Los_29 wrote:Clutch0z24 wrote:YogurtProducer wrote:So you named 2 teams. How does refute my point that most of the players in the nba don’t have value?
Like IQ “doesn’t have value”, but how many guys in his price range do?
Jrue? Grant? Poole? Middleton?
Sure, a guy like Brunson who took a discount does, or Sengun who took his max off his rookie deal, but the vas majority of guys who have gotten extensions don’t have positive value.
There are a small number of players with “good contracts”. Most are neutral (like IQ, and Poeltl), and then you got your negatives.
In your theoretical of trading for a star we have all our picks, which is the main piece (and salaries) teams want back in trades
Teams want draft picks or young good prospects....We would yes be forced to give up all our picks for a star while some teams that collected actually good young talents would not have to give up every pick they have because they have a mix of both.....if that star unless they hand pick Raptors we can easily be outbid by teams all it takes is 2 or 3 teams to be able to outbid us on the trade market to miss out on that player....So it really does not matter if its only a few teams i named....Im simply saying we have to trade for flawed stars that everyone on the board hates to trade for because them are the only type of players we maybe have the assets to get....And even that idk if other teams can outbid us in that department as well...
With playing the trade game it is alot easier when you have the most assets in the room....We atm have mid level assets in terms of players to trade in the grand scheme of things....I don't see any team looking to aquire IQ/Yak/Dick/JaKobe/Mogbo/Ochai or really be after them because they are not vets that are impactfull (Yak & IQ Would be ok but at that price tag not many want) players to help your team win in that department nor are they young players with a ton of potential.....Hard to really make a + Winning trade for a big time upgrade with what we have...
Who are some teams with picks and young good prospects? We’ve went over OKC and SAS. What other teams?
Lol you really want me to go through every team with assets above us now?....All this to try and say the Raptors have some sort of elite stock pile?
I will just ask Grok to make it easier and Copy/Paste what it tells me...
This is Groks answer feel free to argue with it...
Tier 1: Elite Asset Hoards (Contenders for Any Blockbuster Trade)
Oklahoma City Thunder
Draft Assets: +5 extra first-round picks (e.g., protected from Philadelphia 2026, Denver 2027, Clippers 2027 swap, Dallas 2028 swap). Strong swap rights add flexibility.
Young Prospects: Jalen Williams (All-Star level), Chet Holmgren (defensive anchor), Cason Wallace (versatile guard), Nikola Topic (high-upside rookie).
Why #1: Unmatched depth in picks and proven young talent; they can outbid anyone without gutting the core.
Utah Jazz
Draft Assets: +5 extra first-round picks (e.g., from Cleveland/Minnesota 2027 and 2029, Cleveland 2028 swap, Phoenix 2031). Valuable multi-team swaps.
Young Prospects: Ace Bailey (explosive scorer), Keyonte George (playmaker), Cody Williams (wing defender), Isaiah Collier (guard upside), Walker Kessler (rim protector).
Why Top-Tier: Massive pick volume pairs with a rebuilding young group full of lottery talent.
Brooklyn Nets
Draft Assets: +7 extra first-round picks (e.g., from New York 2027/2029/2031, Philadelphia 2028, Houston/Dallas/Phoenix 2029 least favorable, Denver 2032). Heavy on unprotected picks from contenders.
Young Prospects: Egor Demin (skilled big), Nolan Traore (point guard), Cam Thomas (scorer), Noah Clowney (stretch forward), Ziaire Williams (athletic wing).
Why Top-Tier: Arguably the league's best pick collection, with a decent influx of recent draftees.
Tier 2: Strong Mix (Can Swing Big Trades)
San Antonio Spurs
Draft Assets: +3 extra first-round picks (e.g., Boston 2028 swap, Dallas/Minnesota 2030, Sacramento 2031 swap). Solid unprotected options.
Young Prospects: Victor Wembanyama (generational talent), Stephon Castle (two-way guard), Dylan Harper (scorer), Jeremy Sochan (versatile defender), Carter Bryant (wing).
Why Here: Wemby elevates them immensely; picks provide ammo for complements.
Houston Rockets
Draft Assets: +3-4 extra first-round picks (e.g., Phoenix 2027 unprotected, 2029 from Phoenix/Dallas, 2027 Brooklyn swap). Net positive with high-value swaps.
Young Prospects: Alperen Sengun (skilled big), Reed Sheppard (sharpshooter), Amen Thompson (athletic freak), Jabari Smith Jr. (stretch forward), Tari Eason (defender).
Why Here: Balanced rebuild with All-Star-caliber youth and picks from underperformers.
Detroit Pistons
Draft Assets: Neutral (minimal extras; some second-round influx but no major firsts owed/owned beyond own).
Young Prospects: Cade Cunningham (star guard), Jaden Ivey (explosive scorer), Ron Holland (defensive wing), Ausar Thompson (versatile), Jalen Duren (rebounder).
Why Here: Deepest young rotation in the league; lacks picks but prospects are trade chips themselves.
Tier 3: Solid but Not Elite (Useful for Targeted Deals)
Orlando Magic
Draft Assets: -3 net (owes to Memphis/others in 2026, 2029 swap, 2030 unprotected). Liabilities limit flexibility.
Young Prospects: Paolo Banchero (All-Star forward), Franz Wagner (two-way wing), Jalen Suggs (defender), Anthony Black (playmaker), Tristan da Silva (shooter).
Why Here: Premium young talent offsets pick debt; they're building, not trading away.
Portland Trail Blazers
Draft Assets: +2 net (e.g., Boston/Milwaukee 2029, Milwaukee 2030 swap; owes protected 2026 to Chicago).
Young Prospects: Shaedon Sharpe (athletic scorer), Scoot Henderson (guard), Donovan Clingan (rim protector), Yang Hansen (big), Toumani Camara (defender).
Why Here: Rebuilding with upside; picks from contenders add value.
Washington Wizards
Draft Assets: +4 extra first-round picks (e.g., OKC/Houston/Clippers 2026 least favorable, Golden State 2030 protected, Phoenix 2030 swap).
Young Prospects: Alex Sarr (versatile big), Bilal Coulibaly (defender), Bub Carrington (guard), Kyshawn George (wing), Tre Johnson (scorer).
Why Here: Pick-heavy but young core is raw/unproven.
Charlotte Hornets
Draft Assets: +3 extra first-round picks (e.g., Dallas 2027 protected, Miami 2027 lottery-protected, Utah/Cleveland/Minnesota 2029 least favorable).
Young Prospects: LaMelo Ball (star playmaker), Brandon Miller (scorer), Tidjane Salaun (athletic forward), Kon Knueppel (shooter), Liam McNeeley (wing).
Why Here: Ball and Miller headline a promising group; picks provide rebuild fuel.
We rank mid tier it says which would be above majority of the win now teams but below the teams that were stockpiling picks, young guys with high draft picks....Which is exactly what i was saying.....This is Groks answer not mine But it seems to be a trend where all of Groks takes much smarter than you or i with information seems to agree with my takes more so than your takes when it comes to basketball....so feel free to argue with Grok to why we have better assets.