payitforward wrote:nate33 wrote:badinage wrote:The assumption that Deni being here would have kept the team out of the Top 3 worst records isn’t true. We see how it’s done — it’s not hard to play well and, oops, fumble away a game in the fourth.
I agree. I think it's possible that we may have fallen to fourth-worst by catching the Pelicans, but that's the worst it would have gotten.
 
Sorry, no. The NBA is not comedy hall theater.
You win as many games as your guys deliver by how they play. If you are saying that Deni wouldn't be worth, say, 9 extra wins for the Wizards -- even though that's a good bet for how many wins his play alone has added to the Portland total this year -- then there's really no discussing anything on an objective basis.
Has Deni been outstanding this year? Yes, he has. Outstanding players increase your win total by a lot.
 
And it's not just Deni.  It's more Deni, less Kuzma.  Also less George.  Less Bilal.  Probably not less Sarr.  And we would not have a rookie PG leading the team in minutes.   
Unless of course you benched Deni in order to protect your losses.  But that sends a worse message to your young players than letting them play all the minutes and living with the losses.  If you are going to sit a guy for playing the right way, it dampens the enthusiasm of those players for doing it right. 
First you win, then you get good.  Players have to see how to win, feel what that tastes like, then learn how to consistently do that thing. But if you win then shut it down you can't build consistency.
I firmly agree with CCJ.  You commonly see players breakout with a change of scenery.  If Deni was once again playing behind Kuzma or benched for developmental minutes for worse players, a la Rui, I don't see him developing as swiftly he has with the Blazers.  But possibly backsliding as he did over his first few years when he was subbed out for worse guys.  If you're not trying to win why bother?
This rookie crew is actually trying to win.  And they were over the first half of the season.  Playing the veteran Valanciunas in a reserve role is not the same as benching a young productive player entering his prime.  We played heavy minutes for Kuzma and Poole. We would have played Deni.  And won even more when Kuzma was finally traded. 
Yes.  Deni playing at a near all-star level makes the trade look worse.  Today anyway.  It may look different after this draft, or next.  Some aspects were predictable.  Even those who support the trade knew Deni was on the rise.  Hoped he'd be a mentor for whomever we got with the #2 and the Gafford pick.  Still, the reasoning behind the trade is sound.  On a 15 win team nobody is sacred.  If the FO gambled that 5 assets were better than a very good young player on a bargain contract. Hey, they rolled the dice.  We have yet to see if overall they hit on a winning combination.  As of right now it looks like the guy across the table has the numbers.  Shrug, we'll see.