So it's all done, it's all official, it's all been signed, press conference is over, David Griffin is the new ''Executive Vice President of Basketball Operations'' for the New Orleans Pelicans. Whatever else that means, it means he's the guy who is, at the end of the day, in charge. He may as well be called ''Executive Vice President of Trading Anthony Davis''. We've heard a lot about how amazing he is, and how well respected he is around the league. But what about his perspectives? What viewpoints does he hold? What's his outlook? I decided to take a look at a few interviews, a few podcasts he's been on, a few TV appearances, and try to put together a little portrait of the man who's now running our franchise. Each section begins with a bold title, so if all you care about is his perspective on the draft, for example, you can find that easily without having to read anything else. Sources used in this post are included at the bottom. There was some other sources I watched or listened to (for example, Griffin's hour long appearance on Woj's podcast in April of last year) that I didn't include here because they didn't really address anything too relevant to this post. I watched and read a lot more than what's cited here.
DISCLAIMER: Obviously an evaluation like this will contain some personal opinion, and there's no question that some information simply won't be available to fans. So take this with a grain of salt. It's obviously fine for you to disagree with a personal evaluation that I make.
Style of Rebuild One thing seems to be fairly clear: David Griffin doesn't want to rush things. In an interview with SI in February [source 1] he discussed having to build around Lebron James as being a very different experience from running a normal team. ''A lot of teams get to build in more long-view, mindful, sustainable way, but with the championship in sight each year, that needs to be adapted'' he says, and that sounds to me a little like a guy who actually prefers the former set up. Using terms like ''mindful'' and ''sustainable'' implies that the rush-job of running a Lebron team requires being unsustainable, and a little mindless in terms of the franchise's future, and it's good to see him acknowledging the difficulties of that time in CLE. It's good that he recognises that running a team that way isn't always going to work for every team, and can be a terrible strategy for long term success.
At the press conference yesterday, he made it clear that his intention is to build this franchise for ''generational'' success, as he put it. He also added in the media availability after the presser that the way Cleveland was built was very ''inorganic'' and that there's a chance in New Orleans to be more ''mindful of sustaining success'' and ''playing the long game'' [2] There's those key words again, mindful and sustained.
Trade Preferences We've been pretty lucky to get Griffin's fairly open opinions on the kinds of trades he prefers [3] It's good to know the attitude your head guy takes when there's something like that Anthony Davis trade coming up. Of course, everyone has seen the clip by now where Griffin says that he would want at least one young guy with star potential, draft picks, and a high quality roleplayer.
For a lot of people, that seems to have translated into them thinking that Griffin has his eye on the Boston trade. Now, of course that's possible, but there is also this to consider: in the SI interview, Griffin discusses trades a little bit and he was asked specifically about how LA handled the trade deadling with regards to Davis. He made it clear that for him, 'the teams that are most successful, sort of come in at the 11th hour under the cover of night and make a deal. I look at what [former Jazz general manager] Kevin O’Connor did when he traded Deron Williams to the Nets, by way of example. Nobody heard that coming and he made a very positive deal for his franchise and set up the future of his franchise. I think that’s how you should do things'' [1]. And speaking of Anthony Davis and trades, he also adds this later in the interview: ''You need to maximize your asset value all the time [...] remain flexible they’ll be able to accumulate the right assets for the good of the franchise.''
Concerning Tanking The last thing to take from the SI interview is that Griffin is against tanking. Kinda. He notes however, that in Cleveland due to the loss of Lebron when he first took up residence there, he knew that ''we were in one of those rare situations where emotionally, with the city, losing was going to be someone else’s fault. So we didn’t need to bring a ton of rhetoric to a tanking campaign, we could just go about the process of maximizing and accumulating assets.''
To me, that sounds like someone saying that he isn't in favour of ''tanking'', but he is very willing to ''just go about the process'', particularly when losing is ''someone else's fault'' - ding ding ding, that's alarm bells for Anthony Davis ditching the team midway through a season. Depending on the trade return, Griffin could be willing to allow one season worth of going ''about the process'' while the city recovers from ''someone else''.
Concerning Ethos We heard a lot in the press conference about the idea of family, and that's something that Griffin mentions a lot. When asked about the gameplan of landing big time free agents [4] Griffin responded ''the thing for us [in Cleveland] was just to try to build something that everybody wanted to be part of. You know, you see it in Houston, [...] what CP said about the joy they have there, Golden State's a great example, Kevin was really attracted to the joy-machine, the joy-engine that is Golden State, and I think if you create a family-like atmosphere, where you tell people what they need to hear, guys want to be part of what you're doing because it's authentic.''
The Draft Griffin notes that when drafting the right player, a lot of it depends on your system and your coaching staff; this is a worry, if he keeps Gentry on, in my view. Our system is run and gun with no defense. Drafting players for that is kind of concerning. He adds, however, that ''the most important thing to keep in mind is that it's about the human beings first'' [4], and adds that ''if a guy is unwilling to fail, very often he won't.'' That tells you a little something about the mentality he's looking for in players when draft night comes around. It appears that one of his highest concerns will be motor and work ethic.
At least a little of this probably comes from learning from his own mistakes. Griffin drafted Anthony Bennett in 2013 as the #1 overall pick, and he recognises the mistake that was. ''The issue with Anthony was, and we had no way of knowing it at the time, the kid had no desire to overcome adversity whatsoever. As soon as it was hard, he was out,” Griffin was quoted as saying [5] ''His whole life, he rolled out of bed bigger, better, and more talented than everybody else. As soon as it was hard, it was over. And I was the one on campus at UNLV. I’m the one who got sold the bill of goods and I bought it hook, line, and sinker. You **** up sometimes.''
Griffin's change in focus since then from raw talent, to instead being more focused on personality and work ethic is an important thing in two respects. On one level, it tells us that he's willing to own up to his own mistakes and learn from them. On the second, it reinforces his overall strategy that he's repeated time and again over the last few years, and again at the press conference yesterday: Griffin wants to build a team with an identity that revolves around honesty, hard work, motor, and investment. Either you're all the way in, or you're all the way out.
I have my doubts about Griffin still. But he does have a game plan, and the game plan looks positive.
Sources:
1 -SI Interview: https://www.si.com/nba/2019/02/22/da...ng-dan-gilbert
2 -Press Conference Media Session from Wednesday: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHjHruOL3d0
3 -David Griffin's trade preferences video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8g_KFsae2PQ
4 -Challenges of Being a GM video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MvT9e-NYRzQ
5 -Having Anthony Bennett on his resume: https://theathletic.com/135466/2017/...013-nba-draft/