erudite23 wrote:The complaint all along was that we never got out ahead of a given situation and struck preemptively, but waited until it was too late to make a move. An example of this was the NYK pick. Many thought we should flip that pick "while it had value" for something instead of waiting to see it play out. The reality is that waiting was the riskier option, ...
There is a balance that achieves the best outcome. I thought it was a terrible decision for the Jazz to wait on the Wesley Mathews situation to playout, so that they could wait and see if he got a higher offer from another team since he was a restricted free agent. I assume that they thought that he wasn't worth the price he was asking during the regular season, when he was eager to sign an extension. So they waited to let it play out (mistake 1) and then they failed to match (mistake 2) both based on conservative financial decisions.
Then comes the Deron situation and it feels like whip lash. Seemed way too aggressive from a player personnel perspective. However; his was certainly a much more complex situation, and I was glad to see him go, given his actions and the fact that I have never really liked his personality from the very beginning.
I look at Portland and the Gerald Wallace move, and I think why and the heck will the Jazz never do something like that. Is is lack of funds, lack of skill in evaluating talent, or pure laziness in failing to keep a pulse on the options that become available.