Thunderhead wrote:I don't buy the non amnesty of Perk as a " value " move , I think Presti's options were limited. Perk was untradeable, who was gonna take on that contract ? Presti moved Perk as soon as possible. As to amnesty, there was nothing to be gained when the amnesty was available. The possible upgrade of the position was so small, it was not worth making the move, especially considering Perks value in the locker room. Which btw, I bet Adams misses Perk and Kanter could use a lot of Perk .
Keeping Kendrick Perkins was absolutely a value decision. Sam Presti traded Perkins on the day of the trade deadline; the 11th hour. Do you think that Presti arrived at the conclusion that Perkins wasn't the best fit for the team that day? Of course not. But keeping him around was still acceptable value vs. the mediocre return he would have gotten in previous seasons, or the dead money represented by using the amnesty provision. Presti got the most value he could out of Perkins by trading him when his contract represented the smallest risk / investment to the team acquiring him.
Kendrick Perkins ranked 58th of 64 centers in RPM in 2013-14. Alexis Ajinca was signed to a league minimum contract by the Pelicans in 2013-14 and had two seasons more productive than Perkins before agreeing to an MLE contract this week. The idea that there were not many possible upgrades at the position is disingenuous. By 2013-14, practically any center replacement would have been a measurable upgrade.
Thunderhead wrote:But overall, yes Presti collects assets. That's how he built the team from day one in Seattle. He collected small assets, combined them, and moved them for more value.
This was a fine way to build a team around Kevin Durant, but is it the optimal method to produce a champion? Jury is out.
Thunderhead wrote:Before I write off Kanter as a mistake, I want to see what this coaching staff can do with him. But I'm not optimistic. I don't discount the coaching he got in Utah. I would feel better if Brooks was still in place, he and his coaches are proven at developing players. I got a feeling Donovan is gonna be hip deep in learning, before he can get much involved in defense and specifically , Kanter's development. I'm afraid training camp will be mostly an adjustment by everyone, coaches acclimating to each other and players acclimating to new coaches.
Kanter wasn't a mistake. Presti had to get value for Perkins at some point, he just waited until the last minute and Kanter was the best thing available. There's value in Kanter. Having right of first refusal is valuable; the chance, however slim, that his defense could turn around has some value.
I'm lukewarm on the coaching 'explanation' for Kanter's problems. That same coaching didn't have a problem fielding a Top 3 defense after he was traded.
Thunderhead wrote:In the exit interviews after this past season, every Thunder player who spoke of defense, spoke in terms of team defense, not man on man on ball defense. And that's what has been in place since Ron Adams was here in 2010. Will that continue ? That would serve Kanter and he would gain from a full training camp in that type of defense.
Team defense is by far the most important kind of defense. Kanter is a sieve in the pick and roll. My subjective view is that he lacks effort more than he lacks understanding (though, he does lack that as well). I'm sure it's possible he can improve. If he does, Presti's value-based approach will finally be vindicated somewhat. For what it's worth, I'm less hopeful on Dion Waiters panning out than Enes Kanter.