Slava wrote:kingofthecourt67 wrote:Slava wrote:I wish this "all or nothing" philosophy peddled by the quants could be driven out of sports and especially the NBA. Watching the Bulls compete season after season against all odds is one of the best things about today's league and I'd rather be them than 76ers no matter how much success their shameful plunge may or might not yield.
Shameful?
Before this season, we were the epitome of a treadmill team. Aside from the year we got Turner, we were on the fringe of making/missing the playoffs for the last decade. We swung for the fences with Bynum and that crippled our team. Our team was built so he would be our #1 option. Evan Turner, Jrue Holiday, Spencer Hawes were not capable of filling that void once we realized he would never wear a 76er jersey. Unfortunately our management was smart enough to realize that being somewhat relevant requires a #1 and #2 option--and we didn't have that. So there are 3 ways to get those type of top-end players. Draft, free agency, and trade. With current trends, no superstar free agent was walking through our door. So we had to resort to number 1 and 3. We blew up our team because those guys--aside from Jrue Holiday [2 things--I'm not saying he was a #1 and #2 and that Holiday trade was lauded around the league]--were not championship level starters. So why should we overpay for glorified back-ups?
In terms of success this season, while our management made certain choices, our players still go out there and play hard. We just don't have talent. Chicago does. And they truly are a remarkable story to watch--no disagreement from me. Thibs has done an absolutely amazing job and Noah is playing out of his mind. But let's not forget, their management has made things harder for them to succeed as well [i.e. trading Deng, being generally cheap, not retaining assistant coaches]. And I know the Sixers do it because we're thinking of long-term success. I feel absolutely no shame in what we're doing. Perhaps 31 years without a championship will do that to a team's fans.
The Bulls did not tank to get where they are now. They drafted much smarter, got a head coach that's making the sum of the parts much greater than the team itself and showed grit and determination, which is respected by their fans and by players/coaches around the league.
Now if a free agent hits the market, don't you think he'd find Chicago more appealing as a franchise? Bulls traded Deng but they are still at or close to the tax apron, they are not below the league minimum pay roll, they never were.
In NBA like in real life, if you build a good culture you will attract free agents. If you don't you'll end up being caught up in a cycle of irrelevance.
Even Sam Hinkie's mentor, Morey always maintained a team that was good enough to challenge for the playoff spot, they only missed once in their rebuild. They eventually accumulated assets to build their team. I can't generally recall a team that willingly gutted their roster and succeeded as a result.
Bulls didn't tank? Chicago had 9 draft picks in the top 10 between 2000-2008. Can't miss on all of those--particularly when one of those was Derek Rose at #1. That's a lot of years of being bad. Their culture was not always there. They built it through the draft. Which is exactly what we will be doing.
We are tearing it down and starting over. How the heck are you going to build a culture to attract FAs being a perennial 8 seed? Moreover, Miami changed the FA game forever. There are so many more factors with superteams now in play that luring FAs is even harder.
Morey had McGrady and Yao to work with. Sixers had nobody even close to that.



























