Chaos Revenant wrote:nate33 wrote:I think another one of my concerns is with the idea of devoting so many resources to the backcourt and so few resources to the frontcourt. It feels instinctively wrong to me. I've never seen a contending team constructed with it's two best players being guards. This also relates to a point Doc often makes about guards getting too good too quickly and vaulting the team up to 45-win purgatory before there's an opportunity to draft franchise-caliber big men.
Good point, but
One thing to consider though - I might argue that there has not been a true franchise-caliber big drafted since 2004 (though the jury is out on a lot of guys). Even guys like Amare, Bosh, Gasol are *well* short of a prime Duncan, Shaq, KG, Dirk or even the second tier of great bigs - Webber, Ewing, Mourning, guys like that. And even a guy like Gasol was closer to a 7'0 version of Jamison before he got to LA. And personally, if Blatche maintains his performance as a starter last year, he's already on the cusp of being a franchise big. And as we all know, Chris Webber was no paragon of hustle and work ethic. If Blatche = C-Webb, then I have no problem committing to him.
The fact is, of the titles this decade that featured dominant bigs, 4 of them were won by a guy drafted in 1992, 4 won by guys drafted in 1996. The other two was won by a guy drafted in 2001, and hadn't won a GAME in the playoffs without Kobe and Phil.
With Arenas, there will be very little chance of ever obtaining a high enough pick to get a good big, and teams almost never trade good bigs.
I'd argue this was the case the moment we drafted Wall.
Wall is being considered a
once in a generation PG prospect. In addition, he was a top pick in the draft. Well, let's see first, the impact elite PG prospects have on their teams as *rookies*, and second, the impact quality #1 picks have on their teams as rookies.
PGs:
2005 Hornets: +18 games from last year
2005 Jazz: +15 games from last year
2008 Bulls +8 from previous year
2009 Bucks +12 from previous years.
For goodness sake the Bobcats were +7 after they drafted Felton!
The only exceptions were Russel Westbrook (who was considered a major project at the time, and not even a pure PG), on a team that had Durant, Green, and literally nothing else, and Stephon Curry, whose team was devastated by injury like no team in recent memory. We have *far* more talent than those teams even without Arenas.
Meanwhile, let's look at #1 picks that panned out
Yao Ming + 15
LeBron James + 18 (Wade, Bosh, and Melo would be #1s in other years, so will include them just because - +17, +7, and +27 respectively)
Dwight Howard + 15
Bogut + 10
Bargnani (arguably a bust bust still +20)
Durant is an interesting case - he's minus -10, but SEA/OKC had blown it up, trading Allen and Lewis. Obviously Oden didn't play.
Rose + 8, as above.
Obviously Griffin didn't play, but Evans, as the only impact rookie from last year's class, was +8, and they had started strong, and might have better if Martin was healthy.
So based on the track record, if we are in the high lottery yet again, we either got racked by injuries,
or we have much bigger problems than Arenas making us too good, because it means Wall isn't ready and/or Blatche and McGee have stagnated or regressed.
Impact rookies make immediate and significant improvements in team win totals and even if it doesn't vault them into the playoffs, it does take them well over the 30 win mark in most cases.
So basically, the scenario where dumping Arenas puts in the high lottery,
assumes Wall, Blatche, McGee, Booker, Seraphin, and even Young are busts.