GMATCallahan wrote:RunDogGun wrote:GMATCallahan wrote:... yeah, I noticed that as well ...
Also, he tried to take credit for the 2004 summer and suggest that he thus possesses a blueprint for doing it again, but while Sarver player a role, he mainly just facilitated (via his finances) the Colangelos' vision.
And the Colangelos are long gone, in part because Sarver basically froze out Jerry Colangelo after 2004.
Maybe he did not want Jerry to make $200 million debt with his vision? What has Bryan done since leaving the Suns with his vision? I wasn't at the meetings, so I don't know how much involvement Sarver played. I don't think anyone has a blueprint for success in the NBA.
Just wondering though, under which owner did the Mercury win their chip. Jerry did win a World Series though, so I guess both owners can win it all outside of the NBA.
I have long credited Sarver for having paid off the debt that Colangelo had accrued. The vision for the 2004 "rebuild," however, certainly was not Sarver's and had been developed before the sale. Sarver just provided the money and maybe the private jet or whatever.
Bryan Colangelo hardly boasts a Hall of Fame resume, but the way that he rebuilt the Suns over a decade ago is far more impressive than anything that any of Sarver's subsequent general managers or executives have accomplished, especially the contingent of Lon Babby, Lance Blanks, and Ryan McDonough. Bryan Colangelo was the Suns' general manager when Phoenix drafted Shawn Marion and Amare Stoudemire, traded for a twenty-year old rookie named Joe Johnson, and inked Steve Nash as a free agent. Indeed, Colangelo 'hit' on quite a bit of athletic young talent and eventually found the right point guard (the same one, by the way, that Bryan Colangelo had drafted in the first place in 1996). Sure, he missed on some other things along the way, and he was not a success in Toronto, but he possessed a real feel for the game and could adjust and build based on that feel.
A guy like McDonough can identify talent, but I really do not know if he yet understands what makes a club 'tick' and what does not. And I certainly do not believe that Sarver possesses that understanding at all.
But they also traded Nash, which you left out. You also left out the terrible GMing from D'Angelo, which hindered many choices and future rebuilds/reloading.
I'm not saying Sarver has been perfect, but let's not build up the Colangelos, they have had their issues with this team, bad calls, and issues after the Suns. Some might forget that Bryan claimed to tank while with the Raptors. Which to me is the worst thing someone can say, that they purposely tried to lose games.