Clutch0z24 wrote:The one thing that annoys me about all the people that advocate for playing the middle.....Any player that is on the market "Sucks and we should not trade for"....Ball, No he sucks and is stupid don't want, Morant he sucks and is no good, AD too old and sucks, Sabonis sucks and bad....
I mean these are the reality of trades and players that you are most likely trading for when you have the limited assets like we have accumulated over the years....If you want to compete these are the type of players, Flawed stars you are trading for...
You can't be cheering for team mid while also not wanting to trade anyone and continue to build on two timelines, The Young rebuild timeline + the win now timeline....You have to pick a lane because trying to do both will end up in a bad result....
Playing the middle....Chances of you trading for a legit first option franchise player is most likely not happening so you can not be that picky....
And thats even if we have assets these teams even like....Being rumoured to these players means NOTHING in actual trade talks because these teams might hate what we have to offer...
Agree we shouldn’t be playing for the middle. Given that we have Scottie we aren’t going to tear it down and rebuild so it makes the whole direction pretty easy. The issue with most fans is people want top 10 players at top 30 value. Just doesn’t happen cause top 10 players rarely come on the market.
The Raps are not in a horrible situation, but also not in the best like a SA or OKC. Let me lay out realistic options on how they compete.
1. Push the chips in and mortgage the next 5-6 years on someone like Giannis. You pretty much hope Barnes, Giannis and Ingram along with some role players can win you a chip. It’s a strong team, but not sure if we are top 4 in the league. I would probably do it.
2. You trade for reclamation projects that are undervalued due to their team taking a different direction. Reclamation projects come in two groups, guys buried in depth and stars that are on teams just not looking to compete and need to fire sale. Sabonis, Ja, Sharpe, White, Monk, Kyrie, Gafford are some players that fall in that group. Just think when th Bulls dealt Markanen to the Jazz or when the Cavs dealt Sexton. These are quality players at fractional prices.
3. Value snipe as a 3rd team in big trades. Nets, OKC and Jazz are absolutely rapists when it comes to this. They always find a way to absorb large salaries that are partially reclamation projects with potential while gaining draft capital. They usually do it by cycling expiring contracts in return or provide cap space absorption.
4. Roll the dice on high risk high reward stars. Davis, Young, LaMelo. These are guys that come at a 50% discount because of injury, contract demands, etc… I personally feel this group you stay away unless it is 30 cents on the dollar.
Option 1 gives you the most certainty but if it fails you set the team back several years and will need to be ready for a full rebuild. It is a more sensible strategy for free agent attractive markets as even though they gift up assets they can always pick back up tier 1 players at no cost. Miami, GS, LA, NY are teams that fall in that category.
Option 2 is really what makes the most sense for the Raptors. Get a guy like Sabonis who won’t cost a kings ransom. You are a competitive playoff team. You bam on improvement across your roster and keep liquid enough to still pull off an option 1 move when ready.
Option 3 is another one, but it would need to be something where Giannis is going to NY and they need to move someone like Towns but the Bucks not wanting Towns and prefer pics and younger players back.
Option 4 is just not the type of deal we can risk unless the price is absolutely low. If it means giving up a few of our larger contracts, IQ, Jak and 1 first rounder and a bench player like Dick sure, but anything that needs two starters, 2 first a CMB and Dick should be avoided. Such a trade can absolutely blow up and the team is caught in limbo and out of assets to make a meaningful move going forward.


















