I know not everyone here is a fan, but in light of reports that Derrick Williams is unhappy in Minnesota, and his lack of playing time, it looks like he might be considered expendable right now. The way AK-47 is playing, you have to figure he'll be back next season so it looks like Pekovic/Love/Kirilenko/Rubio is their core. They have obvious needs at SG and backup big. We have, well, we're all familiar with our many problems. I hate making these trade scenarios, but throwing out acquiring Williams as an idea without finding a feasible way how doesn't seem all that useful either, so I'll give it a go.
Sacramento Trades:
Marcus Thornton (signed for 2 more seasons)
Jason Thompson (signed for 4 more seasons)
Minnesota Trades:
Derrick Williams (signed for 1 more season + team option)
Luke Ridnour (signed for 1 more season)
Greg Steimsma (team option)
Now at first glance, this might look bad for us. Ridnour and Steimsma are throw-ins, Williams hasn't been all that productive so far, and Thornton and Thompson are both key contributors for us. However, we've been locked into mediocrity for a long time now and I don't think either Thompson or Thornton are going to pull us out of it. Williams is potentially the best player in this trade. He can play either forward position, but he'd start at SF. Let me go through my thinking though for both teams...
For Minnesota -- Ridnour is going to lose his starting job to Rubio pretty soon and they already have Barea signed as a backup and Alexey Shved who's been one of the breakout stars for them this season. I think Ridnour is the expendable one, though the trade still works with JJ Barea instead. Meanwhile Brandon Roy is permanently injured (no surprise there) and Malcolm Lee hasn't been giving them much in his minutes. Stiemsma is no big loss. Thompson gives them a legit backup big who's a relative bargain for the next 4 years. Thornton gives them scoring in their backcourt -- which will be even more of an issue once Rubio takes over. So that's two productive players with decent contracts to provide some roster stability.
For Sacramento -- The goal obviously is to acquire a young talented forward who can fit into our starting lineup and give us a different dimension offensively. The secondary goal is to shake up the roster and try to create more of a clear path forward. So with that in mind, Williams at SF is an offensive threat who can score in the post and space the floor. Defensively he needs some coaching, but he's at least going to bring rebounding and the occasional blocked shot. He's not the defensive role-player at SF we've all been calling for, but he replaces Thornton as our third option and fits in better alongside Cousins and Evans.
The real problem for us is that this opens up a hole in our frontcourt. Thompson has been a steadying influence alongside the erratic play of Cousins and Robinson, but long-term he's more of a luxury than a necessity and we're going nowhere with our current roster. Hayes takes his place in the starting lineup for now with Robinson hopefully ready to takeover next season. We're seriously undersized at that point, so the priority would be to find a new backup big to replace Thompson. We can't trade our draft pick anyway because of the Hickson deal, so that's one option. Steimsma gets reserve minutes as a backup C for this season (which, honestly, probably doesn't matter anyway) and we look to replace him in the off-season. So this is one depth chart...
Ridnour / Brooks / Fredette
Evans / Salmons / Fredette
Williams / Salmons / Johnson
Hayes / Robinson / Wiliams
Cousins / Hayes / Steimsma
or perhaps...
Evans (Ridnour/Brooks/Fredette)
Salmons
Williams (Johnson)
Robinson
Cousins (Hayes)
Ridnour and Steimsma are short-term plug ins, not long-term solutions. Steimsma and Brooks probably wouldn't be back next season. We might try to re-sign Johnson as a backup SF or find someone else to fill that role. The new core is Evans/Williams/Robinson/Cousins. That's a young core who could potentially do some damage. We'd still have to figure out the other guard position, with Fredette and Salmons as possible in-house options. I don't know that this is our best solution for improving the team, but it's something. It's a lot to give up, but it actually clears up some long-term roster flexibility for us and I really believe in Williams' talent. Minnesota is going to need a lot of enticement to give up on Williams so quickly. I don't know if Thornton and Thompson are enough to do it, but they're not getting Evans or Cousins and we can't trade our pick, so that's the best we can do.
Sacramento Trades:
Marcus Thornton (signed for 2 more seasons)
Jason Thompson (signed for 4 more seasons)
Minnesota Trades:
Derrick Williams (signed for 1 more season + team option)
Luke Ridnour (signed for 1 more season)
Greg Steimsma (team option)
Now at first glance, this might look bad for us. Ridnour and Steimsma are throw-ins, Williams hasn't been all that productive so far, and Thornton and Thompson are both key contributors for us. However, we've been locked into mediocrity for a long time now and I don't think either Thompson or Thornton are going to pull us out of it. Williams is potentially the best player in this trade. He can play either forward position, but he'd start at SF. Let me go through my thinking though for both teams...
For Minnesota -- Ridnour is going to lose his starting job to Rubio pretty soon and they already have Barea signed as a backup and Alexey Shved who's been one of the breakout stars for them this season. I think Ridnour is the expendable one, though the trade still works with JJ Barea instead. Meanwhile Brandon Roy is permanently injured (no surprise there) and Malcolm Lee hasn't been giving them much in his minutes. Stiemsma is no big loss. Thompson gives them a legit backup big who's a relative bargain for the next 4 years. Thornton gives them scoring in their backcourt -- which will be even more of an issue once Rubio takes over. So that's two productive players with decent contracts to provide some roster stability.
For Sacramento -- The goal obviously is to acquire a young talented forward who can fit into our starting lineup and give us a different dimension offensively. The secondary goal is to shake up the roster and try to create more of a clear path forward. So with that in mind, Williams at SF is an offensive threat who can score in the post and space the floor. Defensively he needs some coaching, but he's at least going to bring rebounding and the occasional blocked shot. He's not the defensive role-player at SF we've all been calling for, but he replaces Thornton as our third option and fits in better alongside Cousins and Evans.
The real problem for us is that this opens up a hole in our frontcourt. Thompson has been a steadying influence alongside the erratic play of Cousins and Robinson, but long-term he's more of a luxury than a necessity and we're going nowhere with our current roster. Hayes takes his place in the starting lineup for now with Robinson hopefully ready to takeover next season. We're seriously undersized at that point, so the priority would be to find a new backup big to replace Thompson. We can't trade our draft pick anyway because of the Hickson deal, so that's one option. Steimsma gets reserve minutes as a backup C for this season (which, honestly, probably doesn't matter anyway) and we look to replace him in the off-season. So this is one depth chart...
Ridnour / Brooks / Fredette
Evans / Salmons / Fredette
Williams / Salmons / Johnson
Hayes / Robinson / Wiliams
Cousins / Hayes / Steimsma
or perhaps...
Evans (Ridnour/Brooks/Fredette)
Salmons
Williams (Johnson)
Robinson
Cousins (Hayes)
Ridnour and Steimsma are short-term plug ins, not long-term solutions. Steimsma and Brooks probably wouldn't be back next season. We might try to re-sign Johnson as a backup SF or find someone else to fill that role. The new core is Evans/Williams/Robinson/Cousins. That's a young core who could potentially do some damage. We'd still have to figure out the other guard position, with Fredette and Salmons as possible in-house options. I don't know that this is our best solution for improving the team, but it's something. It's a lot to give up, but it actually clears up some long-term roster flexibility for us and I really believe in Williams' talent. Minnesota is going to need a lot of enticement to give up on Williams so quickly. I don't know if Thornton and Thompson are enough to do it, but they're not getting Evans or Cousins and we can't trade our pick, so that's the best we can do.