dougthonus wrote:dice wrote:you really don't see a difference between proactively trading up to ensure you get your guy and making a last minute deal after waiting until he falls way below expectations?
The second of those probably has a lot more merit when discussing how you target a specific player, as you are trading up to get someone specific when you know he is there. The first is trading up because you want a pick. The second situation is fairly common, the first is very rare. Teams typically only trade up when they know the guy they want will be available, and you never know 100% until a team is on the clock.
it's fairly obvious that krause targeted pippen ahead of time, whereas the spurs surely thought "this kawhi kid has fallen way below where he's supposed to be, so there's some value here." both GMs deserve credit, but it's plain that one GM was way more enamored with the prospect. and when evaluating performance, intent counts at least as much as the luck factor
feel free to amend the topic to stars not dropped into a GMs lap by winning the lotterytaken #1 overall. we're allowed to do that on the fly, right? because that was clearly what i was doing
See point above, I was responding to "no one has ever drafted 2 players of this quality" there was no discussion of excluding #1 picks, excluding trades that were made on draft day, or other things in the point I was replying to.
i added a distinction to the discussion. which i am free to do. it was not an addendum to my initial comment that no GM has ever drafted (or even acquired) more than one pippen-level star on draft day...or even 2 weeks later, which is still valid
the general topic was obviously the drafting acumen of jerry krause. more specifically here being the ability to spot high end talent. jerry west w/ kobe and buford w/ kawhi are thus reasonable points of comparison. bringing derrick rose into the conversation takes us waaaaaay off the reservation...and might not even qualify given that derrick himself was arguably not on scottie's level (only was for a single regular season, anyway)
I wasn't discussing this general topic in this thread, but have done so earlier. In that general topic, I viewed Krause as having made 2 great picks (Pippen and Kukoc) that went well above what a normal GM would do. A few more good picks (Chandler (though Gasol was better and available one slot later), Oakley, Brand, Artest, Crawford, though none of them worked out for us). I don't think that was exceptionally good over the 25 or so years he was GM with huge amounts of busts.
and i agree. which is a far more nuanced evaluation and reason why his head shouldn't have been so big. as opposed to not drafting more than one superstar
even if you add garpax to auerbach as the only 2 GMs to draft more than 1 star player, that doesn't change the point i was making, which is that even a great talent evaluator is unlikely to draft more than 1 star. it wouldn't be that factor that should've prevented krause from his megalomaniacal view of his abilities
Let me rephrase it this way, because setting the bar at Pippen is artificially high to my point. Krause never drafted another player that likely would have been viewed as top 25 in the league in any given year outside of Pippen. There are tons of teams that have done that.
horace grant was quite obviously a top 25 player in '91-92. he was almost as valuable as scottie that year. which is why that team was the best of the first 3-peat. he was robbed of all-nba. for whatever reason his shooting fell off sharply the following season and he was never as good again
At some point in a 13 year stretch in recent history, I would guess more than half the teams in the league have drafted two players better than whomever you think Krause's 2nd best draft pick is.
that may be true, but krause also had late draft picks for most of his tenure





















