 4 pick is unambiguously worse than the above
Making the playoffs is just super important. It's like getting the job or not getting the job, getting a date or not getting a date. It's just a critical barrier. I don't think it's great to barely make the playoffs or anything, I just described it as average. If I'm not going to make the playoffs I'd ideally pick in the top 5.
#7 picks are "high value assets" (Paxson's outcome for 2 of his 4 "collecting high value assets pass for being terrible years") but #8 picks (current projection for our pick this summer) aren't
In a previous post I laid criticism that when they were bad, they weren't aggressive enough about being bad, and I think that's a fair criticism to have. It's a shame because they were literally like 1-2 games off from having much better odds a couple times.
Just holistically, at a very high level, just from a record perspective, if I don't make the playoffs, I want my win total to be in the 20s, not the 30s or 40s.
If I make the playoffs, it is its own reward, the size of that reward might be very small (the bad team sneaking in), but it is still its own reward.
This is only talking about records though and was only refuting the point made that GarPax would languish for ever as 30-40 win teams. I don't think this would be the primary point I would make about why they were vastly better. It's just a super macro level view.
They were better at getting value in trades
They were radically better at avoiding sunk cost theory and moving off guys
They were better at scouting the draft and making good draft picks
They were better at cohesively setting a strategy and sticking with it
They were much better at managing their cap / doing negotiations
The one area I would give AKME credit for was firing Boylen where Paxson was still fighting to keep him that year, but at the same time, it seems pretty clear to me that it is time for Donovan to go (even though I like him, it really seems like he's lost the team now), and we are sticking by him, so even in this area, it feels like he's hung up on sunk cost decision making and waiting too long and was only ever able to make an aggressive decision about a previous GM's choice.