paulpressey25 wrote:paul wrote:
So we're going to abuse Hammond based on a hypothetical assessment of a situation rather than the reality, and that's OK?
Even in a "weak draft", the value board for moving back from 7 to 19 is very high. I just see no other GM's around the league who could justify dropping that far and only obtaining Sean Livingston in return.
If that trade in a vacuum runs across the desk on ESPN on draft night, Ric Bucher, Jay Bilas and Andy Katz all spit out their soda. It instantly makes Chad Ford's column the next morning on "What was Milwaukee thinking?!?"
I think the better way to defend that trade is to simply say that if Jackson played to his career norm, he would have been a positive asset for this team and given them a shot at FTD II. As much as I don't like Hammond, even the original detractors of that deal from last June would never have forecast the guy would be this bad.
Yeah, or we could just take an unbiased look at the actual result of the trade rather than continuing to talk in extreme hypotheticals? Just a thought though.