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I'm surprised no one has brought this up before. We blame Dell for a lot of stuff, but how much of it was really by choice? I mean, we all know Benson was up in age and was pushing for immediate results. So Dell did his best to bring in vets and try to build an immediate winner around AD, instead of following a slower but more sound approach through the draft and being more selective with vets and free agents.
You're not reading it correctly or not understanding the point. The poing is about getting and keeping enough talent to win championsips.
San Antonio is an outlier and yet, they still just lost thier best player, whom they drafted, to a larger market. They wont be winning anything anytime soon. They did worse than the Pelicns last season.
OKC has not come close to winning anything since Durant left. They did worse than the Pelicans last season.
I don't mean to sound silly, but can you just clarify for me: are you saying that the Sixers are currently in a bad position?
Cause they only have like, $40m fully guaranteed on their salary sheet going into this free agency. Don't need to resign Simmons until next summer, Embiid is locked up through 2023, Zhaire Smith is on cheap team control until 2022.
Yeah they have to resign Tobias Harris and Jimmy Butler, but they have like $60m to do it with, and they have bird rights for both.
Watching Pelicans games is what Georges Bataille meant by limit experiences.
They truthfully dont have that much. They have no depth and they will certainly move to get some. That roster, as is, is not sustainable. So most likely they are not going to actively try to resign both even with Bird rights. Nor are they guranteed to resign the one they will go after, since it's up to the player and his market.
So nobody called it a "bad position". But it's not ideal either. Unless making runs for half a season at a time is the goal.
Last edited by luckyman; 02-09-2019 at 02:55 PM.
The Spurs and the Thunder have built championship cores via only the draft. It just requires the right talent evaluators. And that's not to say we have to do it all via the draft but it certainly needs to start there. Build up several top picks and then move on from there.
Agreed.
The Thunder drafted Durant, Westbrook, and Harden. Yes, they made the error of paying Ibaka instead of keeping Harden, but they still drafted that core. That's championship material.
Golden State drafted Curry, Klay, and Draymond. Yes, they added Durant after, but they still went to 2 consecutive finals and won a ring without him, just with that drafted core.
Spurs, obviously, drafted Duncan, Tony Parker, and Manu Ginobili. The Spurs won 5 rings off the back of those drafting choices.
It is possible for teams, even small market teams, to draft up championship level cores. They just need to scout properly, do their due diligence, and have a smart front office and solid player development. Yes, there is a question of whether we have the personnel to do that, but the fact is that it's a place we should start.
So we're pointing out the outliers as if thats the norm? The Spurs didnt tank for high draft picks. They scouted well and got some late 1st and even 2nd round picks right. Kahwi Leonard was not a lottery pick. Yet, he's not there anymore. Why?
And even of those three, the Thunder didnt win anything. At first chance for that core to break up, it broke up.
For every Spurs/Warriors (not a small market btw), there is a Phoenix, Orlando, Sacramento, Minnesota, and OKC.
You obviously need to draft well if not to make moves than just for depth, but all other routes are just as important. Which both San Antonio and Golden St turned to to help move their success forward recently.
When the Warriors drafted Curry in 2009, they were the 18th most valuable NBA team. Just because they're in California does not mean they were a big value franchise.
The Spurs' entire success story was written around Tim Duncan, who they drafted. Sure, they didn't tank for him, Robinson was injured, but the result was the same: they began to win because they drafted their franchise's future. Kawhi Leonard was not a lottery pick, sure, but I didn't say that we needed to desperately just cram lottery picks and that guarantees you a future.
The Thunder made a two conference finals and a finals. No, they didn't end up winning a championship, but they won more than this franchise ever has. If we're talking about building that level of success, I'll take it every day and twice on the Sunday.
I literally said in the post that you're quoting ''It is possible for teams, even small market teams, to draft up championship level cores.''
Where does that say ''we only need to draft ever, that guarantees you championships, other routes are not at all important, also only lottery picks.''?
Hello @all,
i have a Question special at the local fans.
I saw a list, where the pels stand on last position. NO is the smalest market in NBA. i hear about the contract with the SKCenter, that it ends soon. (2021?)
Whats you opinion? Did the pels have a future in NO after 2021?
AD will left the team and my hopes that the pels could touch more Fans in NO with a Franchiceplayer AD and a good Team arround him goes to zero now.
Im realy afraid that the AD thing is a start to a slow dead for the whole Basketball in NO.
If not the draft, where are you going to get your talent, especially as a small market? If you're the Knicks, you can be horrible for decades, then in one season clear cap space and still think you have a reasonable chance to get star players wanting to come play for you. If you're New Orleans, you're not signing players unless you grossly overpay. We are forced to build via either the draft or trades, until we get to the point that our franchise has a reputation like the Spurs that makes players want to play for you.
Exactly. And that's exactly the path the Saints have taken. They built through the draft and trades, and free agency (Brees). Brees and Payton have created a situation where players now WANT to play in New Orleans. I actually heard Brees in a recent interview say that he's constantly heard from players that left here saying they "didn't realize how good they had it here." Also, players on other teams wishing they were on the Saints. Its so much harder on small markets, especially in the NBA where the playing field isn't level to begin with, but it can be done.
Hi German Pel,
No I find it very unlikely that the Pelicans leave in 2021 . Gayle Benson who owns them pushed her husband to buy the team because she wanted them so badly. She is New Orleans completely. The fact that their other sports team (The New Orleans Saints) are also there and also owned by Mrs Benson makes it extremely unlikely they would ever split the teams up.
The only way that I could think of the Pelicans leaving in 2021 is if Mrs Benson passes away and whoever the team was left to wanted no part of them and sold them with the new owner wanting to leave Louisiana.
As long as Mrs Benson is alive I'd put the chances at under 1% that the team leaves New Orleans.
Last edited by Mythrol; 02-09-2019 at 06:02 PM.
Who said anything about ignoring the draft? Can you find I said that?
Did I not repeatedly say, for years now, that every avenue is as important in building your team (draft, trades, FA)?
So, is my main point that when it comes time that you need to attract a FA, smaller market teams like the Pelicans are going to struggle? And that teams like the Pelicans are therefore, basically, just a farm team?
Sure we can draft them. OKC drafted them. But when these players finally mature and reach their peaks as players, is exactly when they are free to leave and sign as a FA elsewhere. AS most of them have.
Again, not even a well run, winning franchsie like the Spurs were able to keep their best player, whom they drafted, from wanting out. This is the new ESPN/NBA...
Last edited by luckyman; 02-09-2019 at 08:16 PM.
Agreed. As long as Mrs. Benson is around they aren't going anywhere. She says that she told her late husband Tom Benson to overpay the NBA for the team because she wanted to secure their remaining in New Orleans so badly. This was confirmed by the former NBA Commissioner David Stern, who said that he would have taken less. The big question is who does the team go to after she passes away? I am not sure if she has any living heirs.
Kenrich will inherit the team once Gayle passes. It's his city now.
Where did I accuse you of saying we should ignore the draft? I never said that. I only said that we don't have the luxury of adding good players in their prime via free agency unless we are going to grossly overpay. For every problem holding onto a player entering their prime from wanting out, we're going to have twice that trying to convince someone who is not in our organization to join it.
lmao...I've disagreed with some on this forum that the knicks would def give up the #1 for ad, but if it is other teams(and there is an overwhelming chance it is) they are NOT going to do that deal.
Say it's atlanta for example. No way in hell they give up all those team controlled years at a lesser cap number for 1 year of AD. Not even close.
it's just that people are underappreciating how incredibly valuable a rookie who could actually play star level basketball is.....if Zion is picked by a team he ends up not loving, they control him for a minimum(counting the QO if needed) of FIVE years...at a lesser cap number(even for a #1 pick...its still rookie structure).
So compare getting Zion to signing some star...let's say Kyrie. Will Zion be a more impactful player than Kyrie over those 5 yes? Maybe, maybe not....probably not next yea but good chance by year 3.
But......when you adjust for their cap numbers under team controlled rookie deal vs not the value becomes even more apparent.
It's why I would be surprised if we get Zion even if the knicks get the pick. Other teams(where him signing isnt a guarantee)....not even a question
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