mtron929 wrote:Also, how much credit should the Warriors be given for the Durant signing then? If Durant wanted to go to the Warriors regardless of what the management of the Warriors sold them on, then they should get zero credit, with similar line of reasoning, right? But then, it seems weird to not give the Warriors any credit for Durant signing as this whole analysis kind of becomes a joke then as they pulled off the biggest coup this offseason.
So it seems like just to be consistent, whether it is fair or not, it is better to just look at the outcomes and not the circumstances. Or else, we need some psychic profile on Durant to know exactly what his mental state was when making a decision to go to the Warriors.
I find this argument somewhat compelling. Durant cannot have been expected to both leave OKC, and also not expected to join GS. If one exceeded expectations, the other had to drop below expectations on Durant.
I think this was something that helped keep me at a B+ and not an A, but I also think its something where I come down to process over results. Did OKC have the right process in place to convince Durant to stay as much as possible, and just get a bad break on his decision which was somewhat up in the air? Or was their process not as strong as it should have been?
I hinted at this with the Ibaka trade:
So, do you grade the Ibaka trade knowing Durant left, or do you grade it knowing he might have left? And did it make it easier or harder for Durant to leave?

I feel like maybe that made it easier on the margin for Durant to avoid the 1+1, but what do I know, and maybe it didn't. It is hard to penalize here unless Durant opens up more. I don't see a massive process failure that would be a clear ding on them. I also don't see a brilliant process move to entice him to stay, like how Boston grabbed Horford in a big play.
I don't see the case OKC made for keeping Durant as so flawed to submarine their whole grade, and knowing that he was openly mentally exploring the idea of free agency well before it happened I think OKC had a very delicate tight rope between making their best case and not handcuffing the future.