payitforward wrote:bsilver wrote:The 2010-11 Dallas Mavericks won the championship with a different model. No superstars and no relevant rookies. The best players were Nowitzki and 37 year old Jason Kidd. They were a veteran unselfish team.
Both Wall and Beal are too ball dominant to fit that model. Beal is playing selfishly lately and Wall, in his prime was a willing passer, but the team still didn't get a lot of assists.
A Wall/Beal team has shown it doesn't have anywhere near championship potential. Trade Beal while he's at max value. I had proposed a trade based on Beal for Knicks 3rd pick (Barrett). Barrett has had a slow start on a dysfunctional team, but I still think he'll be as good as Beal. There should be other trades available.
Yes, the Mavs are "the exception that proves the rule."
Barrett may become an outstanding NBA player, but it's a long shot. OTOH, Beal would have brought that pick and more (maybe their next year #1 & 2?). With all that plus #3 pick & the #9 pick, we'd likely have been able to make trades to do the entire rebuild in a few hours!!

While I generally agree with your assessment, Im not counting this group out yet.
"Wall & Beal have proved they CANT win" is true on the surface, but ignores changes/maturation that would make them a better pair along with a more dynamic team.
1)
Wall & Beal: I think the first iteration of this duo failed for many reasons, 1 of which could very well be they simply aren’t good enough. But here is my take.
- Beal is actually the Alpha and always should have been. He is the work horse that sets the tone in practice, the weight room, and lifestyle choices. With his improvements and Wall sidelined…its finally happened
- Wall was made to be a savior when he simply wasn’t ready or capable. A trash GM and organization put too much on him and surrounded him with poor fits both in skill set and personality.
- The organization is in a very different place. The team now works hard and has fun. Ego’s have been mostly flushed out and there is a semblance of balance and no longer asking John and Brad to make up for organizational mistakes
- Like the organization, Wall and Beal are also in a different place in both their careers and the skill set the modern NBA requires from their guards. All of this hinges on Wall being able to reform his playing style.
2)
Current Support: I think we saw enough from Rui to be moderately optimistic about his future and we can shelve that discussion until we see more.
But make no mistake about folks, Troy Brown Jr is a legit piece on a contender. PIF and I have been sounding this alarm since last year, but when you look at his skill set and age, its hard to argue that he wont be a top 6-7 player in what appears to be a REALLY good 2018 class. Iggy 2.0.
Thomas Bryant is clearly a starting caliber Center who does all the things you need from a Big at this age. Size/Length, Work ethic, skilled shooter, Runs the court, decent IQ…. His defensive issues are mostly based in youth. Young bigs have a lot of pressure these days and it takes time.
3)
2020 pick: If you take out the "Generational" talents from each draft (Blake, Wall, Zion, Ja, Kyrie, AD, KAT, etc.) along with late round steals (Butler, Jokic, Middleton, Gobert etc). Here is a list of players taken in the lotto over the last 10 years (2009 - 2018 drafts) that could easily be the type of player that would make us contenders with our current roster (From oldest to most recent)…
- 2009: Harden (3), Curry (7), Derozan (9)
- 2010: Cousins (5), PG13 (10)
- 2011: Kemba (9), Klay (11), Kawhi (15)
- 2012: Beal (3), Lillard (6)
- 2013: Dipo (2), CJ (10), Giannis (15)
- 2014: Embiid (3)
- 2015: Porzingis (4), Booker (13)
- 2016: Brown (3), Ingram (2), Sabonis (11)
- 2017: Tatum (3), Fox (5), Isaac (6), Mitchell (13), Bam (14)
- 2018: Doncic (3), Jackson (4), Young (5), Carter (7), SGA (11)
To me, that shows that there will be about 3 players picked in the lotto that will be AS caliber players or better. Assuming we pick in the 6-8 range, there will be 1-2 for sure. And that doesn’t include the sleepers like Brandon Clarke who get picked later.
This actually goes to your point about “Strong” vs “Weak” drafts being mostly garbage and the talent is always there.
Point is, if points 1) and 2) both work out to some degree, point 3) simply states we don’t need a generational #1 overall pick to take the leap. Curry, PG13, Kawhi, Lillard, Giannis, Booker, Mitchell, etc. are available almost every year and its up to TS to find it this year.
Haliburton, Anthony, Hayes, Mannion, Okoro, Hampton, etc… Most of these guys will be available to us, and we have to find them.
Im willing to go to the 2021 deadline or even the following summer to see if all 3 lineup.