^ Well written, Shanghai. I agree that the Wiz do have "a shot" at being competitive next season, but I believe that it's far more likely that they are not. I'm simply playing the odds here. But even if they don't make the playoffs, I think this general point still applies:
Shanghai Kid wrote: "Build up his trade value and trade him for an expiring", really? How is that going to work if Gil is putting up 25/5/5 and the team is headed for the playoffs? Do you think thats going to be so easy for the fan base to digest if they re-accept Gilbert, watch him help lead us to the playoffs, and than dump him for the sake of the rebuilding proccess?
What if Gil is putting up 25/5/5 and the team only wins 30 games? What then? People will be clamoring that "see, he's back and can be productive with Wall" and the call will be for adding other pieces so the Wiz can be a playoff team. That's the outcome that scares me the most, because then we could begin using assets and cap space with a goal of simply getting to mediocre. That would pretty much mean that the pain of the last two seasons was all for nothing. And then if Ted/Ernie don't do it and stick with the longterm view, they'll be accused of not wanting to win and wasting Gil's prime.
I just think the majority of the possible Gil scenarios will end up being a net negative:
- the team and Gil are both bad
- the team is decent but Gil is bad
- the team is bad but Gil is good
The only way that keeping Gil results in a positive IMO is if both he and the team are good next year, which I think is asking for too much. Of course, you can still argue that letting the season play out could create a better trade scenario for the team. But again, if Gil really is putting up numbers, the outcry will still be to keep him. And then you'll even have the crowd that will feel that Ted betrayed him by welcoming him only so he could build up his value to trade later.
I guess my point is that the only way this doesn't end badly is to either trade him now, or for Gil to lead this team to the playoffs in his first season. Again, I'm just playing the odds. Could the Wizards make the playoffs, attract some free agents next season and make serious strides sooner rather than later? Sure, anything's possible. But I think it's far more likely (as in 99% more likely) that this ends poorly and I'd rather just cut my losses now.