badinage wrote:
(Another complication to WIlliams signing here is Jordan Crawford. Think what you will, he's still on the roster. We would've had to trade him, and that sort of thing means selling unwisely. And we also just drafted a 2 in Beal, hoping he'll be a star.)
Just wanted to respond to a couple things.
Re: Crawford -- he should be irrelevant in personnel moves because he's bad. His offensive efficiency is horrific and he's below average at everything else. There'd have been no need to trade him if they'd acquired Williams or any other guard. Bench him, trade him, cut him. Whatever.
Picking up Williams (or another good backcourt player) would have no effect on Beal's chances of becoming a star. Williams could have been a nice fit as a 3rd guard with Wall and Beal. Plenty of minutes to divide 3 ways.
And how can you justify spending 14 million on role players when the saying goes that teams kill themselves by spending too much on players who surround a core? You seem to suggest that both will continue to get better. I don't see that. I think Williams already experienced his leap. And Green is what he is.
A) As I said before, I don't think it would have cost $14 million. But whatever.
B) It's easily justifiable because the Wizards still would have had $8-9 million in cap space next offseason. Or, using your $14 million figure, $5-7 million. Which is enough to be able to sign a free agent, use in trades, etc. Plus, the team would have upgraded its talent in need areas.
C) Williams may well have experienced his leap. And? He turns 26 at the start of this season. Which would suggest another 3-4 seasons of the kind of production he provided the past couple seasons.
D) Green just turned 25 and has played 1700 minutes. If he's "only" what he is now, he should be a good 3&D SF for the next 3-4 seasons.
I think both guys COULD get better, but I wouldn't be counting on that at all. Even if they're "only" as good as they were last season, they'd be better than what the Wizards have had at those spots, and better than what the Wizards currently have at those spots.
In an earlier post, you said that Brand and Okafor posted similar defensive numbers, and that Okafor was a better rebounder and shot-blocker. I'm not saying that I think he's the greatest addition in the world, but adding that to what we already have in Nene and Seraphin -- and adding his toughness -- is not nothing. And if we can sell high after a year, that's not nothing either.
Agreed that it's not nothing.
I'm dubious about the notion of flipping Okafor next season. Ted's been beating the "stability and continuity" drum. Of course, he's said a few things about the team and then they've gone out and done something contrary. So, I'm hoping he's full of **** again.
