kingofthecourt67 wrote:Novocaine wrote:kingofthecourt67 wrote:
Most 76er fans were perfectly happy being patient and playing the long game. :
Sure. The issue is that Hinkie's strategy creates a huge collective action problem for the rest of the league. So the other teams had to step in and get rid of him - as they did by pressuring the Sixers to hire Jerry Colangelo (Hinkie was gone as the top decision-maker since that moment). This isn't hard to understand. You can't follow that type of strategy in the NBA because it only works if nobody else follows it and it's not really that difficult to.
I'm confused. The rest of the league didn't like his strategy because they were worried they themselves would commit to it? There are no rules against what we are doing. It was not up to other owners to meddle when we are acting within the CBA. Don't like it? Wait till the next CBA to change it.
Tanking has been around long before Sam Hinkie became a GM. I don't feel the need to point you to specific cases. We just took a rational approach to it. And again, the funny thing is we didn't even finish with the worst record the first 2 years. Our team consistently played hard and was actually quite the joy to watch. the 2015 76ers were a lot more fun to watch than the last year of the Doug Collins Era.
I don't think you understand what a collective action problem is. Do you?
And no, what Sam Hinkie was doing wasn't what all the other teams do. If you think that, you disagree with the man himself - he's explicitly explained the radical newness of his approach in his resignation letter, how he would zig while everyone else has been zagging forever. There's bottoming how to start a rebuild, then there's Hinkie's strategy.















