Moose23 wrote:
you stating there is, is no different that the ringer stating there isnt.
ok? Did I mistake this for a message board or something?
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Moose23 wrote:
you stating there is, is no different that the ringer stating there isnt.
PhilBlackson wrote:The Boy wrote:Syd-TK3 wrote:Tank for RJ barrett
I literally watched that kid grow up and he didn't become good at basketball until his Dad's genes kicked in.
His mom also ran track, he's all genes.
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That is pretty much the same story with Wiggins lol although I would say RB Jr seems like a far more fluid ballhandler than Wiggins was at the same age. Personally if we're going to tank my focus would be more on doing so to get either Kostas Antentkounmpo (who is supposed to be even bigger and more athletic than Giannis was at the same age if that's possible) or Kevin Knoxx.
The Boy wrote:PhilBlackson wrote:The Boy wrote:I literally watched that kid grow up and he didn't become good at basketball until his Dad's genes kicked in.
His mom also ran track, he's all genes.
Sent from my D6603 using Tapatalk
That is pretty much the same story with Wiggins lol although I would say RB Jr seems like a far more fluid ballhandler than Wiggins was at the same age. Personally if we're going to tank my focus would be more on doing so to get either Kostas Antentkounmpo (who is supposed to be even bigger and more athletic than Giannis was at the same age if that's possible) or Kevin Knoxx.
Fans would look at it as another Bruno side project, but you can definitely count on Jeff Weltman to scout Giannis' brother, if not already.
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PhilBlackson wrote:The Boy wrote:PhilBlackson wrote:
That is pretty much the same story with Wiggins lol although I would say RB Jr seems like a far more fluid ballhandler than Wiggins was at the same age. Personally if we're going to tank my focus would be more on doing so to get either Kostas Antentkounmpo (who is supposed to be even bigger and more athletic than Giannis was at the same age if that's possible) or Kevin Knoxx.
Fans would look at it as another Bruno side project, but you can definitely count on Jeff Weltman to scout Giannis' brother, if not already.
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Those fans would be idiots lol Bruno should never be a gauge as he is by far the rawest prospect EVER.
Not saying that you are to be clear but people need to get over that and I hope Masai's **** pick of Bruno isn't what caused him to become a PER fiend but I would think considering how desperate Masai was to get Giannis that if he had any chance at Kostas it would be the biggest no brainer decision of his life. Bruno was basically picked out of broken heart of missing out on Giannis lol
Kostas is nothing like Bruno and if you watch him he is already looking quite a bit like Giannis out there which is scary considering Giannis looked borderline Bruno raw himself at the same age but was a much better athlete than Bruno. If we drafted Kostas I would be more excited than I was during young VC days but anyways I hope we do consider blowing it up because Kostas is legit and it's not like Michael Porter or Kevin Knoxx would be bad breaks lol.
PhilBlackson wrote:almatic wrote:gpoon wrote:i dont know why there is so much hate surrounding Demar, he was clearly our best play for MOST of the playoffs without him the Raptors could barley score. Im in for a SEMI blow up but not a complete rebuild, Demar should be our cornerstone imagine how good Toronto would be if we had some decent 3 point shooters... Demar drive and kick would be deadly, no one on this roster can consistently hit a 3. I think Demar and Norm should be our cornerstone and everyone else should be expendable... that being said i dont think we should dump players for future assets only for other players that will make us better. Ive watched **** raptors ball for way too long and i am enjoying these consecutive playoff appearances, I will not watch ball if the raptors become a bottom team for the next 4-5 years... Lets be real, no team outside Cavs and Dubs are going to win it all this year does that mean every team should blow up their roster? lets just enjoy this ride as our team has never been this good.
How the heck can you have 2 cornerstones that play the same position?!
And Demar isn't a good enough defender or playmaker to play the 3 with Norm consistently.
Move Norm to PG.
People are too caught up on positions. As Coach Cal told Masai, the game is becoming positionless. It's more about certain skills. The issue is you need a decision maker somewhere. Norm and DD would be just fine at being able to bring up the ball. Kyle has really just been a scoring guard playing out of the high PnR for either a step back 3 or drive and step back 2. As Norm continues to develop I don't see why he couldn't be used in a similar fashion, the key will be Norm's ballhandling and decision making. If the team had a Draymond type of player they would be off to the races. Not saying someone like that is available (although Millsap comes to mind) but just playing Devil's Advocate that it could be possible with some development.
It's also as aside why I think Masai drafts Hartenstein if he's still available. He was seen scouting him several times and he has great passing potential. Not quite a Jokic but his passing and 3pt shooting will be welcomed.
Harold_and_Kumar wrote:Interesting that blowing the team up is getting some traction on local radio, as well as some discussion about how Demar isn't a 1A and is more of a complimentary piece. Jeff Blair and Brunt are usually pretty straight-forward and honest in this respect and it's nice to see someone having an honest discussion about it.
Duffman100 wrote:VanWest82 wrote:So two days ago I asked Kevin O'Connor about Demar's trade value:As an aside, say we do decide to blow it up next year (or this off season for that matter). Demar is probably our best asset, but he's tricky to build around. Any idea what the Raptors might get for him, assuming he's able to replicate or improve upon the RS success he had this year?
He answered it indirectly in his article today:But I don’t know if the Raptors can blow it up. Since the article published, I’ve asked around and a few front-office executives told me they don’t think there’s that much interest in DeRozan.
https://theringer.com/2017-nba-playoffs-team-offseason-rebuilding-raptors-clippers-bulls-pacers-f6b9c8062500
That pushes me even further toward 'bring back the band'. No point in tanking if we can't get much for Demar, arguably our biggest trade chip. I highly doubt he's interested in staying put through a rebuild, loyalty or no.
Pfftt...that's crap. There would be huge interest in Demar.
CoachJReturns wrote:Teams I could see wanting DeMar:
Dallas - Need a new star to sell to fans. Also may want to give Dirk one more winning team and be willing to add an established player.
Lakers - They've been going nowhere lately and might want to compete again. Whether Walton would want a player like DeMar is questionable though.
Philly - They can't keep losing forever. DeMar is a horrible fit with Simmons, if Simmons is back, but he's a talent upgrade.
Any other possibilities guys?
CoachJReturns wrote:Teams I could see wanting DeMar:
Dallas - Need a new star to sell to fans. Also may want to give Dirk one more winning team and be willing to add an established player.
Lakers - They've been going nowhere lately and might want to compete again. Whether Walton would want a player like DeMar is questionable though.
Philly - They can't keep losing forever. DeMar is a horrible fit with Simmons, if Simmons is back, but he's a talent upgrade.
Any other possibilities guys?
KevinOConnorNBA wrote:CoachJReturns wrote:Teams I could see wanting DeMar:
Dallas - Need a new star to sell to fans. Also may want to give Dirk one more winning team and be willing to add an established player.
Lakers - They've been going nowhere lately and might want to compete again. Whether Walton would want a player like DeMar is questionable though.
Philly - They can't keep losing forever. DeMar is a horrible fit with Simmons, if Simmons is back, but he's a talent upgrade.
Any other possibilities guys?
How about the Kings? They got loads of cap space and DeRozan is locked up for years. They also have two top 10 picks and should keep them, but maybe they're desperate.
How about the Magic? Now they're desperate to make the playoffs, based off the moves they've made and from all rumors that we've seen put out into the world.
KevinOConnorNBA wrote:CoachJReturns wrote:Teams I could see wanting DeMar:
Dallas - Need a new star to sell to fans. Also may want to give Dirk one more winning team and be willing to add an established player.
Lakers - They've been going nowhere lately and might want to compete again. Whether Walton would want a player like DeMar is questionable though.
Philly - They can't keep losing forever. DeMar is a horrible fit with Simmons, if Simmons is back, but he's a talent upgrade.
Any other possibilities guys?
How about the Kings? They got loads of cap space and DeRozan is locked up for years. They also have two top 10 picks and should keep them, but maybe they're desperate.
How about the Magic? Now they're desperate to make the playoffs, based off the moves they've made and from all rumors that we've seen put out into the world.
Double Helix wrote:lolwut wrote:Double Helix wrote:The bigger counter-question that seems to so regularly be missed is what's the hurry to rebuild? The end goal of each and every rebuild is to get to the level we are now at or higher. So, until we're sliding backwards more what's the hurry?
This point is rarely mentioned in these doom and gloom articles. If the current team is already successful, then what guarantee is there that the "rebuilt" team will ever be as good as the current team? When you blow a team up, you'll suck for 2-3 years before things start improving. Give it another 2-3 years and you may end up as good as the original team. Now you're back to where you started. The NBA landscape will have changed by then, and there's no guarantee that the new team will have a higher ceiling than what you previously blew up. If it doesn't, do you blow it up again and start another rebuild? The cycle never ends.
Lebron James is turning 33 years old later this year and he still leads the top team, and current champs. At this age span anything is possible for Lowry but also the Chosen One himself. What if he seriously has a really bad injury of any kind next year? What team would be better positioned than (asuming Ibaka and Lowry are re-signed) to capitalize on that then us? Boston if they move their draft pick for a superstar but it's really us and them and that's it. These things happen in sports and the closer you are in veteran age to pounce on the timing the better the peak you get. Consider when Michael Jordan left to play baseball. Can you imagine if the Houston Rockets had felt that it was time to blow things up since the Bulls had won 3 in a row and could probably win more? Maybe the Utah Jazz are 2-time champions right now instead. What if Curry's originally shaky ankles catch up to him later or the team struggles to keep all of its stars together?
When you're close, and you have quality vets, and you aren't clearly backsliding in quality yet I just don't see the rush to blow it up. It's very hard to move past a Conference Finals appearance. It requires a lot of things coming together at once, including timing and health.
I'm fine re-signing these guys and going at this for a few other seasons even if means we have Lowry being paid a ton on a team that's starting to rebuild during the last year or two of his deal. Sign them with the next 2 seasons in mind, hoping for some declines from others more reliant on athleticism than Lowry, and hope you also get a good 3rd year. Plan to rebuild around the end of the contract even with him around if you can't move him due to salary.
Double Helix wrote:Double Helix wrote:lolwut wrote:This point is rarely mentioned in these doom and gloom articles. If the current team is already successful, then what guarantee is there that the "rebuilt" team will ever be as good as the current team? When you blow a team up, you'll suck for 2-3 years before things start improving. Give it another 2-3 years and you may end up as good as the original team. Now you're back to where you started. The NBA landscape will have changed by then, and there's no guarantee that the new team will have a higher ceiling than what you previously blew up. If it doesn't, do you blow it up again and start another rebuild? The cycle never ends.
Lebron James is turning 33 years old later this year and he still leads the top team, and current champs. At this age span anything is possible for Lowry but also the Chosen One himself. What if he seriously has a really bad injury of any kind next year? What team would be better positioned than (asuming Ibaka and Lowry are re-signed) to capitalize on that then us? Boston if they move their draft pick for a superstar but it's really us and them and that's it. These things happen in sports and the closer you are in veteran age to pounce on the timing the better the peak you get. Consider when Michael Jordan left to play baseball. Can you imagine if the Houston Rockets had felt that it was time to blow things up since the Bulls had won 3 in a row and could probably win more? Maybe the Utah Jazz are 2-time champions right now instead. What if Curry's originally shaky ankles catch up to him later or the team struggles to keep all of its stars together?
When you're close, and you have quality vets, and you aren't clearly backsliding in quality yet I just don't see the rush to blow it up. It's very hard to move past a Conference Finals appearance. It requires a lot of things coming together at once, including timing and health.
I'm fine re-signing these guys and going at this for a few other seasons even if means we have Lowry being paid a ton on a team that's starting to rebuild during the last year or two of his deal. Sign them with the next 2 seasons in mind, hoping for some declines from others more reliant on athleticism than Lowry, and hope you also get a good 3rd year. Plan to rebuild around the end of the contract even with him around if you can't move him due to salary.
What just happened is precisely what I was advocating for opposite this Ringer blow it up article. I wrote here about the importance of luck and timing and being ready to pounce. One of the reasons this Championship will mean so much to me for so long is because this whole “I think we should keep trying to fight and retool and not rebuild just yet” mindset is something I told friends and family the past couple years due to us being close and they all remember it which is awesome.
Double Helix wrote:Double Helix wrote:lolwut wrote:This point is rarely mentioned in these doom and gloom articles. If the current team is already successful, then what guarantee is there that the "rebuilt" team will ever be as good as the current team? When you blow a team up, you'll suck for 2-3 years before things start improving. Give it another 2-3 years and you may end up as good as the original team. Now you're back to where you started. The NBA landscape will have changed by then, and there's no guarantee that the new team will have a higher ceiling than what you previously blew up. If it doesn't, do you blow it up again and start another rebuild? The cycle never ends.
Lebron James is turning 33 years old later this year and he still leads the top team, and current champs. At this age span anything is possible for Lowry but also the Chosen One himself. What if he seriously has a really bad injury of any kind next year? What team would be better positioned than (asuming Ibaka and Lowry are re-signed) to capitalize on that then us? Boston if they move their draft pick for a superstar but it's really us and them and that's it. These things happen in sports and the closer you are in veteran age to pounce on the timing the better the peak you get. Consider when Michael Jordan left to play baseball. Can you imagine if the Houston Rockets had felt that it was time to blow things up since the Bulls had won 3 in a row and could probably win more? Maybe the Utah Jazz are 2-time champions right now instead. What if Curry's originally shaky ankles catch up to him later or the team struggles to keep all of its stars together?
When you're close, and you have quality vets, and you aren't clearly backsliding in quality yet I just don't see the rush to blow it up. It's very hard to move past a Conference Finals appearance. It requires a lot of things coming together at once, including timing and health.
I'm fine re-signing these guys and going at this for a few other seasons even if means we have Lowry being paid a ton on a team that's starting to rebuild during the last year or two of his deal. Sign them with the next 2 seasons in mind, hoping for some declines from others more reliant on athleticism than Lowry, and hope you also get a good 3rd year. Plan to rebuild around the end of the contract even with him around if you can't move him due to salary.
What just happened is precisely what I was advocating for opposite this Ringer blow it up article. I wrote here about the importance of luck and timing and being ready to pounce. One of the reasons this Championship will mean so much to me for so long is because this whole “I think we should keep trying to fight and retool and not rebuild just yet” mindset is something I told friends and family the past couple years due to us being close and they all remember it which is awesome.
ATLTimekeeper wrote:Should the Celtics blow it up? My rationale is this: yes, they're in first place currently, but they also have one of the worst net ratings for a conference leader in recent record. This is a placeholder contender, largely because the Cavs and Raptors have been dealing with injuries to all-stars for half a season. Second, they have an MVP candidate in Isaiah Thomas, but he's closer to Carmelo Anthony in terms of being only useful at one end of the court. He's also emotionally fragile and will be due a significant raise after next season. His trade value will never be higher than at the end of this season, but his size pretty much makes him physically incapable of playing defense. We saw this with Jose Calderon, who just didn't have the body to defend and so he was always a point of attack. After that they have Al Horford, who is a spectacular vet, but he is not a secondary scorer on a champion and will be an expensive glue guy going forward. Avery Bradley and Marcus Smart are also in IT's situation, they'll get paid for being role players on good teams. And this is also keeping in mind they will most certainly lose Amir Johnson, Kelly Olynyk and Jonas Jerebko in order to keep their cap sheet clean to make that big move.
Now of course, they have those Brooklyn picks and Jaylen Brown looks enticing, but historically it's been difficult to develop high picks on good teams. They come in with their own expectations, the vets on the team want to win now, the coaching staff is nitpicky. The draft is volatile enough as it is. Does it not make more sense to trade Thomas and Horford now and build around this year's Brooklyn pick and Jaylen Brown? What are the odds that they land an all-star in trade that meshes perfectly with what they need? They've been trying for years now. All the deals fall through. Everyone knows what they want, so it'll be harder for them to make a fair trade.
tor1234567 wrote:Double Helix wrote:Double Helix wrote:
Lebron James is turning 33 years old later this year and he still leads the top team, and current champs. At this age span anything is possible for Lowry but also the Chosen One himself. What if he seriously has a really bad injury of any kind next year? What team would be better positioned than (asuming Ibaka and Lowry are re-signed) to capitalize on that then us? Boston if they move their draft pick for a superstar but it's really us and them and that's it. These things happen in sports and the closer you are in veteran age to pounce on the timing the better the peak you get. Consider when Michael Jordan left to play baseball. Can you imagine if the Houston Rockets had felt that it was time to blow things up since the Bulls had won 3 in a row and could probably win more? Maybe the Utah Jazz are 2-time champions right now instead. What if Curry's originally shaky ankles catch up to him later or the team struggles to keep all of its stars together?
When you're close, and you have quality vets, and you aren't clearly backsliding in quality yet I just don't see the rush to blow it up. It's very hard to move past a Conference Finals appearance. It requires a lot of things coming together at once, including timing and health.
I'm fine re-signing these guys and going at this for a few other seasons even if means we have Lowry being paid a ton on a team that's starting to rebuild during the last year or two of his deal. Sign them with the next 2 seasons in mind, hoping for some declines from others more reliant on athleticism than Lowry, and hope you also get a good 3rd year. Plan to rebuild around the end of the contract even with him around if you can't move him due to salary.
What just happened is precisely what I was advocating for opposite this Ringer blow it up article. I wrote here about the importance of luck and timing and being ready to pounce. One of the reasons this Championship will mean so much to me for so long is because this whole “I think we should keep trying to fight and retool and not rebuild just yet” mindset is something I told friends and family the past couple years due to us being close and they all remember it which is awesome.
I thought you were supposed to close your account after you predicted a series loss for the Raptors?