nate33 wrote:...the team is trying to be legitimately good next year when Wall comes back....
nate -- not challenging this claim, but I don't remember any such explicit statement from Tommy. Now... my lack of a memory doesn't mean much, to tell the truth! It can take me a 1/2 hour to find my cup of coffee -- & that's starting 10 minutes after I put it down who knows where....
I do remember, quite specifically, that Tommy said "we're going to build this thing the right way: patiently." I wouldn't say there's a necessary contradiction between this statement & setting optimistic goals for next year. No one sets a next year goal to be
bad! &, aside from anything else, common sense as a businessman calls for Ted to make maximally optimistic statements: he's not going to say "our product will stink next year."
What beats me, though, is how anyone can genuinely expect the team to be "legitimately good" next year. Where that means, say, earning home court advantage in R1 of the playoffs, even in the weak EC. We were #4 in our best year, & one of the teams ahead of us that year (the Cavs) is in rebuilding mode now. OTOH, 4 other teams -- Milwaukee, Philadelphia, Indy, Miami & Brooklyn -- are rebuilt to a state that I'd say there's no chance we pass them next year. Only... that's 5 teams not 4 come to think of it.
IOW, adding Boston & Toronto to that list, we look to have a chance to contend for the 8th spot in the playoffs. Assuming other rebuilding teams don't improve much, & a few of the other teams currently ahead of us (e.g. the Pistons -- only down .1 per game to the league -- or Orlando, down .6) aren't in a position to improve.
What will change for us next year? Wall will be back. We'll have another rookie or 2. Do you think the Wizards expect to be "legitimately good" based on those 2 developments? Do you think so yourself?
It would be great, of course. But, personally, I wonder whether "build this thing... patiently" might not be a more realistic approach. I.e. might be what they really have in mind?