If Petrie signed Salmons as a contingency to Artest, then why aren't their contracts more closely matched? Artest isn't going to be here four years from now, either.
It was a "win now" signing in the sense that Salmons' presence directly impacts Garcia's development, since they have the same skill sets, but Salmons is more ready now, which means that he's going to get time that should (in my opinion) be going to Garcia. The only reason why you should sign a more polished version of a player you already have to any kind of contract is if:
1) Salmons was only signed to be traded/packaged in a trade, or
2) You're trying to be competitive in the short term, and therefore don't want to wait on the less-polished player to develop.
Contrary to popular opinion, I do not feel that practice should be the sole determinant in whether or not the kids get to play, or even necessarily the primary determinant... not on a lottery-bound team, I don't. I feel that our goal should be to give all the young players the optimum amount of minutes, and assess their worth based on actual playing time, against actual opponents. And Garcia is never going to get the optimum amount of minutes as long as he's playing behind Salmons.
If Salmons were an Artest-contingency, then there isn't any reason to match their contracts up or anything. Remember, Petrie wasn't the one that wanted Artest. So when he made Artest's contract it was under the duress of the Maloofs. Bringing in Salmons as a contingency plan means you are bringing the guy in, however you can. And in Salmon's case, GP felt like he had to dish out extra cash or an extended contract to attract him here.
And remember, Kevin only averaged 11 PPG in the 05/06 season. The signing of Salmons was just before Kevin's breakout year, and it was after Bonzi's agent dropped the ball. At the time, Salmons was insurance for Kevin, Ron
and Cisco...in case if one of them dropped off. Who knew that Kevin would go on to break out and Ron would stabilize (at least on the court)? And Cisco is slowly starting to become more stable himself. Most of us fans saw the potential in Kevin, but none of us predicted he would go that high that fast.
I think the idea of Salmons was just a smart business idea all around. Bring in players for cheaper than their value, and let them reach that value in your uniform. Then you are in a position where you can keep the player and get more production for what you are paying them, or you get good value back in a trade. Now if GP could only do that with some frontcourt players, our team might be in a better situation.
As for the stunting of Garcia's growth, I can't really argue with you there. If the team were rebuilding, or had that "plan" as you would put it, then the Salmons signing would have been both redundant and counterproductive. But in the minds of our owners, we were still "competing", which we clearly weren't. And in competing-mode, you want to have depth, you want to have contingency plans.
I totally agree with you about rebuild-mode and giving young studs ample playing time. But I don't mind temporarily delaying one players development, if a sound business move is in place. As of this moment, we don't really skip a beat when our #1 scorer goes down to injury. And when Kevin comes back, we will be back to where we were before Kevin went down -- which is in a prime position to trade Salmons or Artest.
At this point, I would rather trade Salmons. He is more of a SG IMO, and we already have our SG of the future. I would like to see Douby get more time as backup SG too. Artest also gives us the flexibility of swinging to PF on occasion. But the window for trading Artest is going to close soon, so the team might be better served in moving him. What do you think? Trade Salmons or Artest? Or both?