Nanogeek wrote:BrotherDave wrote:Nanogeek wrote:Blah blah blah, I need everything to be instantaneous for my adhd riddled brain to appreciate
Dude, you're pretty obtuse if you expect a dramatic turnaround of a small market franchise within 2 years.
Typical fairweather Charlottean.
Where did I ever criticize him for not winning? Save your time - I didn't. I said he had done little to show he was a particularly valuable owner. If you actually read what I post and respond to that - that would be more sensible.
I have read your post. You stated:
The past 2 years have seen continued static home attendance, continued dubious personnel moves, etc.
I'd like to hear exactly what these dubious personnel moves and et cetera are, in your opinion.
Jordan became majority owner in March of 2010, so we can rule out the poor attendance for that year as being his fault, don't you think? Either way, they made the playoffs that year and their attendance was 15,000+. Next year, their attendance was 15,000+. This year, it's 15,000+. The difference b/w a playoff team with a 44-38 record and getting swept and a 7-43 team is about 400 people apparently. That means about 15,000 fans are likely to show up regardless if we make the playoffs or win 7 games. How do you get more fans? Chasing the 8th seed every year was not doing it, people don't want to see a kind of good team, they want to see a
great team. To be a great team you have to either A) sign major stars (see, Heat, Miami); B) make blockbuster trades to build around your superstar(s) (see, Lakers, LA) or C) be horrible for a few seasons and stockpile draft picks, salary cap and assets (see Spurs, SA).
Do you believe that anything but option C is viable for the Bobcats? Since Jordan has bought into ownership the Bobcats haven't grown attendance at all even when the team was winning more games than the current squad.
This is a misleading statement. When Jordan became majority owner, there were 17 games left in the regular season. They finished 44-38 and were swept in the first round. His first complete year as majority owner, they finished 34-48 with Larry Brown resigning mid-season. They also traded away Gerald Wallace and Stephen Jackson because they decided to try option C for the first time. Criticizing Jordan's stint as majority owner is like criticizing a seed for not being a tree yet.