Mos_Heat wrote:RCM88x wrote:Mos_Heat wrote:No, it doesn't work this way. If your title is a President of Basketball operations or whatever you can't be blameless. After the bubble they were in a very good position but screwed up almost every move since
As long as you have a boss you can be blameless.
I disagree they were in a good spot after the bubble too. Both of their best players past their prime. Multiple contributors we're on the team for 1 year deals. Not a lot of young players with team friendly contracts.
AD 27
KCP 27
Caruso 26
Kuzma 25
THT 19
They had Green's expiring 15m, 1st round pick in 2020(and 2021), full MLE, BIE. That's a lot of flexibility
Honestly trading DG was probably their first mistake, not sure if that was motivated by LeBron n'camp or what.
But looking back perhaps trading AD when he was at the peak of his value would have been best, obviously that never would have happened.
I do think their one big mistake recently is picking THT over Caruso. But I sort of believe their motives were financial there and future outlook, which was stupid.
All that being said. The team was never really in a great roster at any point. LeBron and AD just were insane that first season together and Rondo played his best basketball in a decade. Everyone else was simply acceptable or worse.
Obviously the Westbrook trade was terrible but he was being pushed to do something and it was the only something that seemed to be acceptable.
If it were me I would probably have just ran the team back w/ Caruso instead of THT and tried to add Monk and McGee instead of Dwight, Ariza, Bazemore and DAJ.
But again maybe those guys were chosen by someone else. Who really knows.

















