Drwho17 wrote:vege wrote:Best case scenario is Gores sell the team, we get a good owner, he fire Weaver and hire a competent GM and we restart from there. Anything other than that is a disaster and another decade of suffering for us fans.
I don't get your negativity, now that the dust has settled. Isn't this what we've been calling for the last decade. When you look at it, the Pistons have revamped their roster, gotten young players with upside, without selling out the future. To me it looks like Weaver has a three year plan to get to championship competitor. In basically a week he flipped the worst roster in the NBA, into one with a bunch of young players with upside, Hayes/Stewart/Bey/Doumbaya, not to mention taking chances on Jackson/Okafor breaking out. M
My only fear is that I think that this team could end up being too competive and screwing up their future draft positions, with Griffin/Rose/Grant they could win too much.
It's not difficult to understand. We are "rebuilding", but we still have Blake and DRose. We donated 2 talented young players in Wood and Kennard and we got absolutely nothing in return (we took Ariza for free and we gave Kennard to LAC in our 4 2nds for #19 trade) We just finished paying Josh Smith's 5 years dead cap space, and we got Almost the same amount in dead cap space, for no reason.
Bey doesn't have a lot of upside, he is what he is, which is not bad, he is solid, and we did well drafting him at #19. The Stewart pick was laughable. Sekou and Hayes have upside and I am happy for that, doesn't mean Sekou will be anything.
We should have only signed only guys like Josh Jackson and Okafor, I even posted a list of similar guys, who were signed very cheap. Instead we signed Grant (to play out of position, hello Josh Smith) and we signed a veteran bad center for a lot of money. Money we did not have to spend, since we **** up our cap space for no reason.
We waited for years to have cap flexibility, and this is what we did with it? Seriously? And you're happy?