4cwebb said:
To truly follow this strategy, the team should have traded CWebb at the beginning of the season, but the remaining team still wouldn't have been as bad as that Spurs team that was playing without David Robinson for the entire season (if I recall correctly).
No, Ailene Voison's shrill bleating aside, its clear to me this all wasn't the plan, or at least not the only plan. We came back from the summer with the same squad, and it seems clear now that they really were being given one more chance, or at least one more half chance, but were on double secret probation -- they had to prove themselves to earn their last shot. If they had dominated and been right up there with Phoenix and San Antonio, I doubt we make any moves at all until the summer, and they get their one more shot. But as we struggled, and Doug in particular was clearly fading, well a decision was made on the fly. And then when we hit the skids going into the All Star break, that sealed Webb's fate as well. Part of why it is frustrating is because it clearly WASN'T all planned, and so instead of a cold calculation which got us the best possible return for breaking up the team, it feels like we gave up/panicked and took whatever we could get.
Could still work out if we cash in our mismatched pieces over the summer, but quite clearly this is not the way you'd go about it if you were drawing up a grand rebuilding plan on the chalkboard.
P.S. BTW, the odds of the best team in the lottery getting one of the Top 3 picks is pretty miniscule (about 3%), but the guarantee of the 14th pick (rather than #18 or #19 or so if you make the playoffs) still gets you a much better shot to land a real contributor. BUt in any case, I don;t really think we are going to sink to #8, so point probably moot. If we play reasonably well and go into the playoffs as a #5 or #6 seed, well, just fight the good fight, see if you can steal a round to keep morale up, and mission accomplished.