long suffrin' boulez fan wrote:... or give up the rights for La Bomba for a future murderer.
ROFL!
Moderators: nate33, montestewart, LyricalRico

long suffrin' boulez fan wrote:... or give up the rights for La Bomba for a future murderer.
montestewart wrote:I can't think of any #1 pick that has looked so bad 9-10 games into his career. It's hard to think of many top draft picks in general that have looked as bad at the same point. Wonder how Vesely compared at a comparable point in his rookie year?

hands11 wrote:montestewart wrote:I can't think of any #1 pick that has looked so bad 9-10 games into his career. It's hard to think of many top draft picks in general that have looked as bad at the same point. Wonder how Vesely compared at a comparable point in his rookie year?
As I posted before.
KWAME
Hypnotizer wrote:I wonder if Grant Hill would be good GM?
Upper Decker wrote:Hypnotizer wrote:I wonder if Grant Hill would be good GM?
Going forward I hope / pray / wish the Wizards just stay away from former pro ball players as the GM's.

Hypnotizer wrote:I wonder if Grant Hill would be good GM?

closg00 wrote:Larry Bird turned the Pacers around.

montestewart wrote:hands11 wrote:montestewart wrote:I can't think of any #1 pick that has looked so bad 9-10 games into his career. It's hard to think of many top draft picks in general that have looked as bad at the same point. Wonder how Vesely compared at a comparable point in his rookie year?
As I posted before.
KWAME
I didn't overlook him. Bennett looks worse.
Upper Decker wrote:Hypnotizer wrote:I wonder if Grant Hill would be good GM?
Going forward I hope / pray / wish the Wizards just stay away from former pro ball players as the GM's. My reasoning is three fold:
1) They've never really had to negotiate anything in their lives. When they played, their agents negotiated their contracts. Now they're responsible for negotiating massive contracts with expert negotiators. If I'm an agent I'm looking at guys like Joe Dumars and EG and just hoping they call me. Dumars and EG have given out the worst contracts in over the last 10 years. Ben Gordan, Charlie V, Arenas, and seemingly Wall if he keeps this up.
2) Former players are incapable of accurately valuing current players. I just think about ESPN's countdown show, or whatever it's called. Last year the biggest continual rift was Jalen & Magic vs. Simmons on whether Rudy Gay's good or not. Jalen & Magic were convinced Gay was/is a very good player. "Capable of going toe-to-toe with Lebron on some nights." Simmons countered with not so complex stats that Rudy Gay is just a low efficiency chucker. How dense can former players be in evaluating current players? MJ is another good example, although a bit extreme.
3) Former players empathize with current players so they might be less willing to make tough business decisions. This opinion may be unsubstantiated, however, my feel is that the mentality for former players is to playcate to current players because they've once been there and know how bad it sucks to get cut, traded, low-balled, strung-out, benched, mis-managed by a coach, or whatever else happens behind closed doors. I think this is a large reason why Arenas and Blatche were so mis-managed by EG.
nate33 wrote:closg00 wrote:Larry Bird turned the Pacers around.
True. But it's important to note that Bird was a head coach before becoming a GM. I think that experience gave him perspective and helped distance him from being overly sympathetic to the players' side of things.
Jerry West was another successful former-player GM.
Nivek wrote:Saying "no former players" is the same thinking that had the Wizards trading for Okafor and Ariza (and giving away 2nd round picks) instead of seeking to acquire talented young players with the possibility of a long-term future with the team. Excluding groups of people because of their membership in some group deemed "undesirable" is prejudice, and it leads to bad decisions. Former players should be treated the same way as anyone else trying to become a GM or a coach -- evaluated on their own merits.
Shane Battier, for example, will probably make a first-rate team executive someday -- he's smart, thoughtful, perceptive, has a good sense of humor, and he's systematic and organized in his approach to the game. Many former players would make bad executives, but truth is that many PEOPLE would make bad executives. It's not an easy job (though I don't think it's as difficult as Grunfeld has made it look).