DCZards wrote:fishercob wrote:DCZards wrote:
The Zards weren't going to trade Sessions and have Temple as their best backup PG when they still had a shot at making the playoffs.
The shot at the playoffs was (a) most a mirage and (b) pointless -- even if they had made the playoffs, they would have been destroyed bya good team. If they had taken a long term view, trading sessions and dudley made obvious sense.
Making the playoffs may have been a "mirage" or "pointless" for us fans but I'm sure it wasn't for Wall, Gortat and the other guys actually doing the competing. So do you send the signal to your players that you're giving up on the season by trading a solid backup PG for what would most likely have been a late second round pick? I don't think you do.
OTOH, I would have traded Dudley for something of value, which the Zards may have tried to do.
MAKING the playoffs (from the point when I wrote that blog piece) would have been terrific. It would have meant the Wizards legitimately turned the season around by playing better. The point of that piece, and I think fish's point, was that making the playoffs from that point was a long shot.
I expect the players and coaches to focus on the short term: win tomorrow. Then the next game and the next and the next and so on. But, the GM and front office is supposed to take a longer view. They're supposed to be able to recognize that it wasn't injuries sabotaging their season, but that the players they chose weren't good enough. (They're supposed to pick better players in the first place.) They're supposed to assess what's happening and what's likely to happen, and then act accordingly.
Now, it could be they looked things over, decided it was injuries, and decided that if they could just get healthy, they could make a run and make the playoffs. Making those judgements meant being wrong about the cause of the team's problems (it wasn't injuries), relying on hope and good luck (that guys would get and stay healthy -- although, again, injuries wasn't the real problem), and then dismissing or ignoring years of NBA history. Whatever thought process they used to arrive at the decisions to retain everyone (including expiring contract guys with possible trade value), and then trade a first round pick for Markieff Morris, they were wrong. They're out of the playoffs, don't have any picks in this year's draft (well, there's a 97.8% chance they won't have a pick), and they have no additional assets obtained via trade.
Maximum pain.
"A lot of what we call talent is the desire to practice."
-- Malcolm Gladwell
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