Bricklayer
Don't Make Me Use The Bat
Right. Such an obvious FACT that Harden was going to be a max-level player. He was had for Kevin Martin and Jeremy Lamb. Some bidding war for a guy "EVERYONE" expected to become a superstar.
Lets cut out the revisionist history bullcrap. Almost nobody expected him to be a superstar. And lets stop pretending that there is some mutually exclusive dichotomy between "traditional" GMing and using analytics. Analytics does NOT tell you to avoid grabbing superstars. The principles remain the same. The analytics help make better informed decisions. This strawman you insist on hammering should have died a long time ago, but better late than never. Just stop.
I am eternally amused by people who argue themselves into a box.
1) So, first of all, the trade package for Harden:
-- Kevin Martin (at time coming off a 17.1ppg season, and 5 straight 20pt seasons before that)
-- Jeremy Lamb (rookie, #12 pick in the 2012 draft a few months before)
-- 12th pick in 2013 draft (Steven Adams)
-- another future first
-- a future 2nd
So we get a 20ppg shooting guard, 2 lottery picks, another 1st, and a 2nd.
2) OKC traded Harden because they did not think they could afford to pay FOUR players max type contracts
3) After OKC trades Harden, for a 20ppg SG, 2 lottery picks, another first and a 2nd they are widely ripped for being cheap and not getting enough back.
Onto this playing field stride desperately dishonest analytics types attempting to take credit for recognizing Harden's future prospects via stat formulas and such, or worse yet, attempting to credit their heroes for that insight.
But I ask, if Daryl Morey were such a genius and seeing things nobody else saw, why was OKC having to give up Harden in the first place because he was going to get a max contract? If Daryl Morey were such a genius and seeing things nobody else saw, how could OKC have gotten a package including a 20pt SG, 3 first round picks, 2 in the lottery, and a 2nd? And if Daryl Morey was seeing things nobody else saw, then how could there have been such an outcry about that trade package after it happened. I mean, Daryl Morey's calculator was surely the only one who saw Harden's future stardom right? So why were GMs fighting over him? Why was he going to get a max contract? Why were fans upset that Keivn Martin and 3 firsts wasn't a good enough package?
'Tis very odd.
And completely ****ing illogical and full of bullcrap.
Daryl Morey won an open bidding war for the hottest young commodity in the game by throwing every asset he could get his hands at at the problem. His analytics didn't do dick for him in that case, unless he really is a stupid basketball mind and needed them to get him to the same point all the other GMs after Harden had gotten to with their primitive game watching and other 1.0 techniques.
And the funny thing is, it was the best thing he ever did as a GM. The numbers genius has been down there for nearly a decade now, and Houston is still no closer to a title now then they were then. And any chance they do have is entirely centered around the superstar Morey acquired just like everybody else acquires superstars.