coldfish wrote:kodo wrote:coldfish wrote:
Markkanen quietly got his bag and went back to the old Lauri.
Ainge isn't looking like the genius people make him out to be. He had a core of Donovan Mitchell & Rudy Gobert and this rebuild doesn't look like much, and Lauri is only 1 year younger than Mitchell.
The draft picks are almost certainly won't be any kind of core for Utah. The first one will be the 29th pick, and a couple are pick swaps and Utah would not trade their pick for a Cleveland pick.
I guess the main "benefit" of the trade is to get Utah to be so bad they can draft high, but the actual trade is pretty poor. It's basically Mitchell for Sexton & Lauri (who had to be maxed), since the picks look unlikely to yield even NBA players.
Tanking always looks better in theory than practice.
The Mitchell/Gobert teams had run their course. Didn't the two of them also have issues with one another?
The first year without them the team over achieved to start the season (Markkanen's all-star year). Ainge pivoted to a tank, but that was too late. The next year they tried to tank again, but didn't go all out for it (also that draft wasn't thought of as being very good). Then this year they came into it with the goal being a top pick and it looks like that's what they'll get.
Ainge also talked to teams about Markkanen and didn't make a trade. Were the offers bad? Too low? Or was Ainge asking for too much? Who knows...I wasn't in the room.
Utah took three of those picks and traded them to Phoenix for the Suns 2031 pick. I'm sure they'd like to get better asap, but their plan is a long term one.
Their pick this season will mean a lot going forward. If they get lucky and draft Flagg then they have someone to build around. If they fall in the draft and don't get a top talent then they'll continue to do what they can to build through the draft. I don't see any trades or free agents in the near future that will change that for them.