nate33 wrote:doclinkin wrote:And that right there essentially validates the Deni trade.
Only if we actually do land a top 2 pick.
If it turns out the 5th-to-last or 6th-to-last team ends up with a top 2 lotto pick, then it would completely invalidate the Deni trade.
Fair. It was a gamble. Trying for a top pick last year and this one. If in either year we landed a top 2 pick then it’s a winning bet. Irrespective of whatever we got from the 5 other assets. If not then we lost the bet.
That said it was a decent bet. I’d say a top 3 pick last year looked like a winner (though going into the year it was Ace Bailey in that 3rd spot, I expect folks would have been happy enough with VJ instead). We had a 40% chance of a top 3 pick.
If this year is weighted heaviest at the top 2, then to that 40% we add this years 27.4+%. Plus the possibility of a Suns swap. (Playing in a tough WC relying on a superstar who tends to be injured for significant portions of every year, never know).
So they banked on a near 70% chance of a franchise star. Plus whatever they get from 5 added assets.
Plus play time for developing forwards Bilal, Sarr (whose agent said wanted only to play at PF) and Kyshawn (who they’d targeted since Switzerland).
All weighed against the chance we lost the pick to the Knicks if we held on to our best young player, built around him and he did breakout. Or if any of our picks had instant chemistry with him and showed good success. Or frankly if his play forced us to bench +/- loser Kuzma.
It’s to Deni’s credit that his remarkable and steady continued advancement makes it a question.
Now I personally think Mikel Brown makes an argument for a top 3 position. And the NCAA season is young. There’s always a breakout player who stands tall in March.
Going into this year it looked like a draft that was 3-4 players deep. I like and respect Boozer’s game as a good foil for Sarr. Though what’s most notable is that he plays like a vet despite his age. But I understand the argument that you might as well hire a vet. Or a 4/5th year senior. Maybe there’s less upside unless he somehow gets even more fit. Quicker footwork to match his quick understanding. And let him play up top in pick and roll defense.
Anyway. Understood most folks weight too heavy the mystery of a top pick over the production of a very very good player.
But in a rebuild, especially one where you might lose your potentially best asset to a rival in your same conference, seems to me you weight most heavily in favor of minimizing the worst that could happen. While trying hard to shift the odds in your favor.
The rest is up to chance. Shrug. Some times it’s better to be San Antonio and know that small market or no the basketball gods simply love you more than most.