doclinkin wrote:pcbothwel wrote:GREAT post Doc... My only caveat is that we are entering uncharted territory. Over the last 15 years we've seen 2 things:
1) The greatest, most durable, team playing basketball player dominate consistently. Most all of which in our conference.
2) The 3 ball, fast pace revolution that has phased out specialist in favor of versatility
You mention two players that have revolutionized and/or dominated the game in LeBron and Curry... but both are entering the latter quarter/fifth of their career and we really dont know what the landscape will look like on the other side.
Doncic, Giannis, Jokic, etc. could all be the next best thing... but they are not Lebron.
I wouldn't be surprised if more 2020 Heat/2019 Raptors teams emerge over the next decade.
There's always a best player who wins an era though. Kobe/Shaq. Tim Duncan. MJ.
Yes you can have a 2020 Heat every year. They didn't win the last game of the year.
2019 Raptors traded into a one year fluke when LeBJ had a team full of young lottery picks around him. For that one year the Raptors won over KD's ruptured achilles, DeMarcus' ruptured achillies, Klay's torn ACL and Curry's dislocated finger.
Every few years there is a fluke where the best player is injured or a solid team build overcomes the trend.
Boston's big 3. Detroit. The Raptors blip. If that is being in contention then no doubt you'd take it. Build a good team who can take advantage in an off year. A smart front office carefully assembling talent and making the right trades when an opportunity presents itself. I'm with that. That kind of all in, or the process, comes from a high level of competence year after year. Not from any radical surge in either the 'blow it up' or 'go all in' philosophies. Incremental consistent competence gave them the chance to cash in eventually.
If the model requires a superstar who is not a top pick then Kobe is the hope I suppose, drafting lucky with the last pick of the lottery. (Well, drafting smart there too. They had Jerry West picking for them.) And Kobe's his early championships he had Shaq. I think experiencing championships early helps shape a talented player. Kobe, Kawhi, for instance.
Anyway. I guess I'm saying I'd take solid and competent and good for a while, to try to build a foundation, instead of doing anything radical to chase what is unlikely in the extreme. Especially since we don't see many examples of that working. We have some work to do first. it's tough to make up for 30 years all at once. If we can win a while with Russ and Beal and developing youth, then let's see how far that takes us. An opportunity may come along to significantly improve the team, and hopefully we will take it when it does. I'm with DCZards on this. I want to see what we have with what we've got, then reevaluate after we have let a positive culture take hold among the young players we have developing.
I do like some of the moves Tommy has made. TBJ, Bryant, Bonga, Deni. They seem like good value for how we got them. Mathews. Whether or not we drafted all of our young players, we are rebuilding. Young. Even Beal is in fact both young and still improving. Westbrook is the only player that runs counter to that model (Lopez and Ish, I suppose, but they are peripheral). However Russ seems like he will be instrumental in helping to cement a culture of hard work all the time. If his habits on both defense and shot selection improve then we may be a solid team and our win/loss record will improve the value of the assets we do have.
Championship contender or no, I think the team is better and has a more hopeful outlook now than it has in a long while. Yeah we need improvements in key areas. Defense being paramount. Coaching as well. And yeah this would have been a year to tank if lottery picks were going to be the savior for us. I just don't see the team doing that, so I am resolved to appreciate this year as a palate cleanser for years and years of the Grunfeld in our collective mouth.
If someone has a story to tell that shows how we realistically change all that and win a championship, I'm willing to listen though.
It may seem you are onto something as far as the injury front goes. Even the Detroit Pistons faced a Lakers team who didn't have a healthy Karl Malone. In 2008, Lakers didn't have a healthy Andrew Bynum against the Celtics (plus Ariza wasn't 100% IIRC).
Although that's often the case with most championship experiences good fortune in terms of health while the competition suffers significant injuries - take the Lakers last season who played he Blazers where Lillard went down mid-series, the Rockets who were playing with a banged up Westbrook. And finally the Heat who had an injured Dragic/Bam and even without them at 100% they pushed the Lakers to 6. Plenty of teams have faced injured competition in many seasons (ie 2018 Warriors down 3-2 faced the Rockets without CP3).