DuckIII wrote:Little Nathan wrote:sco wrote:I agree with that approach, but I disagree that AKME put themselves in a tough spot (or at least tougher than they would otherwise be in).
They made it clear they want to win-now. They will now have to do that with a roster that has lots of question marks, not a lot of financial flexibility and without the 2022/2024 picks to deal (or use). To me, that's a very tough spot and a lot more challenging (right now) then the "wait and see" route (stand pat at the deadline) or even the soft tank (trade Vets) and the hard tank (trade Vets + Zach) routes.
Yeah, “tough spot” is euphemistic. More accurately, highly likely completely screwed with a sliver of hope to keep us interested for another 6 weeks or so.
Let me put it this way, if GarPax had painted us into the exact scenario we are in now, this board would be in flames. The only reason it’s not is because the guys making the decisions are new and we hope they secretly know what they are doing despite heavy evidence to the contrary.
I just have to note that the vast majority of the paint on this floor was put down by GarPax. From 2012 to 2019, they used the following first round picks:
#29 Teague
#20 Snell
#16 + #19 for McDermott
#22 Portis
#14 Valentine
#7 Markkanen
#7 Carter
#22 Hutch
#7 White
10 first round picks, no competent players. The best player on the list was traded for a guy who can't stay healthy.
The Bulls are largely screwed because they haven't drafted anyone worth a dam since 2011. The Vuc trade looks bad right now but if you reverse it, the Bulls would still be in a terrible spot.
This mess is going to take years to fix. AKME has done nothing to improve the situation but let's not act like this was anything other than a dumpster fire before they showed up.
Hopefully some miracle happens but I think for the most part, everyone realizes that Chicago may not be competitive for another 5 or 6 years.