My B grade had a lot to do with not signing Bonzi to a 10 million dollar a year deal too.
I agree. Sometimes the best moves are the ones you don't make. I love Bonzi and wanted to keep him at a reasonable price. However, giving a player over 30 an 8-10 million dollar contract based on one good contract year and a great playoff series would have been a mistake.
I also gave us a B for several reasons:
1 - We didn't sign Bonzi to a bad contract, which will give us more money to ensure we can resign Martin, Artest, etc and/or get a role player we need during the next couple of off seasons.
2 - I think we are still a very competitive team. We had a great record once we got Artest, even while Bonzi was out and Shareef was still recovering/working his way back into basketball shape after his injury. Take the core that won the high percentage and add a healthy Shareef, Salmons, Douby, Woods and possibly Amundson or Williams and we will be a better overall team.
3 - Few teams really improved their rosters this offseason. There were not many marquee signings. The Bulls upgraded significantly and the Hornets appear to have as well (though there are still a lot of question marks there). However, look at our competition from last season.
Mavs - May have improved slightly, but did not make any signficant moves.
Spurs - Made some nice additions to their frontcourt. I give them a lot of credit, but their primary challenge will be fielding a healthy team this year.
Clippers - Did not improve at all. With their backcourt aging, they will need Livingston and Singleton to improve their games to prevent slipping this year.
Nuggets - Did not improve at all. Nene signing could hamper them for awhile if he does not improve significantly. They need Anthony to join Lebron and Wade as an elite player to improve.
Suns - Jones (assuming they sign him) and Banks could help, but their backcourt/wings are already crowded. They did little to address their weaknesses in the frontcourt. They need Amare and Thomas to stay healthy and play well.
Wolves - Foye was a nice pickup, but it remains to be seen if he can provide more than Banks did last year as a rookie. The team is a mess right now.
Warriors - Player wise they did nothing to improve. They will need their young players to improve and Baron to reemerge as a leader to make any noise.
Lakers - Radmonovic could help with his shooting, but he is also a defensive liability who is adverse to rebounding. Farmar is at least a year away. They may have upgraded narrowly at best. Again, their improvement will be based on Kwame, Sasha, Bynum and Parker improving as well as Kobe and Odom meshing better.
Grizzlies - Will have become worse unless Gay can provide significant help this year and Warrick can improve.
Rockets - Battier was a nice move. However, they did not significantly improve. If Yao and TMac can't stay healthy, they will be in trouble again this year.
Our growth will really hinge on the coaching change. Like it or hate it, I really think that is the hardest move to judge yet. I loved Adelman; however, if it was time for him to go, I have always liked Muss. He looks like a good fit as a coach given our personel and the direction we are trying to take this team. However, his ability to coach and connect with the players will make us or break us far more than any one of the player moves.
Overall, I give the roster moves a B, not spectacular, but solid and nothing that kills us for the future. I understand if this same rational makes other people give them a C.
As for the coaching, I'm sticking with an "I" for incomplete until we have several months to eveluate Muss' effect on this team.