Leslie Forman wrote:I find it crazy how even Chicago fans keep underrating Jimmy. He dragged an arguably even worse roster than this one to .500 (40-36 in games he actually played). He dragged that trash ass Minnesota team to the playoffs. We know what he did with Miami.
He was considerably better than Zach. He's still the most underrated player in the league. Even after last season people are still thinking his entire career is some fluke or something. He was a straight up top-10 player, not "maybe top 15-20" or something. He was easily better than Towns. He was better than Embiid. He went inch-for-inch with LeBron in the damn Finals. Kawhi asked him to come to LA before PG for good reason.
If you wanted Jimmy out but suddenly have absolutely no issue with throwing $200million (even more after revenues go back up with fans next season) at Zach LaVine I'm sorry but that is just nonsense. It's like saying getting rid of Scottie Pippen to give Mitch Richmond a max contract is a great idea.
i agree with this generally, but my conclusion is "it was stupid to trade butler, and it would be slightly less stupid — but still pretty stupid — to trade lavine"
i think the one argument you could make for trading jimmy but keeping lavine is that the bulls front office had proven itself incompetent at building a team that complemented butler's strengths, so they might as well cut their losses and move on because they weren't going to take their head out of their ass. the bulls current front offense is theoretically competent, so they should try to build around the elite talent already on the roster. (it's a backwards argument, but i at least kind of understand how someone would arrive at it)
but like, in general, if people are now recognizing that it's smart to retain talented players in their prime...i'll take it. no need to revisit the dark past