Mike Conley came to Utah in a trade when he was already in his 30s. Rudy Gobert was drafted 27th overall. Neither is an argument for why sticking with Fox prevents us from putting good pieces around him.
There's all sorts of valid reasons to criticize Fox's play this season but failing to transform a losing franchise into a successful one does not fall on his shoulders nor do I think Mitchell finding instant success on a winning team that knew exactly what type of player they were looking for and surrounded him with all sorts of complimentary talent means he was always destined for greatness. It's a particularly human failing to see time as a linear series of causes and effects whereby the factuality of the present moment retroactively implies inevitably. We don't know what would have happened if their situations were reversed, we only know what did happen. What might have happened is a judgement call and there's nothing objective or realistic about anyone's answer to that kind of question.
Here's what I think will happen... the growing volume of white noise about Fox's failings coming from the more reactionary and outspoken segment of the fanbase will continue to grow and our equally reactionary and often shortsighted owner will listen to them. It's easy to blame Fox when he's the guy with the big contract who's been here for 4 years of losing and we have two younger, cheaper guards with better advanced stats (who have the added advantage of being drafted by our current GM) ready to replace him. We won't get much for him because of said contract and because we will have driven his value down by telegraphing to the world that we think he's expendable but those same fans will convince themselves it's addition by subtraction anyway. We will then continue hoping a lottery pick will transform us while systematically unloading every former lottery pick on the roster once they too fail to transform the entire franchise by sheer force of will and they have the audacity to expect to be paid a market value contract to play in a city that the majority of the country couldn't even find on a map.
The alternative... acknowledging that no player is perfect and you build a winning team by collecting players whose strengths and weaknesses compliment each other and putting the money and effort into state of the art player development personnel and technology.. requires actual work and the trouble with being a losing franchise is that you haven't even learned yet what actual work is.
Personally, I don't think success has anything to do with a person's ability to make money or run a business but I feel I'm likely in the minority with that opinion, especially in this country. I would take Fox right now over Mitchell 10 times out of 10 and hope that I could help him work his way out of whatever funk he's currently in because I think loyalty matters and I don't give up on people. Please don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that you do. I'm just trying to convey that being "objective" or "dispassionate" or "realistic" in your decisions implies a certain value system which is not universal. I would argue that our current owner (who we all agree has been the only common denominator in the post-Maloof treadmill of mediocrity) prides himself on being a quick-thinker who is dispassionate and realistic in his decision making and he has the bank account to back it up. I would also argue that exactly that approach has kept this franchise in perpetual turmoil to the point where the passion of what was once an exceptionally passionate and engaged fanbase may be irreperably damaged.
If your answer to the question "what's up with DeAaron Fox" is to unceremoniously kick him to the curb mere weeks into his reign as the highest paid player on the Kings for failing to meet your lofty standards I think you have a lot more in common with our disastrously fickle owner than you would care to admit. I'm sure you're both more successful within your value system than I am though so I hope you won't take this as as an attempted burn. The world is big enough for different people to hold different value systems. I disagree respectfully with your assessment of the situation and if it were up to me I would approach the problem by hiring a new head coach with a proven track record and a defensive emphasis and I would be clear to all of the players that if they put in the work to improve the team's defense and they play with intensity every game that we will take care of them.
Firstly, thanks for taking the time to respond with your thoughts. Few things from me:
1. I simply used the anecdote of a "successful" person because it's something most should understand - as you say it's a popular opinion. I even added the " " marks so you shouldn't take away that I necessarily agree with that definition.
2. FWIW, I've maintained my position that Fox is not a #1 guy since last season, even when he was putting up stats. My position is well documented over the off-season, where I was coming across as Fox hater, well before Fox even played a game this season. I've maintained that we shouldn't shouldn't have treated him as untouchable when the Simmons trade proposals were first out there, with the caveat that at most I would give him this season (year 5) to actually prove he is an all star.
3. Could you help me better understand your point on loyalty and how it relates to the discussion we're having on Fox?
4. I actually agree with you 100% on your statement that "no player is perfect and you build a winning team by collecting players whose strengths and weaknesses compliment each other". The problem is, I don't see how this then translates to Fox being untouchable. I mean, what you've described is literally the reason why some such as myself have proposed trading Fox, perhaps for Simmons or some other player. If fans indeed recognized that no player is perfect, then why should player be untouchable? I've summarized my basic thinking quite clearly - Fox does not seem to compliment other pieces easily because he's a ball-dominant score-first PG, who isn't a good playmaker and isn't a consistent outside threat. Meanwhile, we have Tyrese and Davion who look like they could blossom in the PG role, so why wouldn't you consider trading Fox in order to
collect players whose strengths and weaknesses compliment them? Why is it your argument only seems to apply to Fox, and not to Barnes, not to Buddy (who by the way, is the longest tenured King on the roster) etc.? Surely you don't mean to say that we must hold on to every player we draft?
5. What exactly do you think are my lofty standards for a max player? What are your standards for a max player, or does the money not matter?
6. What timeline are you working on with said new head coach? Say we hire him this offseason, when do you then expect us to make the playoffs? Are you giving him 2 years to implement his system and change the culture?
7. Don't you realise that your argument and idea once again ultimately revolves around the core belief that DeAaron is the franchise guy? Surround HIM with good pieces. And again and again I come back to this which I've harped on all offseason - Why, Why, Why? And again and again, I'm given answers like "if you can't see it you're dumb", or "honestly I don't care, Fox is my guy and wants to be here so I roll with him". Or people point to 25/7; and I say ok but it's on a losing team - and people say well put good pieces around him then (CIRCULAR ARGUMENT). People say well he'd be an all-star if the West wasn't so darn competitive. People say put DeAaron on the Jazz and they'd be just fine, and yet nobody can tell me with a straight face that the Jazz would trade Mitchell for DeAaron and a pick. Do you understand my frustration? There is absolutely no way to take Fox off this franchise player pedestal you've put him on no matter what I try to argue. When he puts up stats and the team loses, I'm told it's the fault of the coach, of not having good pieces. When he fails to put up stats, you tell me I have lofty standards. So what exactly would cause you to reconsider whether or not DeAaron is the franchise guy, bearing in mind that we are paying him a MAX CONTRACT.
8. Finally, why is it that wanting to trade Fox is interpreted as scapegoating him, or that we're pinning the fall of the franchise on his shoulders? It's just about trying to make the team better. That's all. If you told me that tomorrow we're trading Buddy Hield and Harrison Barnes for Kevin Durant then ok sure, don't trade Fox.