Magic_Johnny12 wrote:Landshark wrote:Magic_Johnny12 wrote:
We have been doing this EXACT thing for the last 5 years. Its time to go another direction as Hennigan has already tried with the Oladipo trade. Just have to be patient and take advantage once a great opportunity presents itself.
Drafting a "franchise player" is a bit harder than you think buddy. Especially when you're ALWAYS drafting outside the potential star range as we have for the last couple of years.
We've been doing it for three years, and we weren't as committed in the third year as we were in the first two. Getting the 11th pick in the fourth year was just a failed attempt at making the playoffs. The fact that we were just outside the potential star range shows how close the plan was to succeeding, and this year's potential star range is greater than usual.
Drafting a franchise player is hard, but it's still easier than finding the great opportunity that you described.
You're forgetting that Basketball is more a business than anything. Tanking does not generate actual currency. Especially when you have been doing it for the last 5 yrs. More tanking means less fans/attendance, less fans and attendance means less money in ownerships pockets.
Prepare yourself for a rude awakening if you think NOW that management covets potential championships more than winning meaningless games.
I agree with this. It's very possible that Hennigan actually does want to tank, but ownership is pressuring him to win now. Tanking isn't necessarily bad from a financial perspective, since the team would reduce expenditures by trading vets, and being a contender would generate more revenue than being a mediocre team in the long run. However, owners may not see things that way. They may not want to take the risk, they may personally be impatient to see their team win, they may believe there's a faster route to becoming a contender (e.g. Mikhail Prokhorov), etc.
If this is the case, some of the blame should be going to DeVos instead of Hennigan.

























