fishercob wrote:Dat2U wrote:fishercob wrote:
The only thing I'm selling is that there will be other opportunities to improve the team other than the scenario nate laid out. I'm not disagreeing with anything you say about wanting Ernie gone, minute loads, etc.
With Booker out of Witt's doghouse and contributing, we are slowly arriving at a point where many hoped we'd be when the season was starting -- a solid 7 man rotation with Booker and Webster capably contributing off the bench, and the opportunity to play Porter with good players so as to get him up to speed sooner rather than later. The error margin is still razor thin and contributions from anyone outside our top 7 are unreliable. Nothing to celebrate over. No clear and easy path to huge improvement. But enjoyable to watch with hope for the future if things break right.
Exactly. When your margin of error is that small to begin with, it's really unrealistic to assume that things will break exactly as one would hope because it never does. Beyond no clear and easy path to improvement, there's no clear and easy way to even maintain what we have now, which is basically a .435 winning percentage.
Is this really enjoyable, or does it offer just enough tease to wet the pallet in anticipation for more? What happens if we make the playoffs? We give the good hard fight for 6 games and were left heading into the offseason with 3 1/2 legitimate NBA players with Wall, Beal, Webster & a broken down Nene remaining on the roster and Gortat & Ariza looking for huge paydays. 8 empty roster spots, no 1st rd pick and pretty much the only guys we'll be signing (er, overpaying) is our own free agents.
IMO the future is very bleak if this all-in for the '13-'14 season actually works and Ernie & Witt keep their jobs for at least the time being.
On enjoyability, I was talking about two things: (1) aesthetics -- when the Wizards are healthy and playing well, they're fun for me to watch (2) competitiveness -- winning is better than losing. In the moment, mediocrity feels better than sucking. Anyone who has played sports or competed in anything knows that being terrible and getting embarrassed feels horrendous.
On a personal note, I've done a lot of work on living in the moment over the years. Much as I would like to be, I am not an owner or executive with the Wizards. I am a fan -- a big one -- and my fandom is a form of entertainment. So when the stars (and injury report) align such that the Wizards are going good and putting the hurt on good teams, I don't think it's healthy or productive -- for me at least -- to grouse that it's unsustainable or fools gold or whatever. That's not to say that I don't like to opine and speculate about ways to improve the team and leaders I'd like to see replaced.
I admit that I find it mildly annoying that whenever I post about basically anything positive related to the team, it's met with responses that seem somewhat driven by anger and not as much by thought. I understand and share with frustration with how the Wizards have been managed in recent years, and yet feel that many here suffer from a reactionary tunnel vision when it comes to the range of possible outcomes for the future.
I'm likely one of those annoying posters, and before anything else, I'll say that you're one of my favorite posters here, whether I agree with you or not, not only because you are thoughtful and open-minded, but because you (and dobrojim and others) consistently inject reasonable positiveness to the conversation. I can use some of that sometimes.
For me currently, Wizards fandom is an exhausting dichotomy: on the one hand, wishing it would all just fail so badly that the owner will see the error of his ways, jettison EG, most of the bench for nothing, Nene and Ariza for whatever they can get, and just start over on the fly with a visionary team builder and shrewd manager of assets running the show with little interference. Yet, when I'm watching games, I'm rooting for each player, at each moment, to play his best, to play better than his best, to win. Even if that win is nothing but a notch closer to average. I don't
want Maynor to fail, I don't
want Nene to be injured again, I don't want bad things to happen, I don't want my negativity to correspond with reality.
"Go Wizards!" is my in-game mantra. I guess "Eff it, just start over," is my out-of-game mantra. I'll be much happier when I can just go with one chant. You have the unfortunate task of occasionally trying to offer balance to sour pusses like me.