Tacoma wrote:WuTang_OG wrote:Tacoma wrote:
This statement would be mostly true up to 2020, but definitely not thereafter. His "intelligent architect" didn't architect a team that fit together for the past 5 years with no real architectural direction. As for being a straight shooter? Too many examples of the opposite.
He once claimed he'd never go for play-in, remarking "play-in for what?" and then subsequently aimed for the play-in. He once told DD he wasn't trading him and then traded him, later apologizing to a pissed off DeRozan who said: " “Be told one thing and the outcome another. Can’t trust em."
He was developing such "good reputation among agents" that when Siakam tried to contact him to negotiate his contract, he never returned his agent's calls, essentially ghosted his agent then apologized to Siakam for it, saying: "Pascal deserved that I even gave him the over-communication, which I didn't, and I apologized to him for it." If he was shooting so straight, he wouldn't have to keep apologizing for doing the opposite.
He keeps preaching patience and then proceed to impatiently trade away draft capital for win-now moves. Can go on but there's sufficient evidence to say that for a supposed fast ball pitcher, he's throwing a lot of curve balls and change ups. A straight shooter he's clearly not.
There was a misses the last few years but not every GM is perfect. Masai had the recipe and the team was back on the upswing. The core of this team is drafting and developing and we are back to that. Masai is a straight shooter and calls it how it is. My biggest issue was him not tanking in the Wemby draft and moving off of Pascal/OG/Fred sooner - but he pivoted and has been fixing things since.
Not clear how you can keep insisting that he's a "straight shooter and calls it how it is" when there's ample evidence to the contrary?
With due respect, where has Masai been pivoting exactly? For past 5 years, he's pivoted to Siakam/OG/FVV, then traded Siakam/OG and pivoted to BBQ, then pivoted to Ingram while trying to trade IQ & RJ. With so much pivoting happening, what of the "fixing things" has he done that is now fixed? Our most pressing needs to get fixed: shooting and Center position are still holes.
And the claim "not every GM is perfect" is a straw man because no one is saying that nor making perfection the standard. What I've seen over recent 5 years is less like "fixing" and more like throwing things against the wall to see what sticks. It's almost like reincarnation of the Colangelo days.
I don't think Ingram is a pivot rather than an addition to the core. And of course they are listening to offers to RJ and IQ, doesn't mean they want IQ as part of this core longer term.














