dangermouse wrote:
Kevin Durant. OK, he was a number 2 pick, but thats close enough for me considering he COULD have gone #1. It was a 2 man draft.
KD didnt help OKC's win column until his 3rd/4th season.
Edit: and that was with a better supporting cast than Wall has right now from about his 2nd/3rd season onwards.
We need another stud, or at least borderline. its as simple as that. Nene is a good start but injured.
In the past eight years, teams that had the No. 1 pick improved their record by an average of 12.9 games. The only team that didn't improve, in fact, was Washington this season. The Wizards finished with three more losses than last season's 26-56 record in the season immediately following when they selected point guard John Wall.
Still, the Wizards carry the unhappy distinction of being the first team in nine years to not improve after garnering the top pick. The greatest jump was Toronto's 20-game improvement after the Raptors drafted Andrea Bargnani in 2006; they were 47-35 the next season. The next greatest improvement was the Cavaliers' leap to 35-47 in 2004 after selecting LeBron James at No. 1 in 2003, a jump that was 18 victories better than the 17-win season in 2003.
http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2011/04/no_1_draft_pick_is_almost_a_su.htmlTo update the data, the Cavs are on pace to improve 11.5 games with Kyrie Irving over last season, so the average seems to be holding.
Sure there are always exceptions, and Durant is worth noting. The Thunder started 1-12 in Durant's 2nd season and were winning at a much better clip by the end of that season on their way to 50 wins the following season. So the improvement was not noticable until the middle of his second season, but his supporting cast was no better during his 1st and 2nd years. In fact, the Wizards are starting all youngsters based on that model.
Yes, we need another stud and that's the plan with the upcoming draft pick. HOWEVER, that does NOT excuse being on track for
the worst season in franchise history.
If Wall is who you think he is we would not be staring at that possibility.
Another point of reference, in 09-10 after trading away Jamison, Butler and Haywood and running the team through ANDRAY BLATCHE for the rest of the season, the Wizards went 9-23 including the the infamous 16 game losing streak ("don't ever think it can't get worse, because it can") which is a .28 win %.
The Wiz are <.28% win with Wall as a starting PG.