Damn, I hope they know what they're doing. And as nate says, Anthony Davis could fix a lot of this angst.
Sure, and so could TRob most likely.
Moderators: nate33, montestewart, LyricalRico
Damn, I hope they know what they're doing. And as nate says, Anthony Davis could fix a lot of this angst.
The Consiglieri wrote:Severn Hoos wrote:Man, this island is getting lonely, but I'm not conceding in absolute terms the Singleton pick as a whiff.
Gilligan? You there? Lil buddy?
Singleton will get it on the defensive end, I just worry about the offensive end. He struggled with it his entire career at FSU, it was always the one weakness in his game, and only in his last year did he start to finally start shooting reasonably well. It's not surprising that he's looked a bit lost on the offensive end again, it was never his greatest skill to begin with. He's smart, tough, and a worker. He's not an idiot. He'll figure out the defensive end, it's just that unless he can grasp the rest, he'll never turn into what we hoped we were getting (and what justified potentially taking him instead of Faried) when we made the pick.
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:
Thanks. Too much on my mind to really address this other than thanks, Illuminaire.
The Consiglieri wrote:Ruzious wrote:fishercob wrote:Ruzious, no.
I never would have picked Faried 6th in this past draft. But that doesn't make me right. In fact, it makes me wrong.
Regardless of what Chad Ford, Jon Givony, ESPN or any GM said, Faired at 6 would have been the correct move. He's the best player in the draft other than Irving.
You are right in that the second whiff is more egregious because the salary there makes Faried an absurd steal. But if we had traded both picks for Faried we would be in a better spot than we are today.
Sad but true.
I completely disagree - even using the hindsight that you're using.
When you know that Faried could be had later in the draft - where you already have a pick, strategically it would have been the WRONG decision to pick him 6th. The whiff at 6 was not missing on Faried. It was in not using the pick smarter. BB would have been a smarter use of the pick then Faried or Vesely. Trading the pick could have been a much smarter use of the pick.
Correct, the right pick was Leonard in my view. If we were not going to take Leonard because of our fears that he'd never develop a complete offensive game why in hell were we in love with Vesely's Dunk reel and complete inability to hit a free throw let alone a jump shot? Leonard was the athlete with fantastic defensive presence, athleticism and a great motor. He should have been the pick. I thought the Morris twins were an insane interest by some posters on the board and argued as much as their ceiling appeared to be no better than quality big man bench player/competent starter. You don't draft that at 6, no way in hell. However word coming out during the summer was that there was a reason that Markieff surprised a lot of folks going higher than his brother, that he was actually a better pro prospect, more sound etc.
In retrospect I think the smart play would have been to trade up for Valunciunas, trade down for Markieff or simply take Leonard at slot, and of course grab Faried later. I will freely own that after Valunciunas went, I didn't have a problem with the Ves pick as I felt nobod else save Leonard was worth the 6 slot, and since we weren't interested in Leonard, I'd be fine with Ves's upside as an athlete. Of course in retrospect I was wrong and the metrics were right, I simply had a hard time believing Ves could be so thoroughly hopeless as a shooter. It was and is utterly shocking to me how bad he is (I reserve some hope that he might eventually put it together and at least become competent, but that may be a foolish dream).
fishercob wrote:Ted's take:Yesterday’s Trade Activities for the Wizards
Posted on March 16, 2012
If you can believe it, the trade deadline ended at 3:00 pm and our 3 team trade was finally approved via conference call by all parties and the NBA at close to 9:00 pm. The trade was a very complex one with Nick Young having to approve the team that he eventually would play for as he held Bird rights and the dollars having to line up team by team.
The docket was full at the league offices. There were many trades throughout the league and we weren’t official until late into the evening. We couldn’t comment on the trade until it was officially blessed by the NBA and we didn’t send out a press release until late into the game against the Hornets last night. This is the reason we weren’t able to comment or blog about the trade yesterday. I apologize if this caused any of you any inconvenience.
I had the chance to speak to one player last night – Nene – at about 10:00 pm. I look forward to also speaking to Brian Cook later today.
I wish to thank Nick Young and JaVale McGee for all of their contributions to our franchise. Ronny Turiaf as well. I wish them well and I am sure they will flourish with their new teams.
The trade was made for the several reasons. We have been crystal clear with our rebuild plan. We are celebrating young players and we have a commitment to add to our young players with picks this coming off season. We needed to add some certainty to the line-up via a veteran presence. Both Nick Young and JaVale McGee were free agents or restricted free agents this coming off season. By adding Nene – who is under contract – and is a mature and proven player, we now have secured a point guard (John Wall) and a big man – post player (Nene) – for a reasonable and certain period of time. We can build around these two positions via the draft and via additional trades and via free agency.
We will have a high first round pick this coming off season as well as a high second round pick as well. We haven’t altered our rebuild plan in the least. We will be one of the youngest teams in the NBA. We have more moves to make certainly but this set of trades positions us well to continue to re-craft our team and refocus our culture to one that is serious and is about winning.
Nene is coming to us from a winning program. He has played in a system that we admire. It is up tempo and high scoring and he has good hands; runs the floor well; and is very strong. He is a team first kind of player. He is about winning and is a respected teammate.
He is a family man; a player who is secure in who he is; and a player who has battled through adversity and is dependable and strong in spirit. I very much enjoyed my conversation with him last night and know our fans will appreciate his brand of intensity and the way he plays the game. It was nice to hear analysts on NBA TV call him a “Top 10 center” in the NBA.
As you saw last night in the game against the Hornets this is John Wall’s team to run and having a polished big man who likes to move; sets hard picks; plays defense; is humble, mature and blends in a team setting will help us to segue to a next generation of player and culture for our franchise.
We have a lot of work to do still. I understand that fact. We made a big move and made a big investment in our future yesterday. Help us to welcome our new players to our great city and to our community in the coming weeks. Thank you for caring so much.
One last point: In reading some emails and some blog posts, it is apparent to me that the new CBA and some of the rules regarding how trades are made are perhaps not fully understandable. Would it be helpful if one day we held a chalk talk to explain how the rules work and how trades get made so that you as opinion leaders are more informed about process and methodology around trades? Let me know. Thank you.
Nivek wrote:JAR -- I think it's reasonable to think Nene might have 2-3 good years left. Unfortunately, he's signed for 5. Which is why I don't think it's the right move for the team long-term. I think by the time they have enough talent with enough experience to think about contending for a title, they'll need a replacement for Nene. I think he's at just wrong age for the Wizards at this stage in their rebuild.


fishercob wrote:The $13M per year thing is troubling. Two buts, though.
1) The fact that it's a flat $13M is nice. If the cap grows, his hit relative to the cap obviously shrinks and we wont be in the stupid situation we were with Jamison where his game was declining and his salary was increasing
2) For the next couple of years the money shouldn't matter. Next season Nene is going to make $13M. Nene is going to be taking minutes currently occupied by Baltche, Turiaf and Mcgee, who this year combine to make about $13M. McGee is obviously going to get a significant raise from someone this summer. Booker and Seraphin are locked in dirt cheap for two more years.
The final two years of the deal is when it could get really dicey -- the new CBA will be kicking in, we'll want to give extensions to Booker, Wall, and maybe Seraphin.
Damn, I hope they know what they're doing. And as nate says, Anthony Davis could fix a lot of this angst.
LyricalRico wrote:See, this is the kind of analysis we need. Fish, you've really captured the discussion. This is a significant upgrade for us in the near-term. And in the long-term...well, let's cross that bridge when we come to it IMO..
LyricalRico wrote:fishercob wrote:The $13M per year thing is troubling. Two buts, though.
1) The fact that it's a flat $13M is nice. If the cap grows, his hit relative to the cap obviously shrinks and we wont be in the stupid situation we were with Jamison where his game was declining and his salary was increasing
2) For the next couple of years the money shouldn't matter. Next season Nene is going to make $13M. Nene is going to be taking minutes currently occupied by Baltche, Turiaf and Mcgee, who this year combine to make about $13M. McGee is obviously going to get a significant raise from someone this summer. Booker and Seraphin are locked in dirt cheap for two more years.
The final two years of the deal is when it could get really dicey -- the new CBA will be kicking in, we'll want to give extensions to Booker, Wall, and maybe Seraphin.
Damn, I hope they know what they're doing. And as nate says, Anthony Davis could fix a lot of this angst.
See, this is the kind of analysis we need. Fish, you've really captured the discussion.

Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:Here is what should have happened:
1. Coaching should have noticed what we saw in 2010-2011 when Javale and Andray were suspended for fighting each other. Defense was much better with Booker and Seraphin.
2. Instead of allowing McGee's mistakes to cause a negative vibe, he simply should have been benched in favor of Seraphin.
3. A wise coach, and not one who tolerates shot jackers, should have praised Seraphin's emergence and at the same time praised McGee for continuing to play with 100% effort off the bench.
4. McGee being a bench player would not be credited with bogus contract demands that never were validated.
5. People who want a defensive C would realize Seraphin might be a better defender already than Nene. Denver traded Nene for a reason.
6. Instead of allowing an inept GM and a lame duck head coach to make long-term decisions, no move should have been made until someone like Kevin Pritchard made the call, and Dave Joerger was the coach.


dobrojim wrote:closg00 wrote:McGee will be an allstar in 2-3 years, right around year-4 of Nene's deal.
in track and field?
But the Nuggets believe wholeheartedly that Nene had reached his ceiling as a player and the thought around Denver is head coach George Karl believes he can channel McGee’s talent and eventually develop him into an All-Star caliber performer.

nate33 wrote:Good stuff on the past several pages. What I see from the age stats that Nivek posted is that we can expect relatively flat production from Nene over the next 2-3 years, with perhaps an ever so slight dropoff each year, followed by a more significant decline in his 4th year. All in all, that doesn't seem so bad to me.
closg00 wrote:dobrojim wrote:closg00 wrote:McGee will be an allstar in 2-3 years, right around year-4 of Nene's deal.
in track and field?
Keep making jokesBut the Nuggets believe wholeheartedly that Nene had reached his ceiling as a player and the thought around Denver is head coach George Karl believes he can channel McGee’s talent and eventually develop him into an All-Star caliber performer.
http://www.hoopsworld.com/2012-nba-trad ... ine-losers
Like I said earlier, you-guys (not all) underestimate what an awful basketball organization the Wizards are, and I'm not just taking about their record. I'm talking about the culture and the "development".
I fully expected that another organization would think that they could rescue a 24 y/o talent and help him reach his full potential. Watch JaVale in 2-3 years, not now.