Don’t you even ****ing think about it Vivek.
We did come dangerously close to it though before Vivek “graciously” allows the man to take a job with the league office lolAt least we can say we don't have Joe Dumars running the ship. That's a positive for us
We did come dangerously close to it though before Vivek “graciously” allows the man to take a job with the league office lol
Goddamn we should’ve traded for Kuminga all of a sudden he’s a Gilbert good versatile defender
At least we can say we don't have Joe Dumars running the ship. That's a positive for us
Isn’t Perry close to Dumars
Not until he utterly destroys our future, like Dumars did for the Pels.
Just insane run-out, trading the Pacers pick for no reason at that time of the season and then trading your own unprotected FRP to move up to get a late lotto selection. Just insanity.
The youth length and athleticism in Orlando has the same record as the Kangz. What’s goin’ on there?
They're off to a slow start, but are still developing a younger team? Lets see where they are after 25 games or so
They're off to a slow start, but are still developing a younger team? Lets see where they are after 25 games or so
lol they actually have two young players with star potential although they might need to get rid of Paulo. We suck and have zero players under 25 with potential have the third oldest roster
The youth length and athleticism in Orlando has the same record as the Kangz. What’s goin’ on there?
Eh I disagree here. I think we have 3 high level starter potential guys (Nique/Keon/Keegan) one potential in Carter. Just don't have the franchise guy in house, but I absolutely love the "surrounding" pieces if we get in a position to draft one.
I feel this may be a bit rosy on the projections for these guys.
In terms of a championship roster, Keegan is probably your third-best starter with two All-Star level guys in front of him. If you want Keegan to be your second-best player, you're probably not going anywhere.
Keon...sorry, guys...Keon is probably 5th-best starter at best, but more likely a rotation guy off the bench. I don't want to diss Keon, but I think he's a guy who can hope to have the same type/value of contribution as say a Bobby Jackson. You need to have guys like that, and you like to keep the ones you have, but they're not irreplaceable.
Nique is a complete question mark at this point. He's played one NBA game! And it's not like he's a top-three draft pick where you expect to have this huge level of growth and want to project him to being a future All-Star, he's a mid-20s pick, and his athletic profile doesn't exactly scream "superstar". Yes, there are diamonds in the rough, and hey, maybe we found one, but I would bet that fans of 29 NBA teams have thought about Nique for zero seconds cumulative in the last five months. So, not saying "no" on Nique, but way, way, premature, and the probability that he pans out as a high-level starter is pretty low.
In terms of what we're looking at now: LaVine could be a starter on a championship team (ceiling: #2). DDR could be a starter on a championship team (ceiling: #3-#4). Monk could be a starter on a championship team (ceiling #4). So trying to make that work with Domas (ceiling #1-#2) and Keegan (ceiling #3) was at least worth a try, though from the start the fit looked very bad.
The fit turns out to be worse than very bad. It's not going to work.
So I suspect our easiest course forward is to build a roster that eventually looks like this:
#1: ????
#2: Domas
#3/#4: Keegan + ???? (If things magically fall into place LaVine could hold this slot)
#5: ???? (Maybe Nique can slide in here someday)
Bench: Keon, maybe Monk, maybe Carter, maybe Raynaud, fill the rest in
So yeah, with respect to your "no franchise guy in house", yep, agree totally. Don't know how we're going to get that guy. I guess that's the draft. The problem with tanking is that ultimately you lose LaVine (who could have been a #3/#4 in ideal circumstances), you lose Monk, you probably lose Carter (which might not be a huge loss), you might well lose Keon, and you're playing with absolute fire in terms of losing Domas. Losing Domas would *hurt*. So it's really hard for me to blame the franchise for trying to build around him rather than just ditching an obvious #2 guy and playing the lottery. I guess that's where we are now...but there's a real good shot that if we take that path, that nobody on the current roster outside of Keegan (if that) will be around for the next playoff game. We just got out of a record drought and boy howdy are we setting ourselves up for another one. It's no surprise that some fans want to just get to the playoffs and roll the dice, maybe find a way to build from there. The tank, as we can all remember, has not been kind to us at all.
I feel this may be a bit rosy on the projections for these guys.
In terms of a championship roster, Keegan is probably your third-best starter with two All-Star level guys in front of him. If you want Keegan to be your second-best player, you're probably not going anywhere.
Keon...sorry, guys...Keon is probably 5th-best starter at best, but more likely a rotation guy off the bench. I don't want to diss Keon, but I think he's a guy who can hope to have the same type/value of contribution as say a Bobby Jackson. You need to have guys like that, and you like to keep the ones you have, but they're not irreplaceable.
Nique is a complete question mark at this point. He's played one NBA game! And it's not like he's a top-three draft pick where you expect to have this huge level of growth and want to project him to being a future All-Star, he's a mid-20s pick, and his athletic profile doesn't exactly scream "superstar". Yes, there are diamonds in the rough, and hey, maybe we found one, but I would bet that fans of 29 NBA teams have thought about Nique for zero seconds cumulative in the last five months. So, not saying "no" on Nique, but way, way, premature, and the probability that he pans out as a high-level starter is pretty low.
In terms of what we're looking at now: LaVine could be a starter on a championship team (ceiling: #2). DDR could be a starter on a championship team (ceiling: #3-#4). Monk could be a starter on a championship team (ceiling #4). So trying to make that work with Domas (ceiling #1-#2) and Keegan (ceiling #3) was at least worth a try, though from the start the fit looked very bad.
The fit turns out to be worse than very bad. It's not going to work.
So I suspect our easiest course forward is to build a roster that eventually looks like this:
#1: ????
#2: Domas
#3/#4: Keegan + ???? (If things magically fall into place LaVine could hold this slot)
#5: ???? (Maybe Nique can slide in here someday)
Bench: Keon, maybe Monk, maybe Carter, maybe Raynaud, fill the rest in
So yeah, with respect to your "no franchise guy in house", yep, agree totally. Don't know how we're going to get that guy. I guess that's the draft. The problem with tanking is that ultimately you lose LaVine (who could have been a #3/#4 in ideal circumstances), you lose Monk, you probably lose Carter (which might not be a huge loss), you might well lose Keon, and you're playing with absolute fire in terms of losing Domas. Losing Domas would *hurt*. So it's really hard for me to blame the franchise for trying to build around him rather than just ditching an obvious #2 guy and playing the lottery. I guess that's where we are now...but there's a real good shot that if we take that path, that nobody on the current roster outside of Keegan (if that) will be around for the next playoff game. We just got out of a record drought and boy howdy are we setting ourselves up for another one. It's no surprise that some fans want to just get to the playoffs and roll the dice, maybe find a way to build from there. The tank, as we can all remember, has not been kind to us at all.
I'm not gonna argue the stats. I'm not at all saying Keon is a bad player, and it's not terribly surprising to me that he has a positive influence on a bad team. Makes sense.Just strongly disagree on Keon. Indiana and OKC had like 7 versions of him playing crucial roles in the NBA finals. He's the archetype that wins around your star players in the NBA now.
...
Or I'll phrase it like this. Would the Kings be better or worse if we committed 34 MPG to Keon every single game?
A solid comparison for Keon Ellis would be Alex Caruso. Both undrafted high-energy wing with strong defensive instincts and hustle, Ellis shot above 40% from 3 last season.I'm not gonna argue the stats. I'm not at all saying Keon is a bad player, and it's not terribly surprising to me that he has a positive influence on a bad team. Makes sense.
But again, I think we as a fanbase are overestimating how unique he is, and how difficult it would be to replace him. "Indiana and OKC had like 7 versions of him" - well great, there's a lot of Keons out there in different guises with different names. They fit around your star players - well great, they're not stars. They're kind of fungible pieces. You need them, sure. If you have a Keon, you don't want to throw him away, sure. But that's just not a guy to hang your hat on.
Yes, the team would probably be better if it committed more minutes to Keon. Keon is not part of the problem here. But he's only a small part of the solution.