HartfordWhalers wrote:So, by your methodology no trade can be measured as good or bad until long after everything (including the random stuff) happens after.
That also strikes me as meaningless.
Sixers got the prospect they wanted, and a prospect viewed as at least as good if not better by most experts, along with other assets.
https://web.archive.org/web/20140607112021/http://www.draftexpress.com/rankings/Top-100-Prospects/
http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/draft2014/insider/story/_/id/11069368/nba-draft-2014-ranking-prospects-tiers
Seems a pretty clear win to me.
Im saying that Hinikie's perception of Saric and Payton means nothing about their actual value and neither does Henningan's, clearly both of them felt like they were getting the better end of the deal or there would be no trade.
I dont know if Hinkie really rated Saric higher than Payton but even if he did doesnt mean he was right or that he won something, what if Hennigan rated Payton in the top 5 and was ready to throw in another 3 first rounders if thats what it took? would that make him the winner?
When its all said and done GMs have enough information to make an educated decision, Im sure were going to found out who got the better end of the deal soon enough.