Dat2U wrote:fishercob wrote:And what exactly does Minnesota have to show for getting Batum to sign an offer sheet? You'd be apoplectic if the Wizards had cap space and then signed Kirilenko to the deal that Minnesota did. Anderson, also restricted, cost New Orleans a decent young piece as well in Ayon. You hate overpaying mediocre players in free agency and you hate not going after free agents because you're don't think your enough of a destination for guys to sign reasonable deals to come here. There's not a lot of room in between.
First off, your changing the argument. I've heard ad nauseum that no one would sign with the Wizards. That's what I was specfically arguing.
Fair enough, but I think you're hearing something more specific than is actually being said. Neither Ted nor Ernie never said "no one is going to sign with us, so we might as well make a trade." Never. What Ted has basically said is that the risks associated with free agency, in this case, made the OkaRiza trade, which already helped the roster, even more appealing.
It's not only whether or not guys would choose to be here when presented with multiple options, but what they would cost and for how long. I suppose we could criticize the FO for failure to predict what desirable free agents would ultimately cost, but I don't think that's fair.
I'm a lot more comfortable with ownership saying "we're not the destination we want to be yet" and working to that end, than I would be them predicating too much of what they do on free agency.
fishercob wrote:The truth hurts, I guess. As a proponent of brutal honesty, this should resonate with you. Front office swagger is meaningless. Going aggressively after free agents and making a big show of it is meaningless. Who they actually land and for how much is what matters. Results matter. Minnesota doesn't get any points in the standings for providing Batum with the leverage to get the money he wanted from Portland.
I couldn't disagree with you more. The younger generation calls it swagger, I call it confidence. Confidence matters in everything we do. Without confidence there's 0% at succeeding. The Wizards front office are a perfect example of this. Ernie & Ted didn't believe they could sign anyone. And the crazy thing is they actually admitted it. To me, that's just sad. You've lost before you even played the game because you were too scared to even try. Shame on Ernie for lacking vision, creativity and the golatas to take any sort of risk. A desperate man trying to save his career. And double the shame on Teddy Leonsis, for eating the slop that Pringles served him, then smiling in the camera afterwards like it's the best thing he's ever tasted.
Maybe they are right in thinking they couldn't sign anyone. But only because they believe it.
We've been called the Clippers East for the last two decades. Look at the Clips now. Even with a crappy owner, Neil Oshay (before leaving for Portland this offseason) didn't make a similar excuse. Much like the Wizards, the Clips have been a place where players go to fail. Much like the Wizards, they struck lottery fortune a found a potential star. Much UNLIKE the Wizards, they didn't act like a 80 yr old lady that mistakenly walks into a Gucci Mane video shoot when it came to free agency and the trade market. They were bold. They actually pursued LeBron. And while everyone snickered, especially in the media, LeBron met with them.
And going forward, it set the table that this is a franchise that is serious about not just competiting but contending. The aggressively pursued trades until they landed Chris Paul. Now their a relevant franchise on the basketball landscape. We're ready to buy into the excitement in possibly losing less than 50 games this year. You can think big or think small and it really does make all the difference in the world.
Stop it. Their pursuit of Lebron or Kobe in free agency had nothing to do with Chris Paul. Chis Paul is a Clipper because of Eric Gordon and an unprotected first from Minnesota. Period. The Clips made that deal because they drafted Blake Griffin (remarkable vision, eh?) and Deandre Jordan (respect). Without Paul, the Caron contract would have looked like a big overpay (with him it doesn't look so hot).
Do you read Ted's blogs and think he lacks confidence? If anything I'm more worried that he's too confident and that he overvalues what we've already acquired. But you don't reach his level of success without confidence and an insatiable desire to succeed. And for all the fair and valid criticism of Ernie, I don't think great college and good pro players lack for confidence and competitive fire. Again, Ernie's downfall may be his arrogance and failure to understand his own weaknesses (has he every admitted to himself any of his mistakes and examined why he made them?).
I have no problem with Ted correctly admitting that we are not on any superstar's short list of teams yet and his admission that we are working to get there. Whether we do or not has more to do with how good Wall and Beal turn out to be -- and how much we win -- than "confidence."
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fishercob wrote:One or both of those guys could opt out after this season. Even if neither do, they'd both be expiring contracts and at worst marginally competent veterans with good attitudes in a year. I don't think we are going to miss out on any key acquisitions because of lack of cap room. And by the way, even if we did have cap room, who from
this list would be a desirable and attainable difference maker?
The chances of either opting out is slim to none. Unless one pulls a Byron Russell and I don't think anyone here is hoping the situation turns so toxic that either feels the need to "get the hell out of dodge".
And yes, we could potentially miss out on key acquisitions because of a lack of cap room. It's not just about free agency. The ability to make trades without worrying about matching up salaries. The opportunity to take on additional long term salary which teams are usually willing to pay a price for (unless they're dealing with Ernie of course).
Either opting out wouldn't be a function of toxicity, but rather economics. If Ariza can get 3/$20M or maybe even $15M from a place close to home, maybe he takes it. If Okafor, who'' have made $75M for his career, can get 2/$20M from the Spurs (even if he leaves some money on the table) and gets to contend for a title, he may do it.
But to your last point, I don't think there's big threat of losing out on trades -- because both guys will be expiring and they are both decent players. If for instance Lamarcus Aldridge went nuclear on the Blazers, having Okafor's expiring would be enough salary ballast to make the deal assuming the youth/picks was to their liking. Said differently, I can't see Portland in this example taking less in the way of youth/picks to to do a deal for instant savings as opposed to a year of Okafor.