JehuuBacon wrote:A couple things:
1. I like Chad Ford, but that's because I really enjoy all his draft coverage. That's what he lives for. So although he can be a pretty good judge of individual talent, it's tough to say if he's an expert in team win/loss projection. And while it's probably unpopular that he thinks the Suns will be terrible this year, keep in mind that that's the overwhelming opinion these days. It's not like Chad Ford said anything highly controversial here.
2. I don't know if this has been addressed, but it sort of bothers me when people say that the Suns are 'tanking'. It comes down to what you define as tanking, but to me it always has a very negative connotation attached to it as if it's something to be ashamed of. The Suns should not be ashamed of what they're doing. What Ryan McDonough has accomplished thus far is nothing short of incredible and isn't something that I would've imagined could be possible when he took the job this year. He has successfully flipped all of our expendable talent for equal or greater value and put the Suns in a position for future success. Clearing cap space, trading for younger prospects, and amassing draft picks is a clever and proven rebuilding strategy and not something that is easily done. Tanking is not putting in the effort on the court, sitting players, basically willingly losing games. That's not something that I saw in the first game last night against the Blazers, thankfully. As long as I see the Suns playing hard and trying to win with the players they have, I don't consider them a tanking team.
1. In Ford's defense, if he really is hearing many other GMs saying that Dragic will be moved soon, I can't blame him for putting us at the top of the tank list. It is my hope and belief that he is wrong, though, and that Dragic will only be moved at the deadline or next year, and even then only if it becomes clear that he & Bledsoe are incompatible together. One game in, they look pretty compatible.
2. Count me in on the McDonough era so far. Especially if I'm right, and the Suns are done unloading talent. (Dragic is 27 and signed for 3 more years at reasonable money -- why would you get rid of him unless you plan on stinking for all of the next 3 years? We'd be very lucky if any lotto-protected pick turns out to be as good as him.) I have no problem with the idea that the Suns are in a total rebuild with a very young team, and that means there will be a ton of losses this year. I do have a problem with the idea that, once the season starts, it's still in the team's best interest to lose games. How many *good* free agents sign with teams that win 20 games?
"Oh, but it's all about getting a better draft pick."
Really? That's what you're going to spend 6 months rooting for? Besides, the whole point of the lottery is to make tanking pointless. The worst team in the league is more likely to pick #4 than any other spot. You're going to hinge everything on a 25% chance of winning the lottery? I'd rather see some progress in the young guys -- winning games in the process -- and feel like we have a decent young core to build on. And then I'll root for us to get lucky, either by winning the lottery with like a %5 chance, or by getting a draft-day steal a la Shawn Marion (#9) or Amare Stoudemire (#9) or Rajon Rondo (#21) or Joakim Noah (#9) or Serge Ibaka (#24) or Ty Lawson (#18) or Paul George (#10) or Kawhi Leonard (#15) or Andre Drummond (#9), etc...
Point is, I think it's a lot more fun to root for wins and a longshot instead of losses and a slightly shorter longshot. Now, if the worst record guaranteed us the #1 pick? I would get it. But all it guarantees is #4, and you can find a LOT of busts drafted from #2 on down. (Not that #1 overall isn't without its busts -- *cough*Oden*cough*Bargnani*cough*Olowakandi*cough* -- but the NBA has generally done a very solid job of identifying top talent, and Oden is probably the only "this guy will be a superstar" prospect that has busted in a long time. I feel like it's mostly in overall weaker drafts where the top pick busts.