mihaic wrote:AkelaLoneWolf wrote:Duffman100 wrote:
I didn't like the timing. But value wise (in isolation) it's a no brainer.
I think they did try to be sellers at that time but were getting low balled. So they pivoted into being buyers.
It did stall the rebuild but can’t really blame them given the circumstances
We also don't know the ownership mindset. Maybe they wanted to win with their current core and passed that message.
But to come back to the trade, the only thing we can conclude is that depending on the actual outcome we could have done better, comparable, or worse

We do have most of this information.
At the time (not known to the public, but internal):
- the locker room was imploding with the core being on different pages, likely not wanting to play with each other
- Coach freewheeling and not listening to the FO
- Selfishness and stat padding followed
- Fred was an expiring contract
- the GM
did not want to sign his best player to the contract he wanted- In prime position to tank for a generational talent
This move was not to "keep the core together". The GM didn't want to sign his best player. You can see what the plan is based on the OG trade. They just wanted to get to mediocrity any way they could so that they could continue to make asset draining trades to keep at that level at minimum. Even though Jak's limitations didn't fit with Siakam and Barnes. It was just a pure talent/position play regardless of any real rationale beyond that.
Very obvious to pivot to the Wemby tank and get what you can in the trades, even if it's just Fred with the information they had on hand. A mixture of hubris and denial of their past failures is why the only rational decision wasn't made.