Focusing on the side effect vs. the main reason is not going to help your stance. You never make that decision with the thought that you can get 2nd round picks. You make the decision for the other more important reason I stated and have the secondary reason as icing on the cake. Let's at least be fair when discussing our stances.
This has nothing to do with reports. If they are of the mindset, great! Keep the environment consistent and play who will help the team most. Going away from it could cause this mindset to fade.
I think calling it a psychological game is an unreasonable stance. Telling them that the players who will give us the best chance at winning will get the minutes is not some psychological game. It's as straight forward as you can get.
Interesting. So you do not think any other factors like coach, supporting cast, mentorship, environment, development staff, etc. has anything to do with the player they become? Do we honestly think Leonard would be the player he is today if the Kings drafted him? Maybe, but it's highly questionable.
What would the world be if nobody was ever taught a lesson? What would the world be if there were no consequences for your actions? If a player is doing something that conflicts with what the coach wants him to do, are you going to reward that behavior? I sure wouldn't. Now I'm not saying a good coach is going to just yank a player, not talk to him, and tell him to sit on the bench. A good coach will talk to the player about what they did wrong and what they should do instead. That can be after subbing him. That could be in a timeout. That could be during a free throw. That could be while the PG is walking the ball up the floor. At the end of the day, a coach needs to coach. If a player is not doing what he wants him to do consistently, he shouldn't be rewarded for his "bad habits." He first needs to address it and then give him an opportunity to improve.
This last sentence is highly questionable. Not that either of us could prove each other wrong because each player only has one outcome at the end of the day. For example, was giving McLemore a lot of minutes right out of the gate a mistake? Did giving the keys to Tyreke out of the gate & having him put up empty stats for ROY hurt his overall development? Did it cause him to think he was already good enough? Did it cause him to be entitled? Did it fill his ego that he really did not need to put in all that much work? These are all debatable questions but at least I will acknowledge that we can't use absolutes when it comes to your statement above.
EDIT: And lets not miss the forest for the trees. If Bagley earns his starting spot and shows that he deserves 30 min a night in training camp. Great! He's earned it. I'm not in favor of handing it over to him with no questions asked. Nothing comes easy in the NBA. That should be the mindset we instill in them from day 1.
I'm just tired of the Kings wasting our time, aren't you? Advocating for the same time wasting we've had for the last few years just doesn't make a lick of sense to me. We can basically tack another year of "waiting" onto this team every time Joerger plays a vet over a young player because the vet is slightly better at that point in time. There have been no accounts of players with bad behavior, needing some sort of discipline to be able to get on to the court. Zero evidence so far. I'm not saying these players don't need lessons or coaching or anything like that. I'm saying they don't need to be held off the court because ZBo can score slightly better or Temple can hit a 3 at a better clip.
Last year alone, here are all the time wasters I can think off the top of my head.
- The entire offensive system. Allowing WCS to run the offense from the high post.
- ZBo setting non screens for Fox every game, forcing him to kick the ball back to ZBo due to zero separation ever being made from a ZBo screen.
- Buddy not getting big minutes until the end of the year.
- Fox not playing in an offense that allows him to use his speed in the half court. That's the entire point of him as a player right now. Wtf Joerger?
- Allowing ZBo to have the highest usage % on the team. His game is the least conducive to helping other players on the court develop.
- Skal's minutes being restricted while almost never putting him back in the game in the 2nd and 4th, despite how well he played.
- Rarely getting Bruno on the court. What did they have to lose at that point in the year? That trade was pointless.
- Waiting until the end of the year to rest the vets. Now the young players minutes aren't as valuable because they're playing half the games against tanking teams playing G League nobodies.
As far as your questions go, I thought we did exactly what was necessary for BMac and Tyreke. BMac just isn't good at playing basketball. Tyreke is fine at basketball and was doing just fine until the Kings started jerking him around and playing him at the SF spot. It's not the Kings fault that it took him 7-8 years to become a good shooter but it's absolutely the Kings fault that they wasted his time by playing him at positions that he didn't have the right skills for. None of our rookies have failed here and then gone on to do big things for other teams.