There are only four ways to significantly improve the talent base of the team:
- Get super, duper lucky with a late 2nd round pick or bargain basement free agent. And given how Ernie traded all the 2nd round picks away...
- Win a trade, bigly. It takes assets to make said trade, and the Wiz are a bit short on assets...
- Open up cap space, then court high caliber free agents with reasonable contracts. Signing impact free agents without paying out the ears does not happen often, though. This also requires a lot of luck... and cap space the Wizards do not have.
- Get a little lucky with a lottery pick.
Of those three options, #3 is by far the most probable to succeed. I say probable, because no route is a sure thing. Even signing a superstar to a great deal is not a sure path to long term success - see Arenas' knee catastrophe.
Still, this is a pretty clear cut situation. #1 is way too much of a Hail Mary. The odds are beyond bad. #2 generally requires having overvalued assets to trade away. #3 is only possible if the Wiz had cap space, so they'd have to expend talent just to create the chance to add talent.
If you want the best odds of having a truly competitive team with great players, you stack your chances at lottery picks. That's how you add talent at the lowest possible cost in team resources. You can think of it as spending
wins to gain
talent. The nice part about that is it's a lot easier to add wins back, once you have the talent.
The great difficulty with keeping a mid-level star like Beal around is that he makes the team just good enough to hurts the odds of adding other stars. That's not fated, of course - just look at the Pelicans this year. But you don't play poker hoping every hand is a straight, and you can't run an NBA team hoping for Alvin Gentry's Lucky Tie to save the day. There are two primary scenarios going forward for the Wizards. Looking at the next two seasons...
Keep BealOK, you're locked in on loyalty. Beal becomes the centerpiece of the team for at least two years. Cap Situation: Abysmal. If you want to keep him, you have to pay the supermax. Wall's dead contract and Beal's new one eat up 70% of your space.
Wins: 35-45, depending how the ball bounces. If you're very lucky, you're a first round out as an 8th seed in the playoffs.
Draft Picks: (2) Most likely between 7-12. Very small chance at adding franchise talent.
Future Ceiling: Hobbit hole, post scouring. This route treads water for two years, then hopes to run everything back with an older Wall coming off a debilitating injury.
Trade BealSo if the right trade comes along, you pull the trigger. We'll call the "right" trade a minimum of 2 picks and one blue chip young player.Cap Situation: Painful, but there's hope. Rookies won't have their extensions kick in until the team is almost out of Wall's albatross contract. This is important, because it provides a narrow window to add free agent talent around a young core, before capping out again.
Wins: 20-33
Draft Picks: (2) picks in the 1-7 range, and (2) more in the 6-18 range. Not only is the quantity doubled, but the quality is greatly increased. There is a very reasonable
Future Ceiling Somewhere between the Magic and the Sixers - both of which had better seasons than the Wizards.
One of these choices makes sense. The other is what Grunfeld would do.
Don't be Grunfeld. NEVER be a Grunfeld.