I'm in...the fact that he was successfully quadruple-teamed for the second half of the season may be what gets him to us.

Moderators: ChosenSavior, UCF, Knightro, UCFJayBird, Def Swami, Howard Mass
Skybox wrote:For the record, the trade proposals for CJ and/or Kemba that I made INCLUDED the 2019 first. I understand that Evan and/or Vuc don't get you much on their own.
Def Swami wrote:Usually your alpha players are your best players on the team. The problem with Orlando is they haven't had a clear "best player" since D12 left.
Among the 5 lottery picks that the Magic have had in the last 5 seasons, only 1 turned into an "alpha" and it was for another team (miss you, Victor) and he was the only one that had a clear alpha mentality coming out of college. He learned a lot from Westbrook, but I don't think he obtained that mentality from Westbrook. It was always innate for him. I don't believe you can teach an alpha how to be an alpha. Some guys are just built like that. It's partly why some of us preferred DSJ over Jonathan Isaac last draft (not saying Isaac was the wrong pick). It's why I shy away from players like Jaren Jackson Jr this year.
Quite frankly, the Magic have not taken advantage of the draft that a rebuilding team should. If you're going to commit to a rebuild, then you have to hit in the draft at some point. It doesn't guarantee long term success, but you can't even expect to escape bottom 7 finishes until you draft an elite player or one with that kind of potential. You can look through the rosters of all the lottery teams 1 thru 8 and they all lack a focal star talent (Memphis has missed Gasol and Conley for most of the season).
You don't have to be perfect and there are going to be misses. Nerlens Noel and Jahlil Okafor were clear misses, but those failed picks are so negligible in the grand scheme once you have Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons. You're more likely to forgive that Elfrid Payton debacle if the Magic had the chance to get Porzingis in 2015.
Even teams that never drafted high in the lottery at least hit at some point, which is why they've turned their teams around before Orlando has. Give Utah credit for drafting foundational players like Rudy Gobert in the late 1st round and Donovan Mitchell in the late lottery. Milwaukee with Giannis. Portland with CJ. Denver with Jokic, Murray, and Harris.
Some of that is skill and a lot of that is luck. The latter part is the scarier thought of the two.
There have been so many franchises that have been bad for so many years. You would think that with all the draft picks that the Kings have had in the last 12 seasons!!!! that they would have just fallen ass backwards into some luck. Cleveland at least benefited from this during the post-Lebron seasons with 3 inexplicable #1 picks. The Wolves haven't made the playoffs in the last 14 seasons!!!! It took them nearly 11 years to for luck to fall into their hands and things to just go right for once. The Wolves and Cavs clearly aren't model front offices, but they benefitted from timing and luck.
Sometimes you get lucky in other ways. Toronto was prepared for a full-on tank for Wiggins in 2013-2014 when they traded Rudy Gay. No one in their front office ever thought that Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan would explode like they have. Everyone thought that Indiana would be among the tankers this year, and then Oladipo turned himself into an all-NBA guard. Same with how Isaiah Thomas became that for Boston. A lot of that is simply luck and timing.
I bring these examples up just to reflect on how whimsical NBA success is. You expect a certain level of competence from your front office. But, even if those things occur, a lot of the time it's just luck that makes you good again, which is something no one can control. The Magic could be in this for long haul until they land their "alpha." And even then, it doesn't really guarantee long term success, but it gives them the best chance. It's not out of the question for this rebuild to extend to 10 to 15 seasons. It's a grim reality, but one that they're on pace for until they land their "alpha."
Drafting is definitely the most realistic way for Orlando to land a star player. There are examples of doing it via trade, but it's less common. Almost no star free agents are going to sign to play with a bad team. Again, you could get lucky. Maybe take a risk on Zach Lavine or Marcus Smart and they turn into star players in a different situation, but it's unlikely. Maybe trade for Kemba; I actually really like this idea. He'd at least establish some hierarchy on the team. Or draft a player with an alpha game for once - Deandre Ayton, Luka Doncic, Marvin Bagley, or Trae Young.
Def Swami wrote:Usually your alpha players are your best players on the team. The problem with Orlando is they haven't had a clear "best player" since D12 left.
Among the 5 lottery picks that the Magic have had in the last 5 seasons, only 1 turned into an "alpha" and it was for another team (miss you, Victor) and he was the only one that had a clear alpha mentality coming out of college. He learned a lot from Westbrook, but I don't think he obtained that mentality from Westbrook. It was always innate for him. I don't believe you can teach an alpha how to be an alpha. Some guys are just built like that. It's partly why some of us preferred DSJ over Jonathan Isaac last draft (not saying Isaac was the wrong pick). It's why I shy away from players like Jaren Jackson Jr this year.
Quite frankly, the Magic have not taken advantage of the draft that a rebuilding team should. If you're going to commit to a rebuild, then you have to hit in the draft at some point. It doesn't guarantee long term success, but you can't even expect to escape bottom 7 finishes until you draft an elite player or one with that kind of potential. You can look through the rosters of all the lottery teams 1 thru 8 and they all lack a focal star talent (Memphis has missed Gasol and Conley for most of the season).
You don't have to be perfect and there are going to be misses. Nerlens Noel and Jahlil Okafor were clear misses, but those failed picks are so negligible in the grand scheme once you have Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons. You're more likely to forgive that Elfrid Payton debacle if the Magic had the chance to get Porzingis in 2015.
Even teams that never drafted high in the lottery at least hit at some point, which is why they've turned their teams around before Orlando has. Give Utah credit for drafting foundational players like Rudy Gobert in the late 1st round and Donovan Mitchell in the late lottery. Milwaukee with Giannis. Portland with CJ. Denver with Jokic, Murray, and Harris.
Some of that is skill and a lot of that is luck. The latter part is the scarier thought of the two.
There have been so many franchises that have been bad for so many years. You would think that with all the draft picks that the Kings have had in the last 12 seasons!!!! that they would have just fallen ass backwards into some luck. Cleveland at least benefited from this during the post-Lebron seasons with 3 inexplicable #1 picks. The Wolves haven't made the playoffs in the last 14 seasons!!!! It took them nearly 11 years to for luck to fall into their hands and things to just go right for once. The Wolves and Cavs clearly aren't model front offices, but they benefitted from timing and luck.
Sometimes you get lucky in other ways. Toronto was prepared for a full-on tank for Wiggins in 2013-2014 when they traded Rudy Gay. No one in their front office ever thought that Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan would explode like they have. Everyone thought that Indiana would be among the tankers this year, and then Oladipo turned himself into an all-NBA guard. Same with how Isaiah Thomas became that for Boston. A lot of that is simply luck and timing.
I bring these examples up just to reflect on how whimsical NBA success is. You expect a certain level of competence from your front office. But, even if those things occur, a lot of the time it's just luck that makes you good again, which is something no one can control. The Magic could be in this for long haul until they land their "alpha." And even then, it doesn't really guarantee long term success, but it gives them the best chance. It's not out of the question for this rebuild to extend to 10 to 15 seasons. It's a grim reality, but one that they're on pace for until they land their "alpha."
Drafting is definitely the most realistic way for Orlando to land a star player. There are examples of doing it via trade, but it's less common. Almost no star free agents are going to sign to play with a bad team. Again, you could get lucky. Maybe take a risk on Zach Lavine or Marcus Smart and they turn into star players in a different situation, but it's unlikely. Maybe trade for Kemba; I actually really like this idea. He'd at least establish some hierarchy on the team. Or draft a player with an alpha game for once - Deandre Ayton, Luka Doncic, Marvin Bagley, or Trae Young.
Mauro Pedrosa wrote:How about Zach Lavine?
~Snoopy~ wrote:but to be serious only obvious route is the draft but you need to do what it takes to get top 3
we aint doing that
whats left is luck that maybe even at 5-10 pick we will struck gold but we certainly aint doing oursleves any favors by not tanking hard
Def Swami wrote:Maybe trade for Kemba; I actually really like this idea. He'd at least establish some hierarchy on the team. Or draft a player with an alpha game for once - Deandre Ayton, Luka Doncic, Marvin Bagley, or Trae Young.
drsd wrote:~Snoopy~ wrote:but to be serious only obvious route is the draft but you need to do what it takes to get top 3
we aint doing that
whats left is luck that maybe even at 5-10 pick we will struck gold but we certainly aint doing oursleves any favors by not tanking hard
The Magic is primed to draft at the 6 slot.
..
~Snoopy~ wrote:but meh once a decade you may even get a top dog at 5th-8th