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The Tank Debate Thread

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Which path do you support for 2013-14?

Tank.
10
63%
Compete.
6
38%
 
Total votes: 16

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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#861 » by Patman » Mon Jul 29, 2013 2:19 pm

gerrit4 wrote:
ATLTimekeeper wrote:
gerrit4 wrote:

We played Ben Uzoh and Soloman Alabi over 40 minutes each - two guys who had career nights in and never played another game in the NBA. That was the worst game I've ever seen. Trust me, the raptors were not trying to win that game, but somebody has to win. We got out-tanked that game, they were just better at sucking.

Please don't tell me that a team playing Soloman Alabi and Ben Uzoh for 40 minutes was trying to win the game. That's just absurd.




No, but they didn't tell them in no way can we win the game. We blew them out. One team had instructions, the other was allowed to just play hard and see what happens. Anyway, minor quibble. In the end it got BC out of town and that was the best possible outcome. My point is you can't hang your hat on karma or culture or anything. Not at the early stages.


That's an assumption - there's no fact to that. And it if was proven, whoever gave the border shouldn't be allowed to be involved in the league. It was the worst game of basketball I have ever seen, and I can't believe people paid to see that mess.


This.
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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#862 » by jvuc » Mon Jul 29, 2013 2:45 pm

StMikes31 wrote:
Well you just mentioned you would like to keep this core and I don't agree since 2 of these guys can walk for nothing. I'm sure there are better offers for Gay out there but Masai is holding out and wants to see what this team can do when we all know we're still a 7-11. That's the frustration I have. And presumably if you trade Gay, you can bet Lowry is gone as well since he's a FA at the end of the year. If both those guys are gone, you can sure as hell bet we'll be at the bottom of the league, let alone the East which means we'll be getting a top 5 pick for this year and probably next which is what we want.


These players can also be extended to more optimal contracts and failing that sign and traded or traded or just walk. That said, based on the NBA trades that have occurred I don't see a trade that made sense for Raptors (Rivers, Garnett/Pierce, Bledsoe, Iguodala etc). The problem is BC left Masai a very difficult poker hand here. And even if he wants to tank, aside from giving players away this doesn't work as a way to build a team. I would prefer holding out for a decent return and build up value in assets instead even at the risk of them walking for nothing.
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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#863 » by StMikes31 » Mon Jul 29, 2013 2:53 pm

jvuc wrote:
StMikes31 wrote:
Well you just mentioned you would like to keep this core and I don't agree since 2 of these guys can walk for nothing. I'm sure there are better offers for Gay out there but Masai is holding out and wants to see what this team can do when we all know we're still a 7-11. That's the frustration I have. And presumably if you trade Gay, you can bet Lowry is gone as well since he's a FA at the end of the year. If both those guys are gone, you can sure as hell bet we'll be at the bottom of the league, let alone the East which means we'll be getting a top 5 pick for this year and probably next which is what we want.


These players can also be extended to more optimal contracts and failing that sign and traded or traded or just walk. That said, based on the NBA trades that have occurred I don't see a trade that made sense for Raptors (Rivers, Garnett/Pierce, Bledsoe, Iguodala etc). The problem is BC left Masai a very difficult poker hand here. And even if he wants to tank, aside from giving players away this doesn't work as a way to build a team. I would prefer holding out for a decent return and build up value in assets instead even at the risk of them walking for nothing.


Optimal? Lowry is going to get a big raise from his 6 million, probably more like 8-9. Gay is going to get at least 15 mil a year which isn't far off from what he's getting now. That's not something you want to invest in when your team isn't a contender. The sign and trade aspect would be ideal but you can't hold your hat on that and risk it. Teams can just sign these guys outright and leave you with nothing. The optics of letting these guys go for nothing wouldn't like the greatest for Masai especially since FA hasn't been the Raptors' bread and butter of building a team.

I agree we should hold out for the best possible package but Masai can't be greedy here. 20 games in max, he has to pull the trigger especially if we are below .500. We need enough time to save the season or we'll be back in the middle of the pack again.
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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#864 » by HolyMage110 » Mon Jul 29, 2013 3:56 pm

I'm guessing the reason why Masai doesn't want to tank as of now is because the value of our players that other gms are putty.
For Example: Gay for Stucky and Charlie... Really?! REALLY?!
Masai wants to get fair value back and I think he feels like he doesn't want to get robbed. So he will wait till the season starts to boost the value of his players and maybe deal them if he decides to tank. Look at the warriors. in 2011 they were contending for a playoff spot but after dealing ellis, the went on a hard tank ( I think they lost like the last 25 games) and snagged Barnes, whom many wanted.
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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#865 » by jvuc » Mon Jul 29, 2013 4:26 pm

StMikes31 wrote:
jvuc wrote:
StMikes31 wrote:
Well you just mentioned you would like to keep this core and I don't agree since 2 of these guys can walk for nothing. I'm sure there are better offers for Gay out there but Masai is holding out and wants to see what this team can do when we all know we're still a 7-11. That's the frustration I have. And presumably if you trade Gay, you can bet Lowry is gone as well since he's a FA at the end of the year. If both those guys are gone, you can sure as hell bet we'll be at the bottom of the league, let alone the East which means we'll be getting a top 5 pick for this year and probably next which is what we want.


These players can also be extended to more optimal contracts and failing that sign and traded or traded or just walk. That said, based on the NBA trades that have occurred I don't see a trade that made sense for Raptors (Rivers, Garnett/Pierce, Bledsoe, Iguodala etc). The problem is BC left Masai a very difficult poker hand here. And even if he wants to tank, aside from giving players away this doesn't work as a way to build a team. I would prefer holding out for a decent return and build up value in assets instead even at the risk of them walking for nothing.


Optimal? Lowry is going to get a big raise from his 6 million, probably more like 8-9. Gay is going to get at least 15 mil a year which isn't far off from what he's getting now. That's not something you want to invest in when your team isn't a contender. The sign and trade aspect would be ideal but you can't hold your hat on that and risk it. Teams can just sign these guys outright and leave you with nothing. The optics of letting these guys go for nothing wouldn't like the greatest for Masai especially since FA hasn't been the Raptors' bread and butter of building a team.

I agree we should hold out for the best possible package but Masai can't be greedy here. 20 games in max, he has to pull the trigger especially if we are below .500. We need enough time to save the season or we'll be back in the middle of the pack again.


You don't sell and liquidate your average home (team) for nothing, just because the government gives its citizens more lottery get rich quick tickets by how poor you are. That is straight up gambling and a recipe for poverty. You sell your home for a fair or great return to build up assets and value.

Said differently, the value of trading Gay and/or Lowry mid season for picks/players + the raptors own 2014 pick will be a greater value and lower risk then liquidating Gay/Lowry for nothing and a single better draft pick.
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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#866 » by StMikes31 » Mon Jul 29, 2013 4:46 pm

jvuc wrote:
StMikes31 wrote:
jvuc wrote:
These players can also be extended to more optimal contracts and failing that sign and traded or traded or just walk. That said, based on the NBA trades that have occurred I don't see a trade that made sense for Raptors (Rivers, Garnett/Pierce, Bledsoe, Iguodala etc). The problem is BC left Masai a very difficult poker hand here. And even if he wants to tank, aside from giving players away this doesn't work as a way to build a team. I would prefer holding out for a decent return and build up value in assets instead even at the risk of them walking for nothing.


Optimal? Lowry is going to get a big raise from his 6 million, probably more like 8-9. Gay is going to get at least 15 mil a year which isn't far off from what he's getting now. That's not something you want to invest in when your team isn't a contender. The sign and trade aspect would be ideal but you can't hold your hat on that and risk it. Teams can just sign these guys outright and leave you with nothing. The optics of letting these guys go for nothing wouldn't like the greatest for Masai especially since FA hasn't been the Raptors' bread and butter of building a team.

I agree we should hold out for the best possible package but Masai can't be greedy here. 20 games in max, he has to pull the trigger especially if we are below .500. We need enough time to save the season or we'll be back in the middle of the pack again.


You don't sell and liquidate your average home (team) for nothing, just because the government gives its citizens more lottery get rich quick tickets by how poor you are. That is straight up gambling and a recipe for poverty. You sell your home for a fair or great return to build up assets and value.

Said differently, the value of trading Gay and/or Lowry mid season for picks/players + the raptors own 2014 pick will be a greater value and lower risk then liquidating Gay/Lowry for nothing and a single better draft pick.


And what exactly do you think you are going to get for these guys mid season especially when we aren't in the playoff picture? There isn't going to be much improvement in the deals and then you have to ask yourself is it really worth it when you could have been picking top 5 instead of 10-14? It isn't and that's why Masai can't be too greedy and wait too long. There is big risk waiting mid season if the team is sitting in 10th where they are projected to be because injuries and drop off in play can certainly happen. So instead of waiting to increase the value of these guys, you could potentially decrease the value and ultimately lose them at the end of the year for nothing if they are injured during the TD.

He can't wait too long and that's my point. I agree waiting it out a little but he has to be aggressive and make the right move, he can't sit on these guys too long.
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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#867 » by sortpar » Mon Jul 29, 2013 5:46 pm

It appears that the inside source that emailed Jval17 to let him know that the team won't be tanking, will have to now buy her own tickets to watch a game at the ACC.
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It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#868 » by Abba Zabba » Thu Aug 1, 2013 4:29 pm

There's an article relevant to our endless tanking debate on the front page of RealGM: it's a little dense but offers some useful insights. It also links to 2 other great articles by Wages of Wins and Freakonomics. All three used studies of win and loss records to come to conclusions about "treadmilling".

For the TL;DR-ers I'll post some quotes from each.

Freakonomics:
"At this point it seems pretty clear that the numbers don’t support the notion that the best way to be “excellent” is to be really bad today. In fact, it seems that most teams that make the leap to “excellent” were recently “pretty good...

But if you are close – like the Blazers were – your best bet is to find one or two more players that will get you into the promise land. Based on the data, giving away one of your most productive players for the hope of something better is simply not a very good strategy.”

http://www.freakonomics.com/2012/03/26/you-don%E2%80%99t-need-to-be-bad-to-be-good-in-the-nba-2/

Wages of Wins:
"However, once a team gets more than a season out being on a good team is the best option for improvement in the future (outside of already being a great team.) By the time we get four years out we see being on an OK team is about as good for a team’s fortunes as being a 50-54 win team. However, all of these options are much better than being on bad (20-29 win) teams to terrible (< 20 win) teams.

A team that tanks to get a good draft prospect is simply not in good shape. There’s many reasons for this. The odds a rookie will be great are low. Bad teams often have multiple problems to fix. Frankly, it’s a much better scenario to have a few good players on a team lacking depth."

http://wagesofwins.com/2012/03/26/why-teams-should-try-and-get-on-the-treadmill-of-mediocrity/

RealGM (this part seems to apply directly to us):
"What is apparent, and that should surprise no one, is that the league’s blue-chip franchises can make either the treadmill or tanking work excellently, whereas the less successful franchises have poor outcomes either way...
One thing is for sure: the treadmill is somehow both more and less common than some might think. While teams tend to fall within the 30-49 win range, as would be expected in such a competitive league, the dreaded never-ending stream of late lottery picks is uncommon. As painful as uncertainty can be, maybe whether a team lands on the treadmill isn’t the most important indicator of its future success."

http://basketball.realgm.com/article/229217/The-NBAs-Mediocrity-Treadmill-Since-84-85

If you agree with Bill Simmons that:
"Fortunately for the Raptor Truthers, they suddenly have an accomplished CEO (Tim Leiweke) and a top-five GM (Masai Ujiri). "

Then it makes sense to support this team's decision to build or tank. As factor's such as quality of the organization seem to play a bigger role than specific strategy in the building of a contender. If you don't agree with that statement it makes sense to analyze the small tactical moves more than the general direction too.

We should spend more time analyzing tactical decisions and less playing the grand strategists!

Can anyone convincingly argue that following either the tank or rebuild strategy is more important than how successfully the organization carries out its strategy?

Right now each move we've made seems to have been made with the goal of creating flexibility both in the present and 2 years from now and acquiring pieces with the potential to be worth more than their contracts. This seems logical as our biggest problem was that we were capped out with low value contracts. Has this been successfully accomplished? Did any of our moves fail to do this? Could we have made a better move to achieve this goal?

Edit: thanks for the move, I looked around for the Tank thread but didn't look hard (only checked first page).
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Re: It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#869 » by DatBoiCapspace » Thu Aug 1, 2013 4:44 pm

Great post OP, but dont expect many positive responses. People get angry when you post facts that dont favour tanking around here.

It doesnt matter that Masai just built a contender in Denver without tanking and his best method of asset building is through trades, they still want him to be Sam Presti and tank. Some people just love to put square pegs into round holes. :wink:
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Re: It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#870 » by Abba Zabba » Thu Aug 1, 2013 5:16 pm

DatBoiCapspace wrote:Great post OP, but dont expect many positive responses. People get angry when you post facts that dont favour tanking around here.

It doesnt matter that Masai just built a contender in Denver without tanking and his best method of asset building is through trades, they still want him to be Sam Presti and tank. Some people just love to put square pegs into round holes. :wink:

Thanks!

What I got out of those articles is that tanking can work but is far from garanteed and that the quality of organization (therefore the quality of the moves it makes) plays a far greater role in a team's success regardless of the strategy embraced.

To me that means we would be worrying far more about the "how" than the "what". We should spending far more of our energy analyzing the quality of individual moves with respect to the organization's chosen direction than worrying about wether they fit into our inflexible stances about the "only right way" to build a contender.
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Re: It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#871 » by ATLTimekeeper » Thu Aug 1, 2013 5:52 pm

Abba Zabba wrote:
DatBoiCapspace wrote:Great post OP, but dont expect many positive responses. People get angry when you post facts that dont favour tanking around here.

It doesnt matter that Masai just built a contender in Denver without tanking and his best method of asset building is through trades, they still want him to be Sam Presti and tank. Some people just love to put square pegs into round holes. :wink:

Thanks!

What I got out of those articles is that tanking can work but is far from garanteed and that the quality of organization (therefore the quality of the moves it makes) plays a far greater role in a team's success regardless of the strategy embraced.

To me that means we would be worrying far more about the "how" than the "what". We should spending far more of our energy analyzing the quality of individual moves with respect to the organization's chosen direction than worrying about wether they fit into our inflexible stances about the "only right way" to build a contender.


That goes without saying. There are no "right ways" to build a champion, otherwise everyone would do the one thing that worked the most. There are strategies that make sense at certain times in certain markets.

As far as Ujiri is concerned, it's hard to analyze because, according to Leiweke, he's still "at a crossroads." The most definite stance they've taken is publicly admit they won't tank. So, Ujiri is seemingly fine with 7-11 for now and isn't in a rush to tell anyone how he plans on escaping the treadmill that Leiweke hi-lighted as one of the reasons Bryan had to go. If Ed Stefanski had been named interim GM and done all the same moves, no one would be in the least bit interested in the new season or give much effort into thinking about what he saw in Austin Daye or Dwight Buycks.

The "how" is in the future. For now, we can dine on platitudes about how they "have to get better" and "are getting better every day" and "have to be patient" and "have to be aggressive."
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Re: It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#872 » by jvuc » Thu Aug 1, 2013 6:16 pm

Abba Zabba wrote:Thanks!

What I got out of those articles is that tanking can work but is far from garanteed and that the quality of organization (therefore the quality of the moves it makes) plays a far greater role in a team's success regardless of the strategy embraced.

To me that means we would be worrying far more about the "how" than the "what". We should spending far more of our energy analyzing the quality of individual moves with respect to the organization's chosen direction than worrying about wether they fit into our inflexible stances about the "only right way" to build a contender.


This is why i'm not concerned about tanking or retooling but rather the quality and patience of our management and ownership and how committed they to their plan.
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Re: It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#873 » by roundhead0 » Thu Aug 1, 2013 6:16 pm

Abba Zabba wrote:There's an article relevant to our endless tanking debate on the front page of RealGM: it's a little dense but offers some useful insights. It also links to 2 other great articles by Wages of Wins and Freakonomics. All three used studies of win and loss records to come to conclusions about "treadmilling"
.
.
.
Can anyone convincingly argue that following either the tank or rebuild strategy is more important than how successfully the organization carries out its strategy?
.


Ugh. Freakonomics is actually pretty bad in terms of how rigourous they are with their approach, and have been critiqued endlessly as a result. It's popular because it was made entertaining. But that doesn't make it good.

And your question is completely lop-sided. OF COURSE execution matters. The assumption already made beforehand is that it will be executed at least somewhat competently, or else it doesn't matter. However, choosing a strategy also has to take into consideration the likelihood that one can be executed well, as well as the likelihood of opportunities from a particular strategy. The Lakers don't have to tank becaue a big FA will always be willing to go there. They still have to make the right choice about whic FA and how to spend their money surrounding their to talent though. The Raptors have to tank because a big FA won't just come to Toronto for being Toronto, or else hope they luck out and either win the lottery or get the steal of a draft from a lower pick.
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Re: It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#874 » by Abba Zabba » Thu Aug 1, 2013 6:21 pm

ATLTimekeeper wrote:That goes without saying. There are no "right ways" to build a champion, otherwise everyone would do the one thing that worked the most. There are strategies that make sense at certain times in certain markets.

As far as Ujiri is concerned, it's hard to analyze because, according to Leiweke, he's still "at a crossroads." The most definite stance they've taken is publicly admit they won't tank. So, Ujiri is seemingly fine with 7-11 for now and isn't in a rush to tell anyone how he plans on escaping the treadmill that Leiweke hi-lighted as one of the reasons Bryan had to go. If Ed Stefanski had been named interim GM and done all the same moves, no one would be in the least bit interested in the new season or give much effort into thinking about what he saw in Austin Daye or Dwight Buycks.

The "how" is in the future. For now, we can dine on platitudes about how they "have to get better" and "are getting better every day" and "have to be patient" and "have to be aggressive."


It maybe self evident, but if it was why I am I witnessing endless debates with entrenched positions on tanking or not? I think we get a little big headed and overthink ourselves into dogmatic stances with all the rigour of theological debates of yore. As if only one path will lead us to salvation.

I am at the point with these Raptors that I believe a high return move in either direction is better than a low return move. Even though I am mildly anti-tank I'd be happy with the right return on a move in that direction.

If you accept what these three articles seem to be telling us: that tanking and rebuilding both fail, that the determining factor is the quality of the organization, then shouldn't we concentrating on that until we see how well the team does this year?

We could even argue about goals to meet, such as if this team doesn't have X number of wins after X number of games then we should Y. Actually here's a pretty good question: what results do you feel should make the team tank and what indicators would make you believe the team is now winning and has assets to trade for favourable returns? EG: If we win 46 games with DD posting a 17 per would you be behind a rebuild, trusting in Masai to use the current assets to improve us? If we have 19 wins at the midpoint of the season is that enough to call for a tank?

The evidence shows there are many paths to success (and failure), shouldn't we be flexible and concentrate on when and how to embrace each path?
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Re: It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#875 » by Abba Zabba » Thu Aug 1, 2013 6:34 pm

roundhead0 wrote:
Abba Zabba wrote:There's an article relevant to our endless tanking debate on the front page of RealGM: it's a little dense but offers some useful insights. It also links to 2 other great articles by Wages of Wins and Freakonomics. All three used studies of win and loss records to come to conclusions about "treadmilling"
.
.
.
Can anyone convincingly argue that following either the tank or rebuild strategy is more important than how successfully the organization carries out its strategy?
.


Ugh. Freakonomics is actually pretty bad in terms of how rigourous they are with their approach, and have been critiqued endlessly as a result. It's popular because it was made entertaining. But that doesn't make it good.

And your question is completely lop-sided. OF COURSE execution matters. The assumption already made beforehand is that it will be executed at least somewhat competently, or else it doesn't matter. However, choosing a strategy also has to take into consideration the likelihood that one can be executed well, as well as the likelihood of opportunities from a particular strategy. The Lakers don't have to tank becaue a big FA will always be willing to go there. They still have to make the right choice about whic FA and how to spend their money surrounding their to talent though. The Raptors have to tank because a big FA won't just come to Toronto for being Toronto, or else hope they luck out and either win the lottery or get the steal of a draft from a lower pick.


I always hear this argument but doens't the same logic apply to keeping quality players? Also, Indiana. Like them we could trade and draft intelligently.

We have 2 factors working in our favour lately: 1) A seeming rise in the profile of Toronto as a city amongst NBA players. 2) The looney has been consistently strong. If we had a third such as a quality coach/gm/team we could offset that to a degree. We'd still never be marquee like LA but we could get to the point where it isn't a competitive disadvantage gainst most of the league.

It sounds like I'm arguing against the tank but I am not. I am arguing that it isn't the only avenue available to us and that to blindly follow one path at this point limits our options to our detriment. If we are presented with 2 deals: one that leads to tanking and one that improves the team, we should take the one that is the better return for our asset (all other things being equal like say we are a just below .500 team with our players playing around their expectations), not the one that fits some pre-determined "only way we can do it" dogma.

Edit: One of things that struck me about all three studies is the inertia that seemed present for all the teams. Good teams tended to stay good or near that category, bad teams tend to stay bad. They both use rebuilds and tanking as short term strategies. It's all about execution and perhaps perception around the league as well.
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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#876 » by Tofubeque » Thu Aug 1, 2013 7:30 pm

All those studies show is that most teams that are good were also good four years prior. No ****. When you land actual talent in the NBA, you tend to have sustained success.

It doesn't ask any useful questions, like when those teams first made the playoffs, what the age and make-up of their roster was at that point, etc. For instance, when the Pacers first made the playoffs under Vogel, Paul George and Lance Stephenson were both only 20 years old. Roy Hibbert was a 24 year old center in his third year. Darren Collison was their 23 year old starting PG. They were obviously going to get better. When the Thunder first made the playoffs in 2010, Durant was 21, Westbrook was 21, Harden was 20, and Ibaka was 20. In comparison, the Raptors have a 27 year old PG, and starting wings who will be 27 and 24 in a few weeks. They're all in their prime and either signed to or due for fat contracts, and we still might not even make the playoffs.

Also, no one is saying you can't build a 50 win team without tanking. But do the 50 win teams built that way compete for championships? Do they have the flexibility to move into contention? There are only a few teams every year that are truly contenders, and only 6 teams that have won since 1999, and when you focus on those you see a pretty obvious pattern. The Spurs were 20-62 when they drafted Duncan. The Mavericks were 20-62 when they drafted Dirk. The Heat were 25-57 when they drafted Wade. The Celtics tanked two straight years collecting assets for the Garnett and Allen trades. The Cavs were 17-65 when they drafted LeBron. The Magic were 21-61 when they drafted Howard. The Bulls were 33-49 when they drafted Rose. The Sonics were 31-51 when they drafted Durant, and then tanked harder for Westbrook and Harden. The Pacers, the anti-tank darlings, were 32-50 when they drafted George. None of these were playoff teams. The only exceptions are when Kobe forced himself to the Lakers, and the Pistons landed a 4-time DPOY as an undrafted trade throw-in.

Obviously most teams that tank don't quickly win 55 games. Most teams that DON'T tank don't win 55 games. Most teams in the lottery are there from bad management and not design, and just keep making bad decisions. But when you look at teams that actually accomplish something, they ALL had to be bad to become good.
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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#877 » by DatBoiCapspace » Thu Aug 1, 2013 8:34 pm

Tofubeque wrote:All those studies show is that most teams that are good were also good four years prior. No ****. When you land actual talent in the NBA, you tend to have sustained success.

It doesn't ask any useful questions, like when those teams first made the playoffs, what the age and make-up of their roster was at that point, etc. For instance, when the Pacers first made the playoffs under Vogel, Paul George and Lance Stephenson were both only 20 years old. Roy Hibbert was a 24 year old center in his third year. Darren Collison was their 23 year old starting PG. They were obviously going to get better. When the Thunder first made the playoffs in 2010, Durant was 21, Westbrook was 21, Harden was 20, and Ibaka was 20. In comparison, the Raptors have a 27 year old PG, and starting wings who will be 27 and 24 in a few weeks. They're all in their prime and either signed to or due for fat contracts, and we still might not even make the playoffs.

Also, no one is saying you can't build a 50 win team without tanking. But do the 50 win teams built that way compete for championships? Do they have the flexibility to move into contention? There are only a few teams every year that are truly contenders, and only 6 teams that have won since 1999, and when you focus on those you see a pretty obvious pattern. The Spurs were 20-62 when they drafted Duncan. The Mavericks were 20-62 when they drafted Dirk. The Heat were 25-57 when they drafted Wade. The Celtics tanked two straight years collecting assets for the Garnett and Allen trades. The Cavs were 17-65 when they drafted LeBron. The Magic were 21-61 when they drafted Howard. The Bulls were 33-49 when they drafted Rose. The Sonics were 31-51 when they drafted Durant, and then tanked harder for Westbrook and Harden. The Pacers, the anti-tank darlings, were 32-50 when they drafted George. None of these were playoff teams. The only exceptions are when Kobe forced himself to the Lakers, and the Pistons landed a 4-time DPOY as an undrafted trade throw-in.

Obviously most teams that tank don't quickly win 55 games. Most teams that DON'T tank don't win 55 games. Most teams in the lottery are there from bad management and not design, and just keep making bad decisions. But when you look at teams that actually accomplish something, they ALL had to be bad to become good.


You should actually read the studies before you write conclusions like that. The studies prove the exact opposite, tanking makes it harder to become a contender, not easier. But of course it depends on what your definition of tanking is, and if your definition of tanking includes winning 33 games like the 08 Bulls then the Raptors have been tanking for 90% of their seasons. Even this upcoming year, its entirely possible the Raptors win between 25-34 games again without throwing anyone to the trash, so why the should we dump our good players to get worse when we are already bad enough to "tank"? Why not keep our talent, or atleast trade them for value, AND get a lotto pick this year? No anti-tanker would be against that. To qoute Masai, thats the definition of a win-win.

Also, in your analysis of the Pacers ages you forgot to include 27 year old Danny Granger, 30 year old Mike Dunleavy Jr, 25 year old Brandon Rush and 25 year old Tyler Hansborough. Not to mention their bench with 34 year olds James Posey and Jeff Foster and 30 year old Dahntey Jones. Nobody considered them anything more then a "treadmill" team, who I'm sure would have received much praise in the blogosphere if they had blown it up.
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Re: It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#878 » by roundhead0 » Thu Aug 1, 2013 8:52 pm

Abba Zabba wrote:I always hear this argument but doens't the same logic apply to keeping quality players? Also, Indiana. Like them we could trade and draft intelligently.

We have 2 factors working in our favour lately: 1) A seeming rise in the profile of Toronto as a city amongst NBA players. 2) The looney has been consistently strong. If we had a third such as a quality coach/gm/team we could offset that to a degree. We'd still never be marquee like LA but we could get to the point where it isn't a competitive disadvantage gainst most of the league.


You're doing it again. If you can just "trade and draft intelligently" then the strategy doesn't matter because you'll be fine. The problem is that ANY transaction is going to be somewhat of a crapshoot no matter how well you do your homework. These are organizations worth hundreds of millions of dollars. They aren't just throwing darts at a board. They invest all sorts of time and money and expertise and look how often they still fail. You can't just plan on saying "Well, we have JV, Gay, DD. All I need to do is draft intelligently and add aTony Parker in the late first or second round, and we're good to go."

The problem with keeping quality players is that they cost money against a salary cap, and they hinder your ability to make better draft selections. The draft IS a crapshoot, but not quite: it's a weighted one since both the quality and odds of getting a good player are higher the higher you draft. This is critical because of how this is a star-driven league. You need stars.

You can't just look at the players you have and think "I have assets X, Y, and Z". These all have opportunity costs as well based on likely draft position and ability to sign or trade for other payers and their contracts. If your quality players look good enough to form a core of a contender and the costs are low enough that you can actually add decent pieces, then fine: build around them. If they are not, then you have to make some changes.

The "factors in our favour" aren't true. Players love visiting Toronto. But they don't want to move here and play here. The dollar matters little to them since they get paid in US dollars. Heck, a LOW dollar makes Canada more attractive because they get paid in US dollars, and so everything becomes cheaper for them.
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Re: The Tank Debate Thread 

Post#879 » by Abba Zabba » Thu Aug 1, 2013 9:01 pm

Great points!
Tofubeque wrote:All those studies show is that most teams that are good were also good four years prior. No ****. When you land actual talent in the NBA, you tend to have sustained success.

It doesn't ask any useful questions, like when those teams first made the playoffs, what the age and make-up of their roster was at that point, etc. For instance, when the Pacers first made the playoffs under Vogel, Paul George and Lance Stephenson were both only 20 years old. Roy Hibbert was a 24 year old center in his third year. Darren Collison was their 23 year old starting PG. They were obviously going to get better. When the Thunder first made the playoffs in 2010, Durant was 21, Westbrook was 21, Harden was 20, and Ibaka was 20. In comparison, the Raptors have a 27 year old PG, and starting wings who will be 27 and 24 in a few weeks. They're all in their prime and either signed to or due for fat contracts, and we still might not even make the playoffs..

Can't argue with any of this logic.

Also, no one is saying you can't build a 50 win team without tanking. But do the 50 win teams built that way compete for championships? Do they have the flexibility to move into contention?

Of course a 50 win team would only be the greatest team this franchise has ever put on the floor, so...Sadly one of the studies noted that treadmilling (recording between 30 and 49 wins) would be an improvement for the Raptors. I just don't see the terror involved in being a 50 win team. By definition you have assets that can traded.

There are only a few teams every year that are truly contenders, and only 6 teams that have won since 1999, and when you focus on those you see a pretty obvious pattern. The Spurs were 20-62 when they drafted Duncan. The Mavericks were 20-62 when they drafted Dirk. The Heat were 25-57 when they drafted Wade. The Celtics tanked two straight years collecting assets for the Garnett and Allen trades. The Cavs were 17-65 when they drafted LeBron. The Magic were 21-61 when they drafted Howard. The Bulls were 33-49 when they drafted Rose. The Sonics were 31-51 when they drafted Durant, and then tanked harder for Westbrook and Harden. The Pacers, the anti-tank darlings, were 32-50 when they drafted George. None of these were playoff teams. The only exceptions are when Kobe forced himself to the Lakers, and the Pistons landed a 4-time DPOY as an undrafted trade throw-in.

Obviously most teams that tank don't quickly win 55 games. Most teams that DON'T tank don't win 55 games. Most teams in the lottery are there from bad management and not design, and just keep making bad decisions. But when you look at teams that actually accomplish something, they ALL had to be bad to become good


The studies generally classify bad and very bad teams as less than 30 and less than 20 winns respectively. Indiana drated George 10th which is much more treadmill than tank.

Again good points. The only thing I would add is that most of the teams that won and continued winning after their tank were teams with a history of winning or at least treadmilling in the recent past. Cleveland was down for a long time, popped up into contention and disappeared. Same for Orlando which might be the poster boy franchise for long term tanking followed by short term success followed by more long term tanking. On the other hand the Spurs were a winning team with one bad tank year and haven't been a losing team since. The trend holds for the Lakers, Celtics, Bulls, and Pistons all marquee franchises and attractive destinations that spent more time on the treamill than the tank and all with a winning team within a few years of tanking. The Thunder could buck that trend as they moved locations, changed management and drafted high and well (and with some luck, imagine they ended up with Oden?). We'll have to see, but they definitely went through a change of culture at the start of their tank.

Of course for every OKC there is a Charlotte Bobcats, for every well built team moving up from the treadmill like Houston there is a Milwalkee Bucks. That's the point. You don't have to do it one way or in any particular order. You only have to accumulate talent using all the means at your disposal and the best way to do so is to be a good organization that is opportunistic. Not by following some recipe by wrote. If we are to become not just a good team but a true contender we'll have to get a hold of a highly drafted player, probably at least 2. How we do so, as Houston as just shown us, is completely open.

The question isn't whether we have to tank, but rather whether now is the most opportune time to do so. I'd love to revisit this at the 35-45 game mark of the season, as tanking is very tempting this year. We have a great draft and new management. Still, it doesn't have to be done this way.

Edit: I just wanted to add, that what the studies do seem to show is that the "all out tank until we win" strategy seems to have the least chance of success of any. To stay at the very bottom (bottom 2 or 3 teams in the league) for multiple years (3 plus) seems to have a corrosive effect. Only OKC managed to pull this off and they did it under unique circumstances.
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Re: It Doesn't Matter if We Tank or Rebuild 

Post#880 » by Abba Zabba » Thu Aug 1, 2013 9:20 pm

roundhead0 wrote:You're doing it again. If you can just "trade and draft intelligently" then the strategy doesn't matter because you'll be fine.

That's my point. This board needs to spend more time looking at the quality of the team's moves and less on whether the team is moving inline with their favourite strategy.
roundhead0 wrote:The problem with keeping quality players is that they cost money against a salary cap, and they hinder your ability to make better draft selections. The draft IS a crapshoot, but not quite: it's a weighted one since both the quality and odds of getting a good player are higher the higher you draft. This is critical because of how this is a star-driven league. You need stars.

You can't just look at the players you have and think "I have assets X, Y, and Z". These all have opportunity costs as well based on likely draft position and ability to sign or trade for other payers and their contracts.

What the studies I referenced seem to be indicating is that the opportunity costs of not always being high in the draft is more than offset by the growth of a quality organization, attracting quality front office personnel and players. There's an inertia to team records.
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The "factors in our favour" aren't true. Players love visiting Toronto. But they don't want to move here and play here. The dollar matters little to them since they get paid in US dollars. Heck, a LOW dollar makes Canada more attractive because they get paid in US dollars, and so everything becomes cheaper for them.

The high looney allows our team to be a richer organization that can afford to spend more if we are close to contending (one fine day!) and isn't afraid of always spending to the tax. The lower looney would have ownership rethinking even hitting the cap. The Toronto perception thing we could argue back and forth inconclusively although we can probably agree it is on the up-swing since the days of fearing the metric system and that the increasing presence of Canadian players in the league will only help that.
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