cgmw wrote:BKlutch wrote:cgmw wrote:I’ve been guilty of this sin for decades.
To be clear, there’s nothing wrong with being a fan who roots for “meaningless wins.” But there is something tragically absurd (to the point of franchise malpractice) that the Knicks choose to draft 8-12 almost every year for an entire generation because they can’t resist winning late-season games after the Playoffs are out of reach.
At least this year it was behind RJ, Obi and IQ. Whereas the braintrust of years past would have seen us beating non-playoff teams behind such future stars as Alec Burks, Nerlens Noel, Derrick Rose, Evan Fournier, and Taj Gibson.
I’m like 99% sure that one of the teams just above us will get lucky and land in the top 3 this year. But we’ll draft 12th because we really needed those extra 5 wins in April.
Yeah, it's kind of upsetting to win so many games at the end, but let's say we made certain to lose all those games. The effect on our up and coming players would have been horrible (Obi, Quick, even RJ). So it's not the best to play poorly all season, and then win at the end, but there would have also been a downside if we squandered the chance to see the young guys play out.
Clearly, we'll have a lot more fun if we start winning at the beginning of next season and continue throughout. Having seen my first game on TV as a kid when we won the championship, I'm not a fan of mediocrity, either. Our team has been very mishandled by multiple front offices over the years. When we talk about how to win, however, we all need to keep in mind that there are very few ways to win (often, they aren't the ways we'd have expected) and many ways to totally screw things up. Just because any given one of us has a different approach than the current FO doesn't mean it's actually going to be better.
I wish there were some stats on championship teams showing how they were created (having great draft picks, have poor draft picks but making good choices, free agency, trades, etc.) to show which approach is statistically most likely to work. Of course, even with the best plan, a lousy FO can muck it all up (poor draft choices, poor trades, poor FA signings, etc.)
Yeah, I really disagree and don’t think it’s so complicated. It’s extremely simple logic that the Knicks have punted on drafting a franchise-level talent for 20 years now because they want to chase a playoff appearance each and every year no matter what.
RJ, IQ and Obi’s development is nice to see but none of them project to be a Ewing-level franchise changer. If we can’t sign one in FA because of Dolan. If we can’t trade for one on the trade market, again, because of Dolan. Then the only way to get one is by drafting one. The best chance of that would be multiple shots at a top 3 pick over multiple years like we see in just about every other bottom-dwelling NBA city.
It is absolute inexcusable franchise malpractice to field teams year after year designed to simply make the playoffs (with no hope whatsoever at a championship). No matter how much we develop RJ, Obi, IQ, Mitch and Grimes none of them can ever be the franchise talent we need. Our FO is getting paid big bucks to perpetuate the ego-myth that top talent will eventually accept Dolan as cool again, which they won’t. It’s a lie. Just like going for the playoffs every year is a lie.
But hey, I love nothing more in life than a $30 Carnegie Deli pastrami from a $200 lower-bowl seat to scream on my Knicks a couple times a year.
I realize Dolan should be the object of scorn by all Knicks fans, and it seems to have played out by selecting horrible front office people. But there are other, truly disgusting owners in the NBA, and most of them do better than Dolan does. At the end of the day, it could be we're just cursed.
