GetBuLLish wrote:Ice Man wrote:League Circles wrote: The likelihood of getting a nothing player with a single top 5 pick is way too high for that to be the primary return. Gotta get 2 - 3 serious prospects/players to consider trading Jimmy.
Jimmy is worth three Top 5 picks. Minimum. I know people think I'm joking because they overrate lottery picks, but I'm not.
Here, I will play a game. I will pick 3 numbers at random - 2, 3, 4. And three years at random, 2011, 2012, 2009. Off the top of my head I don't know what guys were drafted those years, in what order.
OK it turns out to be
Derrick Williams
Kanter
Tristan Thompson
MKG
Beal
Dion Waiters
Thabeet
Harden
Tyreke
See, I wasn't kidding.
I've never understood the logic of looking at the exact player chosen at a given pick. If you're talking about the value of a certain pick, it makes more sense to look at what players were available at that spot. The assumption of trading for picks is that you actually make the right selection with those picks. Of course it won't be a good trade if you screw up with your selection.
So if you go with the 2012 draft using the 2, 3, and 4 picks, you could have gotten:
Damian Lillard
Draymond Green
Andre Drummond
2011:
Klay Thompson
Kawhi Leonard
Jimmy Butler
2009:
James Harden
Steph Curry
DeMar Derozan
This is not a good way to look at it. Jimmy Butler was the last pick of the 2011 first round. So, yes, in retrospect you'd spend a top pick on him, but GMs don't have time machines. It was unknowable at the time the draft occurred that Jimmy Butler would blossom into a star player, and not a single team in the league, even if they had the best scouts in the universe, would have drafted him with a top pick.
In assessing whether a top draft pick is enough return for Butler, it's completely irrelevant to cite guys who were available at the end of the draft. If anything, these examples just show the inherent unpredictability of the draft and are arguments against trading Butler, because they cause you to think "Gee, I could get a Jimmy Butler, Draymond Green, or Kawhi Leonard without even having a lottery pick!"






















