Nivek wrote:rockymac52 wrote:Here's why I'm okay with the Ariza/Okafor trade, and why I think it was a better option for us than keeping the cap space and hoping to hit a home run in free agency and become title contenders...
Jeebus...Why do folks keep repeating this bullspit as if it's the only argument that's been made? Alternative offseason and franchise building strategies have been laid out many times on the boards by myself, payitforward and others, and I don't recall any of them being predicated on hitting a home run in free agency or signing a star free agent.
Signing a star free agent is ONE way to use cap space. There are many others. But, the Wizards no longer have those options -- they've spent all their cap space for at least the next two seasons on Okafor and Ariza. In two years, when the contracts for Okafor and Ariza expire, the team could potentially have significant cap space -- if they don't re-sign those two AND they don't re-sign some combination of Wall, Seraphin, Booker and Crawford.
You can be "okay with" the Okafor/Ariza trade. Just cut out the straw man BS.
The Okafor and Ariza CONTRACTS are for two years. That doesn't (necessarily) mean the team is in a straightjacket for two years.
Now, as to the larger point of all this -- here's what we're really talking about.
We have no hope at this point of being CLEAR CONTENDERS. That's Miami, LA, San Antonio, OKC. Maybe Chicago if fully healthy.
We are not DESPERATELY SEEKING GUY #3. That's the Nets, the Knicks, Atlanta, etc. Teams that desperately need that Third Guy -- available only by trade or FA. And who comes at an insane cost. For now, these teams are -- they hope -- biding their time.
We are not YOUNG AND LEGITIMATELY ON THE RISE. That's Philly and Denver.
We are not STUCK IN GEAR. That's Milwaukee, Utah, etc. Not young, not old. Not great, not awful. SIgnificantly, these teams don't have a great young player they can really build around.
We are STILL ASSEMBLING. Relying heavily on the draft, hitting on some guys, missing on others, hoping that a couple of these young'uns take the leap and become stars so that you can begin the process of actually constructing the team.
STILL ASSEMBLING is different and better than SORTA HOPELESS. That's Charlotte and some others.
So what Nivek and Payit and others are talking about, in talking about Danny Green and Lou Williams and Landry Fields, or holding out for Door #3 this summer with beaucoup cap room, is not maneuvering that would put us in the category of CLEAR CONTENDERS or DESPERATELY SEEKING GUY #3 or YOUNG AND LEGITIMATELY ON THE RISE. Nor is it maneuvering that would plunge us into SORTA HOPELESS. It is STILL ASSEMBLING maneuvering. As the Okafor and Ariza deal was. Or, to put it more clearly -- it is simply different maneuvering in the same category. It is not maneuvering, moreover, that would take our team from STILL ASSEMBLING to YOUNG AND LEGITIMATELY ON THE RISE.
The Okafor and Ariza deal may backfire -- who knows?; it may be a stabilizing thing that helps to bring out the best in the young guns -- who knows? One thing that's clear, though, is that it's not a daring move. It doesn't bespeak boldness. But I have not read anything on this board in the wake of that trade that bespeaks boldness. I have not heard of a FA acquisition(s) the team ought to have made that would, and historically, cap room has not been turned into significant prizes. My reading of the situation is that boldness -- legitimate boldness -- is not an option for this team RIGHT NOW, given the owner's stated intention of building through the draft and not being carefree with his money. We have not put ourselves in position to swing a trade for that third piece, nor are we a legit contender that is loaded with talent or money to burn, nor are we that young team that is clearly on the rise. We have to wait ... to see if the young talent matures and we are, in fact, on the rise. At which time, perhaps we can make a consolidation trade and/or position ourselves to be in contention for that third piece.