It's a undeniable different approach to the first year of a rebuild then. That's the point I took, rather then him "whining". Hinkie's whole design was to get the best assets available to acquire a top 10 player, which for a bad franchise is top a pick. He didn't go out at any point and use cap space on the Randolf and Hill's to "build a winning culture". He didn't keep the WCS or Skals around in an attempt to develop middling talent. And they had a plan. No ****ing around, no talk of intangibles, just a straight strategy to exploit the NBA lottery system and acquire talent.
Our strategy can't be defined at this point, but it's not what just worked in a major way for Philly. You're looking at another 25-35 win season next year with no pick and no clear all-star/super star talent, which in turn keeps you from the breakthrough talent you need and once again stuck in this endless cycle. If being frustrated about that is "whining" then fine. Enjoy the "winning culture" in perpetuity from your high horse.
Our strategy can't be defined at this point, but it's not what just worked in a major way for Philly. You're looking at another 25-35 win season next year with no pick and no clear all-star/super star talent, which in turn keeps you from the breakthrough talent you need and once again stuck in this endless cycle. If being frustrated about that is "whining" then fine. Enjoy the "winning culture" in perpetuity from your high horse.
Keeping guys like Skal around (not so much WCS) is precisely what we need to do to try and speed things up. Ultimately it boils down to how much potential you think our young guys have, and to be frank at this point they've accomplished far more than anything the Sixers did for the first 3 years.