MiamiSPX wrote:tsherkin wrote:He said some interesting, and positive things.
But he also said this:
“Scottie is the main core of this team. I think you build around him because of the winning mentality, because of the winning instincts he has. Yeah, he’s not completely a shot maker now, that will develop, but I think he’s a championship-contending competitor now. He understands the game well enough where this is the rebound to get, this is the steal to get, sometimes the right pass to make, when he’s not over-ambitious, or maybe playing with younger players, or people with not the calibre of where his mind is going at the time. And he does make mistakes now.
And most of that is not what I wanted from a GM I hope to trust.
Meh, it was a session in front of STH and
he had to be in his salesman mode. I've always taken this to simply mean he's our best player right now, which is not untrue. Like you said yesterday, he's not an idiot....it will become "this is Player X's team" if and when we find said better player.
What was notable to me is that this is, I believe, the 3rd time he has candidly said that we need "that 2nd player" or a "running mate" for Scottie.
When isn't he though? Masai is always trying to sell the on court product, and that's his job, what he says should always be taken with a massive grain of salt.
The "2nd player" comments are just obvious, Scottie is the most talented (ceiling) player on the roster, but he's not good enough to pull this team based on his talent alone. The problem is, that Masai always thinks that finding that "2nd player" can be done just as easily in the low lotto or trading for, when history says otherwise.
The problem is you need to find those players
before you try to exit a rebuild.
TorontoBarneys wrote:You're helming a team that's playing in a foreign country compared to literally every other team in the NBA, has a marked history of being unable to attract potent free agents, cannot keep their stars around for long, especially through trades, and you decide that you would rather not maximize the one avenue you have of having as solid of a chance as anyone of getting a star: the top of the lottery. The one avenue where you have the chance to bring in a potential star from day 1 and acclimate them to your city and country for at least 7 years of control.
This logic will never compute for me, and you have to seriously be gargling this dude's junk butter if you are still fully bought in regarding his "vision" (he's coasting and has none). Thank you for helping engineer our first chip, now enjoy your annual $20 milly until the big bad white racist Ed Rogers forces you out, or something.
The thing that aggravates me the most about this mentality isn't that they think that the other avenues are good/bad rouotes to take, but that the absolute and unequivocal strength of this FO is drafting, and they refuse to lean into it.
The supposed face of the team and "that guy" is a guy they drafted 4th, finding a Siakam/FVV a decade ago is not a sign you don't need high lotto picks, it just reeks of ego.