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Key Off-Season Decisions

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What do you think would be the best outcome of the offseason?

Both Ron and Beno are back next year
6
50%
Just Ron is back
3
25%
Neither return
3
25%
 
Total votes: 12

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Post#101 » by pillwenney » Tue Apr 29, 2008 6:50 am

SacKingZZZ wrote:-= original quote snipped =-



Wait a minute you're talking about getting guys like Kidd or Shaq and I am the one not looking past tomorrow? That is the ultimate "now" kind of move. And if we had a team that by taking on a player of that level we all of a sudden became a contender then sure why not? But it most likely won't bring us there anyway, we are a lot farther off. We are closer to the teams that unloaded those player than took them on.


Oh please, that's not the point. The point is that star players wanting out, and subsequently getting traded is nothing new or uncommon.
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Post#102 » by deNIEd » Tue Apr 29, 2008 7:01 am

Smills91 wrote:-= original quote snipped =-



Good grief can you not see past tomorrow? How do you think the Lakers got Pau Gasol? How do you think Denver got Allen Iverson? How do you think Phoenix got Shaq or Dallas Kidd? Those are legitimate superstars. Some may be past their primes, but they are still legitimate superstars. You got to have the ASSETS necessary to land those type of players. Petrie is 'stockpiling talent' and in 1 short year we'll have 30 + million in expiring contracts. THose expriings + prospects and picks will surely land a franchise player who wants out(there's at least one or more every year).

There is more than one way to fry a fish. Just because Petrie is doing it differently than you doesn't me he's not doing it.


Smills, I think you I, SacKingzz, and everyone else here, can agree that we don't have a number one option. However, the difference being, sackingz and myself and maybe others believe that we will only obtain this number one option via the draft, not trades.

You bring up trades, lets go back through time.

Kidd - Not a number 1 option or a franchise player, number 3 on Dallas
Shaq - Not even close to a number 1 option or franchise player anymore, Number 3? on Phoenix
Gasol - Not a franchise player, doing much better as a number 2 option, and is the number 2/3 option in LA.
KG - Number 1 option, but they gave up Jefferson (who is a franchise player just younger, so KG doesn't count, since I'm sure we'd be pretty happy and fine with Jefferson)
Ray Allen - Not a number 1 option, number 3 on Celtics
AI - Number 2 option, also the trade made the team worse off
Antwan Walker - Lol
Baron Davis - Franchise number 1 type player, but this was 3 years ago, so here is one.

Trades are great to add missing pieces, ie, Add a Gasol to a playoff team to push them into title contention. However, the point that we are missing is a legit number 1 option. A Chris Webber, Kobe Bryant, D. Howard, C. Bosh type player.

If we all agree that the players we have aren't number 1 options, are work best as 2nd/3rd options on a championship team, and looking back at recent history, franchise type players that are number 1 options are almost never traded, and looking back at recent history franchise type players are also never signed via free agency, the only option is Draft. Draft. Draft

*I would Keep on going, but I don't remenber how good the players were at the time and such*
Included everything i could remenber
http://www.insidehoops.com/nba-trade-deadline.shtml
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Post#103 » by pillwenney » Tue Apr 29, 2008 7:15 am

You didn't seem to remember to mention the first time Shaq was traded, Sheed (he may not be THE number 1 guy, but I would sure be satisfied with a player of his caliber), I could probably go on to name more if I felt like thinking about it.

I just can't wait for these couple of years to pass so that when Geoff gets this all figured out, we won't have to worry so much about it.
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Post#104 » by SacKingZZZ » Tue Apr 29, 2008 7:40 am

mitchweber wrote:-= original quote snipped =-



Oh please, that's not the point. The point is that star players wanting out, and subsequently getting traded is nothing new or uncommon.


Oh please, we are more than a Jason Kidd level star away from going anywhere. And if the plan is to hope that a team gives us a superstar then we may be waiting quite a long time to get going on anything. This last season was a FLUKE. Never have there been this many high profile players moving to different teams. And guess what, we WEREN'T one of the teams involved. But if reports are true, we were one of the ones trying to UNLOAD a big name player.

All I am doing is trying to base my opinion off of actual current league conditions, and like deNIED said I don't think trading is a realistic option at this point. I think all the teams that were going to hit the panic button already did. We lost out on two chances. To either add someone or to unload one of ours to help further a rebuild. I think the latter can still happen, the first is just speculation and really depends on another teams interests in letting a superstar go than our own. I don't think hoping one day that a team lets a superstar go is a good or even semi-reasonable plan. Why? Because you can't even begin to plan for that!!! It's totally circumstantial. You can however try to get a star for the future with an asset you are guaranteed every year, your draft pick.

Not to mention the fact that our team has basically no significant cohesion, both on paper and on the court. So even adding a guy like Gasol gets us where exactly? We still have no TEAM concept. We are torn in two different directions, youth and experience. As I mentioned before, we are currently headed into next season looking at a roster in which nearly 60%, and maybe even as high as 70% of our entire roster, will be relatively young players still developing their own game.
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Post#105 » by SacKingZZZ » Tue Apr 29, 2008 7:51 am

mitchweber wrote:You didn't seem to remember to mention the first time Shaq was traded, Sheed (he may not be THE number 1 guy, but I would sure be satisfied with a player of his caliber), I could probably go on to name more if I felt like thinking about it.

I just can't wait for these couple of years to pass so that when Geoff gets this all figured out, we won't have to worry so much about it.


Yeah and that's what? An every 15 year type of trade??? And Sheed!? I wouldn't mind the guy but he takes us nowhere close to significance. He was great for the Pistons and was that missing piece, but we are far more than one missing piece away from contending. And that's before you even take into account all the teams that got even stronger in the west this last year.

I am OK with the fact that we didn't truly "rebuild" when we traded CWebb even if in hindsight we should have. No doubt about it. Since then we are 2 fairly easy outs in the 1st round (Spurs series was pretty tough though). And 2 lotto appearances in a row. It's been 4 years for craps sake! How much longer until we just finally bite the bullet. As of now it would take far more work to put together a "winning" team than just rebuild. Why? Becasue Geoff has made no significant moves in the direction of immediate winning. However his work in the opposite has been done for him. We have drafted higher and higher for the last couple of years, this year excluded of course, we made a minor jump up. I just think you have to go with easiest and most logical direction at this point.
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Post#106 » by deNIEd » Tue Apr 29, 2008 8:09 am

mitchweber wrote:You didn't seem to remember to mention the first time Shaq was traded, Sheed (he may not be THE number 1 guy, but I would sure be satisfied with a player of his caliber), I could probably go on to name more if I felt like thinking about it.


Opps,
however, if I recall, Miami gave up Lamar Odom and Caron Butler to get Shaq. And, most people will say that when the Heat won, it was Wade that was the best player not Shaq. Either way if Shaq was the best player or number 1 option or not, Wade was still a top 5 player that year. A top 5 player, something that Kings do not have, and the whole point of this debate.
*I would also say, that the Shaq trade made Miami a lot worse. Wade/Butler/Odom would be an amazing trio and would do significant damage in the east.

Wallace, I don't remenber what they got him for, but again, Wallace isn't a number 1 option.
Add Wallace to Sacramento without taking anything off (just for shiz and giggles), Beno/Martin/Artest/Wallace/Miller with Douby/Garcia/Salmons/Moore/Hawes, we still are not a playoff team.

Heres anoter look at things, if we look at the overall picture, of how the team would have done had the trades not gone down...
Phoenix traded for Shaq (Got Worse)
Dallas traded for Kidd (Got Worse)
Denver traded for AI (Got Worse)
Miami traded for Shaq (Got Worse)
LA traded for Gasol (Got alot better lol) (However, we don't have a Kobe!!)
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Post#107 » by pillwenney » Tue Apr 29, 2008 11:18 am

deNIEd wrote:-= original quote snipped =-



Opps,
however, if I recall, Miami gave up Lamar Odom and Caron Butler to get Shaq. And, most people will say that when the Heat won, it was Wade that was the best player not Shaq. Either way if Shaq was the best player or number 1 option or not, Wade was still a top 5 player that year. A top 5 player, something that Kings do not have, and the whole point of this debate.
*I would also say, that the Shaq trade made Miami a lot worse. Wade/Butler/Odom would be an amazing trio and would do significant damage in the east.

Wallace, I don't remenber what they got him for, but again, Wallace isn't a number 1 option.
Add Wallace to Sacramento without taking anything off (just for shiz and giggles), Beno/Martin/Artest/Wallace/Miller with Douby/Garcia/Salmons/Moore/Hawes, we still are not a playoff team.

Heres anoter look at things, if we look at the overall picture, of how the team would have done had the trades not gone down...
Phoenix traded for Shaq (Got Worse)
Dallas traded for Kidd (Got Worse)
Denver traded for AI (Got Worse)
Miami traded for Shaq (Got Worse)
LA traded for Gasol (Got alot better lol) (However, we don't have a Kobe!!)


Shaq was second in MVP voting his first year in Miami. Everybody knew that his presence was the big difference-maker that year. Wade was terrific, but the point still stands. And no, Miami didn't get worse--well they did eventually but they also got a ring out of it before they got worse. I'll take a few years of crap if it means getting a ring.

But no, adding Sheed would definitely make us a playoff team. Hell, just getting healthy would probably push us over .500 pretty easily. Adding a player of Sheed's caliber would make a huge difference.

Phoenix traded for Shaq - Too soon to say IMO. They started to look really good at the end of the regular season and just have been hit by a freight train in the Spurs.

Dallas - Yeah, because Kidd is an awful fit on many levels there.

Denver - No they didn't. They won more games. They didn't get a whole lot better (and again, AI was a poor fit next to Melo from the start), but they didn't get worse.

Miami - Again, no.
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Post#108 » by deNIEd » Tue Apr 29, 2008 7:35 pm

mitchweber wrote:Shaq was second in MVP voting his first year in Miami. Everybody knew that his presence was the big difference-maker that year. Wade was terrific, but the point still stands. And no, Miami didn't get worse--well they did eventually but they also got a ring out of it before they got worse. I'll take a few years of crap if it means getting a ring.

The point I am trying to make, is that without Wade that Miami team goes nowhere. Replace Wade with K. Martin and I doubt that team wins a ring. (Well maybe, cause for some fluke reason Dallas got to the finals). But, out of all the recent trades, Gasol/Shaq made their team a title contender. We don't have an Odom/Butler to trade for a Shaq, nor do we have a Kobe.

Point being, a trade won't make our team instant contenders because of the supporting cast around the traded player is not at a championship level yet.

mitchweber wrote:But no, adding Sheed would definitely make us a playoff team. Hell, just getting healthy would probably push us over .500 pretty easily. Adding a player of Sheed's caliber would make a huge difference.

Being .500 doesn't get us in the playoffs. A bare minimum of 50 wins will. If adding Sheed puts us in the playoffs (along with the hypothetical we lose absolutely no players to get him), it still doesn't put us into a serious playoff threat. At best we would be 7th seed. Now factor in the reality of us giving up players to get Sheed, and it pretty much comes out to the fact that adding a player like Sheed would help us, but not nearly to the level of contenders.

mitchweber wrote:Phoenix traded for Shaq - Too soon to say IMO. They started to look really good at the end of the regular season and just have been hit by a freight train in the Spurs.

If they get knocked 4-1, then yes their team did get worse by the trade. And its crippled any kind of movement or change for that team.

mitchweber wrote:Dallas - Yeah, because Kidd is an awful fit on many levels there.

Agreed

mitchweber wrote:Denver - No they didn't. They won more games. They didn't get a whole lot better (and again, AI was a poor fit next to Melo from the start), but they didn't get worse.

Again I'm talking about the overall picture. I'll give you Miami but not Denver. You don't sacrifice a future to get knocked out of the first round.
Which team would you rather have, the current Knicks team, or
PG: A. Miller/A. Carter
SG: J. Smith/L. Kleiza
SF: C. Anthony/E. Najera
PF: K. Martin/J. Smith
C : M. Camby/Nene
+21st Pick and whatever the 2nd pick was
21 potentially drafting - D. Cook, J. Dudley, W. Chandler, R. Fernadez, A. Brooks, T. Splitter, A. Tucker, C. Landry

So yes, I do believe that Denver got worse. A. Miller is a much better team player in a 5 on 5 setting than A. Iverson, especially when on a team where scoring is not a priority.
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Post#109 » by SacKingZZZ » Tue Apr 29, 2008 11:08 pm

I don't get the whole "playoff team" thing. I still don't think an 8th seed finish is exceptable in my book. It's a lot easier to change 30-40% of your team than 60-70%.
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Post#110 » by pillwenney » Wed Apr 30, 2008 5:33 am

deNIEd wrote:The point I am trying to make, is that without Wade that Miami team goes nowhere. Replace Wade with K. Martin and I doubt that team wins a ring. (Well maybe, cause for some fluke reason Dallas got to the finals). But, out of all the recent trades, Gasol/Shaq made their team a title contender. We don't have an Odom/Butler to trade for a Shaq, nor do we have a Kobe.

Point being, a trade won't make our team instant contenders because of the supporting cast around the traded player is not at a championship level yet.


You're trying to compare exact teams, which is silly. It's silly because just because a trade doesn't make a contender right away, it doesn't mean that it doesn't help the process. The point is that it's not impossible to trade for a great player, and once you do that, you can look to add pieces around said player.

Being .500 doesn't get us in the playoffs. A bare minimum of 50 wins will. If adding Sheed puts us in the playoffs (along with the hypothetical we lose absolutely no players to get him), it still doesn't put us into a serious playoff threat. At best we would be 7th seed. Now factor in the reality of us giving up players to get Sheed, and it pretty much comes out to the fact that adding a player like Sheed would help us, but not nearly to the level of contenders.


Right, but being .500 plus Sheed does get us in. And man, some of you guys are impatient. We would still be in a much better position to add pieces and to improve our roster. And honestly, if that team were to click, I could easily see the team in the top half of the west. I mean if you're a 7 seed at this point, you're very close to being a top seed anyway.


If they get knocked 4-1, then yes their team did get worse by the trade. And its crippled any kind of movement or change for that team.


Wow, that's incredibly short-sighted. I wish I could just look at things like "they did this one year and they did this the next year therefore they're worse". Let's not factor in that Shaq brought a dramatic change to their team that would take some time to adjust to and that Spurs just flat out look incredible this year. And let's not factor in each specific game and how Phoenix could easily be up 3-2 right now if they hadn't choked about as bad as our 02 Kings. No, if you lose to a team 4-1 one year, and 4-2 the next, you are worse.
Again I'm talking about the overall picture. I'll give you Miami but not Denver. You don't sacrifice a future to get knocked out of the first round.
Which team would you rather have, the current Knicks team, or
PG: A. Miller/A. Carter
SG: J. Smith/L. Kleiza
SF: C. Anthony/E. Najera
PF: K. Martin/J. Smith
C : M. Camby/Nene
+21st Pick and whatever the 2nd pick was
21 potentially drafting - D. Cook, J. Dudley, W. Chandler, R. Fernadez, A. Brooks, T. Splitter, A. Tucker, C. Landry

So yes, I do believe that Denver got worse. A. Miller is a much better team player in a 5 on 5 setting than A. Iverson, especially when on a team where scoring is not a priority.


And in a way, that's something where you have to look at the situation. As it was with Kidd, everybody knew going in that AI was a terrible fit there, largely because they already had a star to build around in Melo, and they added one that does a lot of the same things.

The point is still that they were able to add a great player.

And no, they're not really worse off. The guy they would've drafted simply wouldn't have made a huge difference, in all likelihood and they could probably potentially trade AI for more now than they ever could Miller.
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Post#111 » by deNIEd » Wed Apr 30, 2008 6:51 am

^
Point I'm trying to make is that none of those teams got a number 1 option.

The King's whole situation breaks down to the fact that we don't have a number 1/franchise type player, and its the one thing this team needs. I'm pointing out that getting a number 1 option via trading is very unrealistic.

Good/Great players can be obtained via the trade, but all of these players beome a 2nd or 3rd option (with some exceptions, KG which doesn't count, Shaq possibly, but the Kobe/Shaq situation is one in a million and we can't count on it happening again, since having 2 top 5 players on the same team is very unlikely)


So, will you agree with this point? Franchise type players are almost never traded and when they are they happen once in a blue moon.


However, I think it is important to reemphasize what a franchise type player is and what it is the Kings are missing.

Well, Everyone says we are 1 Chris Webber away from being back/1 franchise player away. This in my mind is a top 10-15 player in the league. Outside of possibly the 04 Pistons, no team in recent history has ever won without at least 1 top 10-15 player.
Players like,
Duncan, LeBron, Kobe, KG, Wade, Bosh, Dwight, Paul, Ming, etc...
And counting on getting one of these players via the trade or free agency is 100% completely unrealistic. Is it possible? Yes, but a team cannot count on it happening. Which is why Knicks fans that count on Lebron signing are all coming up with a pathetic one shot plan.

This Franchise player must be obtained through the draft, as there is no other possibility
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Post#112 » by pillwenney » Wed Apr 30, 2008 7:36 am

deNIEd wrote:^
Point I'm trying to make is that none of those teams got a number 1 option.

The King's whole situation breaks down to the fact that we don't have a number 1/franchise type player, and its the one thing this team needs. I'm pointing out that getting a number 1 option via trading is very unrealistic.

Good/Great players can be obtained via the trade, but all of these players beome a 2nd or 3rd option (with some exceptions, KG which doesn't count, Shaq possibly, but the Kobe/Shaq situation is one in a million and we can't count on it happening again, since having 2 top 5 players on the same team is very unlikely)


So, will you agree with this point? Franchise type players are almost never traded and when they are they happen once in a blue moon.


However, I think it is important to reemphasize what a franchise type player is and what it is the Kings are missing.

Well, Everyone says we are 1 Chris Webber away from being back/1 franchise player away. This in my mind is a top 10-15 player in the league. Outside of possibly the 04 Pistons, no team in recent history has ever won without at least 1 top 10-15 player.
Players like,
Duncan, LeBron, Kobe, KG, Wade, Bosh, Dwight, Paul, Ming, etc...
And counting on getting one of these players via the trade or free agency is 100% completely unrealistic. Is it possible? Yes, but a team cannot count on it happening. Which is why Knicks fans that count on Lebron signing are all coming up with a pathetic one shot plan.

This Franchise player must be obtained through the draft, as there is no other possibility


When you look at all of the champions outside of well, any Detroit team in the last few decades, they have all had guys that could make an argument for being a top 10 player ever (and in almost all cases, it's a consensus). That's not just a superstar, that is an all time great player. Those aren't going to be handed to you just because you tank. In fact, I'll say it right now--Michael Beasley will not ever be considered along the same lines of Duncan, Shaq, Jordan or Hakeem. The only guys that have been drafted since Duncan that might have a chance of reaching that point are Lebron and Dwight--maybe an outside chance for Paul, and Wade or Oden (if they can stay healthy, but I do mean an outside chance). In order to get a player like that, we would not only have to tank, but we would have to do so in just the right year and get extremely lucky--and by tank I mean not only trading away our vets, but I mean trying to lose games. Because like I said before, this team without Brad or Ron still isn't close to the worst in the league--probably like a 28-30 win team right now. So

Players that good usually come around once or twice a decade, and we probably missed the boat. So what will we do? Oh no! The sky is falling!

But wait! There is still that 04 Pistons team. There is still that possibility of trying to just get the best players we can. Maybe we won't get what is typically called a "franchise player" and maybe we will. But in all likelihood, we won't get one of the guys I listed up there--even if we do really try to suck for the next couple of years.

So all we can do is the best we can. We can be aggressive in trying to constantly improve our situation, but tanking for somebody really good isn't going to help our cause any more than trying to find a great piece to add in a trade.
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Post#113 » by KF10 » Wed Apr 30, 2008 7:53 am

I think we are still a big time player that would make this team formidable. Like mitch said adding a player like Sheed would make this team an auto playoff team. And from there, we know Petrie would improve that situation by adding pieces to the puzzle... There is one trade in the trade board that I found kind of interesting. The trade between Boston/Kings. It has us trading Artest/Miller for Pierce/Scal. Adding arguably a superstar to this team will do wonders in our current situation IMO... (I have stated in the other thread that Im still on the fence on whether we should rebuild completely or try to improve our current situation).
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Post#114 » by Smills91 » Wed Apr 30, 2008 7:07 pm

kingsfan10 wrote:I think we are still a big time player that would make this team formidable. Like mitch said adding a player like Sheed would make this team an auto playoff team. And from there, we know Petrie would improve that situation by adding pieces to the puzzle... There is one trade in the trade board that I found kind of interesting. The trade between Boston/Kings. It has us trading Artest/Miller for Pierce/Scal. Adding arguably a superstar to this team will do wonders in our current situation IMO... (I have stated in the other thread that Im still on the fence on whether we should rebuild completely or try to improve our current situation).

Wha...TF? Pierce is a great player in his own right, but he's not that superior to Ron that he leads us to the playoffs in the West, ESPECIALLY not by losing Brad Miller either. That trade does NOTHING for the Kings but makes them worse overall because NOW we have gaping holes at the 1/4/5 instead of just the 1/4.
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Post#115 » by deNIEd » Wed Apr 30, 2008 10:47 pm

mitchweber wrote:When you look at all of the champions outside of well, any Detroit team in the last few decades, they have all had guys that could make an argument for being a top 10 player ever (and in almost all cases, it's a consensus).


If you add in teams that were close to winning (Kings, Jazz, Knicks, etc) they all also had great players (Top 50 alltime I would say).

What does that say? It says that a championship team is extremely hard to come by and it takes a perfect combination of coaching, offense, defense, rebounding, bench, 3 point shooting, etc.. It requires every aspect of the team to be near perfect, which is why teams like Denver, Phoenix, Dallas, Houston, Portland of late 90's, why teams like these have no true shot at a title.

mitchweber wrote:The only guys that have been drafted since Duncan that might have a chance of reaching that point are Lebron and Dwight--maybe an outside chance for Paul, and Wade or Oden (if they can stay healthy, but I do mean an outside chance).

This I agree with. But, we just have to beat the best players currently playing. It doesn't matter how good the players are relative to Duncan/Jordan/Shaq but how good the players are relative to LeBron/Wade/Durant/Bosh/Howard etc.

Which is why I say, a team NEEDS at least 1 top 10-15 player in the league at the time.

mitchweber wrote:But wait! There is still that 04 Pistons team. There is still that possibility of trying to just get the best players we can. Maybe we won't get what is typically called a "franchise player" and maybe we will. But in all likelihood, we won't get one of the guys I listed up there--even if we do really try to suck for the next couple of years.


When the Pistons won.
Billups was a top 15-20 player. Rasheed/Ben/Rip were all top 20-30 players. They had a top 5 coach in Larry Brown. A a top 5 bench which included (Corliss (6th man of the year), M. Okur, M. James, E. Campbell, L. Hunter)

Every player was superb on defense, and the team had a perfect balance in every area of basketball. This may be possible, but it is just as hard and rare as getting a Duncan/LeBron/Jordan type of a player.

This, you cannot argue.

mitchweber wrote:So all we can do is the best we can. We can be aggressive in trying to constantly improve our situation, but tanking for somebody really good isn't going to help our cause any more than trying to find a great piece to add in a trade.

There is a HUGE difference between tanking and rebuilding through the draft, the two are not the same.

Tanking - Losing on purpose, trying to get the most ping pong balls, only to have the system rigged against you (rightfully so). Tanking means a team is trying not to win. Like Miami and the Knicks.

Rebuilding through the draft - Just because a team that trades all veteran assets for cap space, future picks, and prospects, doesn't necessarily mean that the team is tanking.
Would you say Seattle or T-Wolves or Bobcats tanked this year? No. They tried to win, just its hard to win when the best player is 23 or so.

I agree, we need to obtain the best assets to hopefully be able to one day create a 04 Pistons, or even possibly trade to obtain a 06 Miami type of a team, but keeping veteran players just isn't the way to do that.

Artest/Moore/Miller's values will decrease with every year simply for the fact that they are starting to approach the end of their careers.

If we want to obtain the best assets and best possible future for this team, we have to trade these three players (Although, I'd like us to keep Artest), and in return receive picks, young prospects, or cap space.

Cap space however doesn't necessarily mean spend it on a free agent once you have it, but you hold the cap space until the perfect opportune moment. (7 million in cap gave Sonics what 4 picks?)

We must rebuild through the draft. Doesn't mean tank every year, but it means possibly getting a team where the oldest member is 26 and starting from there.


kingsfan10 wrote:I think we are still a big time player that would make this team formidable. Like mitch said adding a player like Sheed would make this team an auto playoff team. And from there, we know Petrie would improve that situation by adding pieces to the puzzle... There is one trade in the trade board that I found kind of interesting. The trade between Boston/Kings. It has us trading Artest/Miller for Pierce/Scal. Adding arguably a superstar to this team will do wonders in our current situation IMO... (I have stated in the other thread that Im still on the fence on whether we should rebuild completely or try to improve our current situation).

You can only add so many pieces to a puzzle. My hypothetical was that we would receive Sheed for like Kenny Thomas and Shareef.
Our team becomes
PG: B. Udrih/Q. Douby
SG: K. Martin/F. Garcia
SF: R. Artest/J. Salmons
PF: R. Wallace/M. Moore
C : B. Miller/S. Hawes
Is this a championship team?
No
Can this team become a championship team?
Most likely not. Why?
It all is because of how much a team can flucuate. A team can differ in 4 ways, a) free agency b)trade c)draft d)player development.
a) we would have no cap space, meaning we could only add a MLE player or so, no mle player is going to turn a 6/7th seed team into a 1/3 seed team.
b) To trade for a player you have to give up a player. Typically trades level out for teams (which is the idea). Any trade would involve us giving up a key part, (Phoenix with Marion), so there is only so much a trade can improve us.
c) Draft. Draft doesn't help contending teams during contention years, it can extend the years, but it doesn't directly help much.


Adding Pierce would do nothing for this team. Pierce couldn't lead a team to win in the east, he will do less in the west.
Artest + Miller > Pierce + Hawes
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Post#116 » by KF10 » Wed Apr 30, 2008 11:34 pm

Smills91 wrote:-= original quote snipped =-


Wha...TF? Pierce is a great player in his own right, but he's not that superior to Ron that he leads us to the playoffs in the West, ESPECIALLY not by losing Brad Miller either. That trade does NOTHING for the Kings but makes them worse overall because NOW we have gaping holes at the 1/4/5 instead of just the 1/4.


Eh, while thinking about it. You are probably right. But I really like Pierce's game. Slashing/Mid range game. IMO he is that big time player that we need. I hate losing Miller. Eh, I they could send Perkins instead of Scal I guess...
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Post#117 » by KF10 » Wed Apr 30, 2008 11:44 pm

deNIEd wrote:

kingsfan10 wrote:I think we are still a big time player that would make this team formidable. Like mitch said adding a player like Sheed would make this team an auto playoff team. And from there, we know Petrie would improve that situation by adding pieces to the puzzle... There is one trade in the trade board that I found kind of interesting. The trade between Boston/Kings. It has us trading Artest/Miller for Pierce/Scal. Adding arguably a superstar to this team will do wonders in our current situation IMO... (I have stated in the other thread that Im still on the fence on whether we should rebuild completely or try to improve our current situation).

You can only add so many pieces to a puzzle. My hypothetical was that we would receive Sheed for like Kenny Thomas and Shareef.
Our team becomes
PG: B. Udrih/Q. Douby
SG: K. Martin/F. Garcia
SF: R. Artest/J. Salmons
PF: R. Wallace/M. Moore
C : B. Miller/S. Hawes
Is this a championship team?
No
Can this team become a championship team?
Most likely not. Why?
It all is because of how much a team can flucuate. A team can differ in 4 ways, a) free agency b)trade c)draft d)player development.
a) we would have no cap space, meaning we could only add a MLE player or so, no mle player is going to turn a 6/7th seed team into a 1/3 seed team.
b) To trade for a player you have to give up a player. Typically trades level out for teams (which is the idea). Any trade would involve us giving up a key part, (Phoenix with Marion), so there is only so much a trade can improve us.
c) Draft. Draft doesn't help contending teams during contention years, it can extend the years, but it doesn't directly help much.


Adding Pierce would do nothing for this team. Pierce couldn't lead a team to win in the east, he will do less in the west.
Artest + Miller > Pierce + Hawes


If you add Pierce, we will have another player that could compliment Martin. Assuming that we get Perkins too in the deal. The lineup will be:

Beno/Douby
Martin/Garcia
Pierce/Salmons
Moore/SAR (Assuming that he is healthy for next year).
Perkins/Hawes

Obviously, we will have a powerful SG/SF combination (Arguably the best SG/SF combination) This team will be overall better w/o Artest IMO. The offense is more free flowing IMO...
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Post#118 » by pillwenney » Thu May 1, 2008 12:07 am

If you add in teams that were close to winning (Kings, Jazz, Knicks, etc) they all also had great players (Top 50 alltime I would say).

What does that say? It says that a championship team is extremely hard to come by and it takes a perfect combination of coaching, offense, defense, rebounding, bench, 3 point shooting, etc.. It requires every aspect of the team to be near perfect, which is why teams like Denver, Phoenix, Dallas, Houston, Portland of late 90's, why teams like these have no true shot at a title.


Wait, what? Why are we talking about teams that were close to winning? Wouldn't that just go to help prove that having a great, but not "all time great" player will only get you so far?

But I agree that you need a nearly perfect team. I'm not saying that you don't.

This I agree with. But, we just have to beat the best players currently playing. It doesn't matter how good the players are relative to Duncan/Jordan/Shaq but how good the players are relative to LeBron/Wade/Durant/Bosh/Howard etc.

Which is why I say, a team NEEDS at least 1 top 10-15 player in the league at the time.


No, at that point it matters how good your team is by comparison IMO. If the priority is to really base this off of getting "that one guy" then "that one guy" has to be a potential all-time great. Otherwise, getting great players is nice, but in that sense, not any more proven than anything else.

When the Pistons won.
Billups was a top 15-20 player. Rasheed/Ben/Rip were all top 20-30 players. They had a top 5 coach in Larry Brown. A a top 5 bench which included (Corliss (6th man of the year), M. Okur, M. James, E. Campbell, L. Hunter)

Every player was superb on defense, and the team had a perfect balance in every area of basketball. This may be possible, but it is just as hard and rare as getting a Duncan/LeBron/Jordan type of a player.

This, you cannot argue.


Yes it was a great team in many respects. But it wasn't entirely based off of luck. They find a diamond in the rough in Billups, trading Stack for Rip was just smart GMing, as was drafting Prince, and trading for Big Ben. The Sheed trade might have been lucky, but it was also at a time when when the guys value was at a low point for his career.

I think my point is that if you keep your team good, with good assets, great players to add like Sheed will always eventually become available and you can have a decent shot at acquiring them. But you can suck for years and never have a Lebron fall into your lap.

There is a HUGE difference between tanking and rebuilding through the draft, the two are not the same.

Tanking - Losing on purpose, trying to get the most ping pong balls, only to have the system rigged against you (rightfully so). Tanking means a team is trying not to win. Like Miami and the Knicks.

Rebuilding through the draft - Just because a team that trades all veteran assets for cap space, future picks, and prospects, doesn't necessarily mean that the team is tanking.
Would you say Seattle or T-Wolves or Bobcats tanked this year? No. They tried to win, just its hard to win when the best player is 23 or so.

I agree, we need to obtain the best assets to hopefully be able to one day create a 04 Pistons, or even possibly trade to obtain a 06 Miami type of a team, but keeping veteran players just isn't the way to do that.

Artest/Moore/Miller's values will decrease with every year simply for the fact that they are starting to approach the end of their careers.

If we want to obtain the best assets and best possible future for this team, we have to trade these three players (Although, I'd like us to keep Artest), and in return receive picks, young prospects, or cap space.

Cap space however doesn't necessarily mean spend it on a free agent once you have it, but you hold the cap space until the perfect opportune moment. (7 million in cap gave Sonics what 4 picks?)

We must rebuild through the draft. Doesn't mean tank every year, but it means possibly getting a team where the oldest member is 26 and starting from there.


Well Charlotte wasn't really rebuilding through the draft either--I mean they traded a young big man for J-Rich last year. But that's besides the point.

I guess I just don't get what you're hoping for. If we rebuild through the draft, as you said, and trade our vets for picks or whatever, we still won't be able to get a guaranteed franchise player, which is what we're looking for, right? I mean we'll probably move up a few more spots, but the draft will still be pretty much as much of a crapshoot as before. We're talking about being around the 6th pick and having nothing but young guys, and having the 12th pick with veterans to help the young guys, a team that wins some more games (thus maintaining a positive attitude, experience in winning situations for the younger guys, and not sacrificing any of the teams value) and maintaining some level of fan support (which, as much as some of you want to ignore it, is important).

And okay, you say you want to keep Ron, and basically look to trade Mikki and Brad. First off, I don't really see any team giving up anything substantial for Mikki--at best, a very late 1st. As for Brad, at the deadline, Orlando was the one team with enough expirings to trade for him. But they wanted Cisco, and didn't want to give up their pick. We ended up not trading Brad because our options were very limited. Not that many teams have enough expirings to trade for him, and the ones that do, have to want him enough to add in their 1st round pick (otherwise, there is no real incentive for us). So in all likelihood, trading Brad and Mikki will not really help us to draft our franchise player--but if we wait until next year when we have tons of expiring $, we'll be able to offer some interesting packages to trade for a great player.
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Post#119 » by deNIEd » Thu May 1, 2008 4:34 am

mitchweber wrote:I guess I just don't get what you're hoping for. If we rebuild through the draft, as you said, and trade our vets for picks or whatever, we still won't be able to get a guaranteed franchise player, which is what we're looking for, right?


Drafting a franchise player is hard, I agree, but I also believe chances of drafting a franchise player being far better than trading for one.

*Keeping Artest is only from a personal fan standpoint, not from a team mangement standpoint, I think it will be best for the team to trade Artest, but as a fan I love Artest. I mean, the guy is a pure comedian. How many players Rap. Say they will go into other players houses and murder them if they don't resign. Say they will give their salary to keep a coach. Even pull down other players pants during games to attempt to stop them. The guy is just funny.*

Personally, I would like the Kings to trade Artest/Miller/Moore/Salmons for the best package possible. For Miller and Moore, there may not be "great" deals out there, but as an expiring, the level of dropoff in terms of value between Miller and K. Thomas are negligible . (I doubt Memphis cares if they recieved Kwame Brown or Brad Miller if their desire was an expiring and rebuilding).

However, we have to also realize there are only a few teams that are able or want to take on one of those vets, so we cannot hold out too long otherwise they have no value or their value will drop (how good would J. Williams and 08 1st for M. Bibby be looking right about now).

Yes, we want to hold for the highest value, but it is a fact that up to some point of waiting, that value will drop off and drop off fast.

I don't view the draft as a crapshoot. Look at organizations like Spurs, Lakers, (others if I wasn't tired), even Sacramento, these organizations have had solid draft picks every single year. Yes we may not get the best player possible at that draft spot, but we sure as hell won't get the worst. Give Petrie a number 3 pick, and I am willing to bet in the end of it all Petrie will have picked a top 5 player in that draft class.

mitchweber wrote:We're talking about being around the 6th pick and having nothing but young guys, and having the 12th pick with veterans to help the young guys, a team that wins some more games (thus maintaining a positive attitude, experience in winning situations for the younger guys, and not sacrificing any of the teams value) and maintaining some level of fan support (which, as much as some of you want to ignore it, is important).

I just view that 6th pick as much more valuable. Young players will only have their values increase (typically, especially with Petrie), while vets will only see their value drop off. (all to some variation).

I really don't think the positive attitude/experience you are saying as being that big of a deal. As an athlete myself, I have always rather lost because of my inability to win than win slightley more because of watching others win for me. A veteran Kings team will win more games, but not that much more. (This year we are talking about something along the lines of 10th in the west to maybe 12th in the west.

If the players all grow and develop together, win together and lose together, I think will be better for the overall team morale than watching Brad Miller and Mikki Moore play. Granted, that the team is constantly trying to improve itself.

As terms of fan support, I think fans will be happy as long as effort and hope are present. The effort of a team giving it their all every game and the hope of the team getting better.

Oh well. I think the only thing we can do now is wait. Wait until the end of the summer to see where Petrie leads us.

I agree Petrie isn't just sitting on his ass, I just think he needs some coffee and some balls to react faster and not being afraid of changing things up.
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Post#120 » by Smills91 » Thu May 1, 2008 4:47 am

There's only 3 ways the Kings are getting an all-time great on their roster any time soon(Meaning in the next 2-3 years).

A) Get lucky as hell and win the lottery and have Derrick Rose pan out as the greatest PG of all-time. Chances 1/1,000,000,000
B) Wait a year and stockpile assets and look to make a deal with those assets along with our expiring contracts to land a Chris Bosh caliber PF who wants out of his situation. Chances 1/1,000,000
C) Let our contracts expire and sign a marquee free to an overpaid contract of 20 million dollars. Chances 1/10,000

So as you can see those chances are slim and none(I calculated them myself) :-D

Our best bet is to field the best possible team and hope we catch a lucky break a la Mitch Richmond for Chris Webber.

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