Doctor MJ wrote:jamaalstar21 wrote:RCM88x wrote:
I think NOLAs problem is that they just made bad trades and bad draft picks. They let a very good PG walk for nothing and replaced him with someone who's terrible (that they drafted). They also can't keep their best two players healthy which is an entirely different issue.
Often times I think that teams do try and pull the trigger too quickly once they have a couple guys that show promise. The timing is key, because if those moves don't cash in like you expected it doesn't really leave a lot of room for improvement when those core players are actually capable of contending (if they ever are).
Personally, I don't think the Cavs should be looking to make a move at this point. The team is 7-4 and effectively in it's first season together. They need to do a lot more to prove themselves before they start packaging draft picks to improve.
Yeah the Lonzo Ball move was strange even if we all saw it coming. Not sure exactly why they telegraphed early how little interest they had in paying Ball.
I was thinking a bit about New Orleans today, as everyone is sounding the alarms on the franchise being doomed. I'm not sure I'm at the same level of concern. Zion's health is by far the biggest factor here. If he's healthy we're looking at a different situation because we're all mad they aren't building an immediate contender around him. If Zion is going to miss most of the season due to his foot and conditioning and future injury concern, this seems like a year to just tank around Jonas Valanciunas. New Orleans hasn't made all bad moves: the package they got for Jrue was what some teams get back for an MVP caliber player. They have a lot of extra draft capital in upcoming years, and if the Lakers fall apart after this season (due to Lebron health), that draft capital is pretty juicy. Zion is 21, and injury concerns might make it hard for him to flee New Orleans early. Some good performance in the draft in the next 2-3 seasons might be the slow build that so many people advocate for.
I think what I’m feeling more and more is that we shouldn’t be going ga ga over GMs that ship out talent for assets. No matter how skilled they are in milking the process for all it’s worth, if they never turn those assets into a great team, there’s no reason another team should hire such GMs after they are fired.
It may still work out for NO simply because Zion is Zion, but it doesn’t feel like they have any actual vision.
I also worry for the city here losing the franchise. Realistically, there are more than 32 other markets that could probably be more lucrative and they are holding on at this point out of inertia. There’s so much to the culture of NO that’s worth celebrating and I don’t want them to lose a source of joy and revenue - and I do feel like a good run with Zion can keep that going - but it’s not looking good.
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I think Zion's health is outweighing (no pun intended... sigh) the front office moves. My perception is that New Orleans was hungry to compete right away. They brought in Favors, JJ Redick, and kept Holiday to put around their flashy new core imported from the Lakers. I thought of them that offseason as a potential sneaky playoff team if Zion could hit the ground running. Instead he was hurt, and they pivoted to a slow build since Jrue was 30 and Zion's health was uncertain.
I could at least understand their thinking for those 2 years, and if Zion was a normal healthy player, they'd be in a different situation. Zion also projected to be a plus defender (I remember flying Draymond comparisons and liking them when he was at Duke), instead he's a bit of a liability, so that changes a lot about what they'd have to do to build a contender.
I guess I don't see a problem right now with moving the Zion timeline back a couple years, focusing on him getting healthy and prioritizing flexibility in their team building rather than immediate Zion fits.
Most people would casually say that New Orleans has one of the worst front offices in basketball, but I'm a bit empathetic to the sheer volume on injury problems they've had, going back to the AD era.