Vampirate wrote:Thaddy wrote:Duffman100 wrote:
Dishonest in the sense that your motivations to argue the move aren't based in the actual move itself but rather the underlying implications of the move.
For instance, I wouldn't be surprised that if the stat in question proved your point, you'd be harping on and using it. But instead, you dismiss it. That's the level of dishonesty in conversation, I assume, they're speaking about.
Ingram is a huge risk for Toronto. He's been injured his whole career. The OPJ signing was supposed to be a lesson but we're at the same game. Ingram has a frail build that will get injured again.
Scase is right. Tanking especially at this point is the right move. We need more talent. In the past we used assets we tanked for and then developed to get all of our championship pieces whether it was Demar, JV, Davis, etc.
I disagree with the Ingram move but I can see the logic behind it. We bought low on an asset that's usually very expensive. If he's load managed, trained to be durable, or if there's hidden intel regarding NOPs training staff then I'm for the move.
It's a big risk, but a more short term one, at the most it's a 3 year signing.
Our issue is that it's going to be progressively harder to tank as we add pieces through the years.
We basically need Ingram to stay out of the lineup for this year, but next year, if we land on a great draft pick, Ingram should boost our ceiling as Ingram will likely be better than anyone we draft at that point.
Barnes
IQ - contract
BI - contract
Draft Pick (if it's a high end one)
Poetl is what our starting lineup is eventually going to be
Of course Ingram could also play a lot for the rest of this year and screw our lottery odds, we should pretty much tell him to take it easy this year, rest up.
Anyways as long as we land a game changer in the draft it's all good.
Is it though? The argument I see around here a lot is that it's a buy low type move, so the end result of it, is that we are expected to move him after recouping his value to a higher point. He's 120mil for 3 years, with most notably a player option. That's a significant chunk of the cap on something that is a decent risk.
The 2 outcomes are, either he gets healthy for a year or two and we can flip him, or he maintains his poor health status, and we are in the exact same boat as NOP, except now we get held hostage on that last year due to a player option.
Historically speaking, the latter is way more likely than the former based on 8 years of regular injures causing him to lose a significant amount of court time. It's not as risky as a 5 year contract for sure, but it's still a significant risk.






















