sc8581 wrote:HeroicKennedy wrote:sc8581 wrote:
Ok, then let's change the name of this thread to "who could use Drummond".
Answer: also the Pistons.
How did I know you were going to say that lol.
Curious, do you think the Pistons could contend within the next couple years with Monroe/Smith as the big men and Drummond getting traded for a really good SF and back-up big? I mean a #1 option type SF with range.
Monroe/trade
Smith/Jorts
trade/Singler
KCP/Stuckey
Jennings/Stuckey
I don't buy the Pistons contending so long as Smith is on the team. Everything about him is trending in the wrong direction. He's an "old" 28, so to speak. 10 years in the league with several playoff appearances and this is the time in most careers where players that rely heavily on athleticism start to fall off significantly. The offensive issues are going to stay bad and the defense is going to continue to decline. He's been declining for three straight seasons and I find little reason to believe he will buck this trend.
Basically, if you look at the Monroe/Drummond combo, it's three years before even one of them enters his prime and 5-6 years before BOTH are in their prime. To me, I am completely unconcerned with contending now and am more worried about having a good team when Drummond is like the Death Star: fully operational.
I'd rather have some level of patience with these two working together. Monroe's value is not going to change significantly over the next few seasons barring major injury. If we need to trade Monroe, it should be well after we've tested Monroe/Drummond to it's fullest extent (we're talking roughly 2.7 minutes a game on average with no Smith.).