I think there is an irony here, and I am not sure if it makes it better or worse.
The irony is this: reading the tea leaves it seems apparent that Geoff did NOT want to draft Spenser Hawes. At least not if there were other viable choices. Doesn't mean he was anti-Hawes. But means he was trying for other guys. That he was working the phones trying to move up to grab, maybe Noah (which almost would have annoyed me -- not sure you move up to draft a roleplayer, but anyway), maybe Yi (if we thought he'd play here), maybe B. Wright. And so for years and years we have been getting increasingly restless because time after time Geoff has ignored defense, rebounding, interior presence in favor or one dimensional and undersized offensive guys. And yet in this draft, if the tea leaf reading is correct, he may have been trying to break that trend. Trying to get a guy with length + athleticism. And the irony being that in the end, he failed, was unable to move up, and ended up drafting the same guy he's been acquiring over and over for years, but this time not by choice. And so he ends up drafting the same guy that everybody thought would be a "Petrie pick", but this time it wasn't really and he juat got stuck taking the last remaining big of the high lottery guys (shockingly Geoff's formerly preferred traits weren't considered that attractive by the other lottery teams).
So is this a good thing? Good that Geoff tried to go another direction?
Or is it a bad thing? Bad that Geoff basically failed in his efforts? And when you talk failed in this case, it could be looked at as failed because Geoff wasn't dedicated enough to succeeding and refused to give up what it would take, or failed because Geoff was hamstrung by assets with little value to other teams, or failed because Geoff simply wasn't effective enough at constructing deals. Or a combination of some or all of the above.
I'm not sure. If the tea leaves are right there is room here to be disappointed that we ended up with Hawes wihtout necessarily being disappointed in the selection itself: i.e that the failure was in failing to move up rather than in taking the last big once we ran out of options. And maybe even room to not be outraged by the selction process, if indeed Geoff was trying to go elsewhere and failed. Of course the failure itself opens up a whole new can of worms...
The irony is this: reading the tea leaves it seems apparent that Geoff did NOT want to draft Spenser Hawes. At least not if there were other viable choices. Doesn't mean he was anti-Hawes. But means he was trying for other guys. That he was working the phones trying to move up to grab, maybe Noah (which almost would have annoyed me -- not sure you move up to draft a roleplayer, but anyway), maybe Yi (if we thought he'd play here), maybe B. Wright. And so for years and years we have been getting increasingly restless because time after time Geoff has ignored defense, rebounding, interior presence in favor or one dimensional and undersized offensive guys. And yet in this draft, if the tea leaf reading is correct, he may have been trying to break that trend. Trying to get a guy with length + athleticism. And the irony being that in the end, he failed, was unable to move up, and ended up drafting the same guy he's been acquiring over and over for years, but this time not by choice. And so he ends up drafting the same guy that everybody thought would be a "Petrie pick", but this time it wasn't really and he juat got stuck taking the last remaining big of the high lottery guys (shockingly Geoff's formerly preferred traits weren't considered that attractive by the other lottery teams).
So is this a good thing? Good that Geoff tried to go another direction?
Or is it a bad thing? Bad that Geoff basically failed in his efforts? And when you talk failed in this case, it could be looked at as failed because Geoff wasn't dedicated enough to succeeding and refused to give up what it would take, or failed because Geoff was hamstrung by assets with little value to other teams, or failed because Geoff simply wasn't effective enough at constructing deals. Or a combination of some or all of the above.
I'm not sure. If the tea leaves are right there is room here to be disappointed that we ended up with Hawes wihtout necessarily being disappointed in the selection itself: i.e that the failure was in failing to move up rather than in taking the last big once we ran out of options. And maybe even room to not be outraged by the selction process, if indeed Geoff was trying to go elsewhere and failed. Of course the failure itself opens up a whole new can of worms...
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