KqWIN wrote:stitches wrote:What's the lower limit on what you would consider a successful off season, guys and gals?
We need to address the obvious flaws with our roster, shot creation and shooting. If we sit pat and just ignore them in the name of friendship, that will be failure. Ultimately, the FO needs to open up avenues to improvement besides internal growth. That could mean getting a significant talent upgrade or getting significantly different talent. We have two great building blocks in Donovan and Rudy. The bare minimum would be building a team that fits around them.
Inigo Montoya wrote:stitches wrote:What's the lower limit on what you would consider a successful off season, guys and gals?
I need to feel like the team has a chance to win a championship, even if it falls short. In that context, I'm pretty open in terms of how far the team goes. You can lose in the second round and feel like your team had a real shot at a ring (like the Rockets), and you can lose in the second round and feel like you have no shot (Jazz of the past few years). Or even the Blazers of this year. Yes, they made it to the WCF but that was due to favorable seeding. Once they met a real contender in the Warriors (and without Durant!) they were swept posthaste. If Blazers fans think that this season shows they are a real contender, they're going to be sorely disappointed. They are a similar team to the one that was bounced in the first round last season.
In many ways, the Blazers are at the same situation as we are, only with more young talent that can break out and eventually help the team take the extra step. In some ways, it's better we didn't make it to the WCF, so the FO can't spin it to say we're so close.
Give an example of the lower tier scenarios in that vein that you would consider successful off-season...

















