YogurtProducer wrote:Pointgod wrote:Tripod wrote:And SA who got lucky winning a lotto in a generational talent year AND moving up the other 2 years. That exact same "competent mgt" could have Scoot, Holland and #6 in this draft.
Oh, and OKC has 1 top 10 pick on their team and best player was aquited thru trade. And they got to rebuild by trading guys who were top 10 MVP candidates. So easy to replicate.
And we got lucky moving up from 7th to 4th pick. This “rebuild” looks a lot different with Jonathan Kuminga instead of Scottie. What’s your point exactly?
The whole thing looks different with Kuminga instead of Scottie. WE likely have no success in 2021-22 with Kuminga in Scotties place and OG/Siakam get traded a whole year/two earlier.
Its just more proof that rebuilding is as much luck as it is skill. We could have tanked the entire year, won 0 games, and we still would be picking 5th with how the lottery shook out. On the flip side, if we won 5 more games we would be picking 2nd.
You can dismiss any scenario based on luck. If Kawhi’s knees had turned to string cheese a year earlier, then we don’t win a championship, but that doesn’t mean the decision to trade him wasn’t sound. The decision to build through the draft and accumulate assets is sound, even if a bit of luck is involved because you’re putting yourself in a position to take advantage of randomness in your favor while protecting your downside if when the randomness works against you.
The Spurs tried to rebuild using our approach with a team of Demar, Lamarcus Aldridge, Poeltl, Dejounte Murray and Derrick White and eventually opted for a full tear down after 3 seasons of winning 30 games. I don’t think a single Spurs fan or front office person would say they should have stuck with the core of Demar, White, Murray and Poeltl even if they weren’t in the position to select Wemby. Sometimes you need to take a step back to move two steps forward.