Post#683 » by rtblues » Mon Nov 16, 2020 11:07 am
Don't think that the Lakers should have given up their pick in the trade for Schroeder. In-fact, they may have been able to find a low-budget version of Schroeder at #28. Let's be honest, looking at Schroeder's stats and meh... Especially if you look at the advanced stats, he's pretty unreliable from 3 historically, with last season showing a slight uptick again, but especially on catch-and-shoot 3s, he's bad. Not really a facilitator either, but more of a shoot-first guy.
If you don't trust getting a worthy Rondo-Replacement, Schroeder-Alternative at 28, then maybe they could have waited and looked at other available trades. Just not sure on how and why they decided Schroeder was "their guy". Does he really give them the things that they're going to be lacking and looking for next season, a secondary distributor and more three-point shooting? Not sure they couldn't do better. And again, if it was Green straight-up for Schroeder, I'd be okay with that. That's just my thinking about trading 1st round picks. I still think that the #28 pick has value and may have filled the need in a better and cheaper way, and still looked for a deal for Green.
Conclusion: L.A. overpaid by including the #28 pick*
*Possibilities at 28 to fill the same need: Isaiah Joe, Malachi Flynn. Or to add shooting, maybe Killian Tillie, although his injury history is a bit dubious. Or Tyler Bey, who besides 3pt shooting, rebounds at a high rate. But, Schroeder he just "Ain't all dat"...
"I wouldn’t call it a rebuild; more of a retool.” - Gar Forman, June 2016