Ponchos wrote:ATLTimekeeper wrote:Ponchos wrote:There have been a lot of posts poking holes in the "high draft pick to win" theory, however there has been absolutely no viable alternative presented to building a contender.
Just look through history. That's all anyone has to go by. You can be the Lakers, Celtics, draft Duncan or Jordan, and for everyone else it's the standard way of building teams: drafting, free agency, trades, coaching.
Right but you're just listing the tools, not the plan.
Plans for a bad team:
Plan 1 = Have patience to suck, collect high draft picks. Use cap space to facilitate other teams trades or take on garbage to acquire more draft picks.
Plan 2 = Quick fix moves, guarantee mediocrity.
Plan 3 = ?
I don't really need to indicate a plan, because as I said, history provides the information. There are contending teams that benefited from landing top 3 picks: Spurs, Magic, Cavs, Nets, Celtics (arguably), Bucks, hell, I'll even throw the Heat in there. And then there are teams that were built without them: Jazz, Pistons, Suns, Pacers, Mavs, Kings, Lakers, Blazers.
Then there are teams that really didn't get much out of tanking: Raptors, Grizzlies, Hornets, Bobcats, Warriors, Bulls, Wolves, Rockets, Clippers, Hawks, Nuggets, Wizards.
From where I stand, it looks like you're rolling dice either way. Now, is it worth it to tank just in the hopes that you land a special player? Probably, as it has been said, if you're going to be bad anyway, might as well have the selection slot with the least margin for error. But I would argue that everything after that is just as crucial as landing that special player. Would the Spurs be a dynasty without stumbling upon Manu?























