nate33 wrote:GoneShammGone wrote:It's pretty clear to me that a major part of the trade was that they believed Deni would lead the team to too many wins. And you just can't say that, no matter that its true and obvious.
I don't buy this at all. We're talking about the same team who added Jonas Valanciunas and traded for veteran Malcolm Brogdon because they would help us be more competitive.
If we had kept Deni, we would be in no danger of winning enough games to knock us out of the bottom 3 (where the lottery odds for the top 4 picks are identical); and we definitely wouldn't have fallen past 4th-worst (where the pick odds are only marginally worse than the bottom 3). We are currently 5 wins out of 4th worst place and 9 wins out of 5th worst. I like Deni, but he isn't adding THAT many wins.
And if he played so well that we were in danger of winning that much, then he would have been even more valuable as a trade asset at the Trade Deadline in February.
The only logic for trading Deni was a belief that him being on the roster NEXT year, in addition to our 2025 high lotto pick, might be enough to risk the protection on the 2026 FRP we owe to NY. But in that scenario, we could have simply traded Deni THIS summer. We didn't need to trade him last summer.
I mostly agree with the details of what you're saying here, but I'm thinking of a broader context. My response was to Badinage's point that no one in the front office has ever really publicly justified the trade. And that is because Winger and Dawkins
want to lose games. Trading Deni was part of that. I don't think Deni was going to make us a winning team, but from the W and D perspective, even if he helped us win five more games this year, that is a negative. So we can criticize the deal from the perspective that we didn't get the max value back for Deni that we could have if we had, say, waiting a year before trading him, but for W and D, the return wasn't just two picks and Brogdan, but two picks, Brogdan, and a half dozen or so more losses this year. Will those half dozen really be worth anything in the end? I dunno. But I think you could make a model of how much each loss increases our odds of a top three pick, and then have a reasonable answer to the question. I'm pretty sure W and D did exactly that. Its also factors into the reason they didn't trade Kuz to the Mavs or in the off season. He made us worse, which from their perspective made him more valuable.
Anyway, thinking this way is what I would expect of an executive team that was serious about rebuilding. But what I was trying to point out is: you can't just come out and say it. It would make the NBA look bad. It would upset a lot of people. Hence, a very significant trade with no real public explanation behind it.