saintEscaton wrote:Damkac wrote:Those 76ers fans

If my fav team would be absolutely garbage for few years in a row I would had enough (and for most of this time I couldn't even enjoy watching young players developing because they are injured/oversea). I want the Suns to rebuild but what Philly has done is too hardcore for me. Yet those fans act like Hinkie is a genius and was one step away from building a dynasty.
Booker, Len, Warren and Bogdanovic > Noel, Okafor, Embiid and Saric
For that epic tankathlon their reward is disappointing. Unless Embiid gets healthy finally and live up to his potential Hinkie's experiment is fail.
There is no middle ground or grace in bottoming out. Go hard or go home
Before this round the Suns have never really had to bottom out though. From 88-01 they never missed the playoffs, and then during one losing season at 36-46, they realize they need to capitalize on vets and trade them to a team in the playoff hunt, and trade Delk and Rogers for Joe Johnson, then they pick Amare at #9 in the draft. Suddenly they are back in the playoffs, even winning two games against the Spurs (who went on to win it all), on epic finishes by Amare and Marbury. They missed again the next year, and of course decided to give up Marbury for cap space and go all out on Nash, with another fairly high draft pick coming. Now they should have used that draft pick, which was a mistake, but the following two years they go to the WCF twice.
Then of course Colangelo was shown the door, and we start the spiral. In comes Kerr to right the ship, but after another WCF appearance, again, what a perfect time for change, lets get rid of Kerr. What's he worth? Sarver can do it with the help of an agent who wants to work in a front office and an assistant GM who's prior team only had any success for one reason, and it likely had nothing to do with him.