dakomish23 wrote:Leave it to Channel to ruin what should be a PG thread drooling over the possibility that we may have drafted our future SG

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dakomish23 wrote:Leave it to Channel to ruin what should be a PG thread drooling over the possibility that we may have drafted our future SG

dakomish23 wrote:Leave it to Channel to ruin what should be a PG thread drooling over the possibility that we may have drafted our future SG
dakomish23 wrote:Leave it to Channel to ruin what should be a PG thread drooling over the possibility that we may have drafted our future SG
K-DOT wrote:Chanel Bomber wrote:Regarding the last sentence, I don't even know what it means. I believe that some players can be held back or set up to fail by their organizations. I just do not think it was the case for Frank or RJ. I do believe it is true to some extent with Obi.
You don't believe it for RJ/Frank because you don't like them
You do believe it for Obi because you do like him
It's the same exact thing
I don't know why you think we as an organization were elite at putting guys into position to succeed all this time and it's all only on them if they don't, except for Obi, it's not his fault, we just are failing him. But everyone else we've developed as best we can
Makes more sense to just assume we don't put anyone in a good position to succeed, and success comes in spite of the org instead of failure coming in spite of it.

louisorr wrote:dakomish23 wrote:Leave it to Channel to ruin what should be a PG thread drooling over the possibility that we may have drafted our future SG
we found our Danny Green. only a Timmy, Manu and Tony away from a chip.
Jimmit79 wrote:Yea RJ played well he was definitely the x factor
cgmw wrote:Chanel Bomber wrote:cgmw wrote:My take on the Knicks Rorschach test is that the franchise did RJ Barrett no favors by drafting him onto a Steve Mills-Scott Perry-David Fizdale joint that quickly became a Leon "CAA Godfather Trade" Rose-Tom "Win Now" Thibs production.
If they were serious about building the right way, the Knicks would have developed RJ from the jump as the focal point of a YOUNG REBUILDING TEAM with a growth identity, NOT a "win now" 8 seed-or-bust behind mercenary veteran mentality.
We do not possess a time machine with the ability to alter the past, so there is literally no way of knowing who RJ could have been under more advantageous circumstances. And yes, Chanel, I've heard you say it before and I'm ready for you to say it again -- they have played the sh*t out of RJ. But minutes played is not the only indication of good development. The context of those minutes was and continues to be on a dysfunctional organization that lacks an identity beyond being absurdly dysfunctional.
I've said it before, and I'll say it again -- it will take generational talent (better than RJ) to overcome the Dolan dysfunction. The Knicks one and only hope of drafting a superstar will be if they happen to land a once-in-a-generation type talent that's just too good to fail. Otherwise, the Dolan organization will find a way to screw up just about everybody they bring on board, be it a draftee, free agent, trade acquisition, coach, scout, analytics nerd, or executive. Thank god we still have Breen, Clyde, and Walzewski who all got grandfathered in from previous ownership. Other than that, you're looking at literally 20+ years of 100% failure rate among all Knick employees.
It's therefore not some radical stance to predict failure for RJ. It's basically a statistical certainty and has been since the minute he got drafted.
You and I assign responsibility at different stages of the process, and that's fine.
You think the bigger issue is talent development. I think the bigger issue is talent evaluation.
We can definitely agree to disagree on that.
I just want to point out that Haliburton is enjoying some individual success despite Sacramento's dysfunction. They too are competing for the playoffs, and they too have a ball-dominant, high-usage, inefficient star in Fox. Curry spent his early years playing alongside a black hole in Monta Ellis in a dysfunctional environment as well - although Curry's one of one. It didn't prevent him from reaching his potential down the road. To a lesser extent, even Mitch has been productive for the Knicks.
We both agree the organizational failure starts with James Dolan though.
Talent development? Try organizational development.
The big problem is the organization is run like a joke, which therefore precludes both development and evaluation.
In a hypothetical time machine to 2018, a well-run organization wouldn't have fallen for the Durant-Kyrie okey doke. They would have committed to the tank, committed to a PROPER executive search to coincide with the 2019 Draft. That proper executive would have NEVER signed Julius Randle as a fugaze veteran marquee star, and would have surrounded RJ with a stable executive staff, coaching staff, and roster. In all likelihood, that 2019 season would have resulted in another top 4 pick, which could have ended up being Lamelo. Then the 2020 season could have ended in yet another top 4 pick, which could have ended up Mobley.
That's not some far-flung wild alternate universe. That's a very feasible and relatively "normal" way to do things.
You turning the RJ debate into a referendum on "talent evaluation" rings totally hollow since he was the undisputed 3rd pick on every professional scouting board. It just sounds like you're ambitious to call yourself a talent evaluator, which is fine I guess. Good luck to you, but your arguments make no sense.
thebuzzardman wrote:3toheadmelo wrote:
Marc Stein said the Knicks are currently not engaged in any trade talks for Brunson. seems likely we’re not getting him
Always seemed logical it would be an offseason thing IF it were to happen at all

cgmw wrote:Chanel Bomber wrote:cgmw wrote:My take on the Knicks Rorschach test is that the franchise did RJ Barrett no favors by drafting him onto a Steve Mills-Scott Perry-David Fizdale joint that quickly became a Leon "CAA Godfather Trade" Rose-Tom "Win Now" Thibs production.
If they were serious about building the right way, the Knicks would have developed RJ from the jump as the focal point of a YOUNG REBUILDING TEAM with a growth identity, NOT a "win now" 8 seed-or-bust behind mercenary veteran mentality.
We do not possess a time machine with the ability to alter the past, so there is literally no way of knowing who RJ could have been under more advantageous circumstances. And yes, Chanel, I've heard you say it before and I'm ready for you to say it again -- they have played the sh*t out of RJ. But minutes played is not the only indication of good development. The context of those minutes was and continues to be on a dysfunctional organization that lacks an identity beyond being absurdly dysfunctional.
I've said it before, and I'll say it again -- it will take generational talent (better than RJ) to overcome the Dolan dysfunction. The Knicks one and only hope of drafting a superstar will be if they happen to land a once-in-a-generation type talent that's just too good to fail. Otherwise, the Dolan organization will find a way to screw up just about everybody they bring on board, be it a draftee, free agent, trade acquisition, coach, scout, analytics nerd, or executive. Thank god we still have Breen, Clyde, and Walzewski who all got grandfathered in from previous ownership. Other than that, you're looking at literally 20+ years of 100% failure rate among all Knick employees.
It's therefore not some radical stance to predict failure for RJ. It's basically a statistical certainty and has been since the minute he got drafted.
You and I assign responsibility at different stages of the process, and that's fine.
You think the bigger issue is talent development. I think the bigger issue is talent evaluation.
We can definitely agree to disagree on that.
I just want to point out that Haliburton is enjoying some individual success despite Sacramento's dysfunction. They too are competing for the playoffs, and they too have a ball-dominant, high-usage, inefficient star in Fox. Curry spent his early years playing alongside a black hole in Monta Ellis in a dysfunctional environment as well - although Curry's one of one. It didn't prevent him from reaching his potential down the road. To a lesser extent, even Mitch has been productive for the Knicks.
We both agree the organizational failure starts with James Dolan though.
Talent development? Try organizational development.
The big problem is the organization is run like a joke, which therefore precludes both development and evaluation.
In a hypothetical time machine to 2018, a well-run organization wouldn't have fallen for the Durant-Kyrie okey doke. They would have committed to the tank, committed to a PROPER executive search to coincide with the 2019 Draft. That proper executive would have NEVER signed Julius Randle as a fugaze veteran marquee star, and would have surrounded RJ with a stable executive staff, coaching staff, and roster. In all likelihood, that 2019 season would have resulted in another top 4 pick, which could have ended up being Lamelo. Then the 2020 season could have ended in yet another top 4 pick, which could have ended up Mobley.
That's not some far-flung wild alternate universe. That's a very feasible and relatively "normal" way to do things.
You turning the RJ debate into a referendum on "talent evaluation" rings totally hollow since he was the undisputed 3rd pick on every professional scouting board. It just sounds like you're ambitious to call yourself a talent evaluator, which is fine I guess. Good luck to you, but your arguments make no sense.

TrueWarrior wrote:Obi has shown a lot of interesting elements to his game recently. His shooting has been better but the handle he shows sometimes is also great to see. It looked tighter last night and he looked confident with it.
Hes an “older” rookie contract player sure, but Obi is already a solid-good player and there looks to be some real nice potential left in him with room for improvement in his shot, handle, post moves, and defense. No reason to believe he’s a finished product, yet he already makes an impact since he’s a freak athlete. Just gotta see what he can do with more time already.
F N 11 wrote:It’s the kings. He really battled.

god shammgod wrote:
god shammgod wrote: