vladetomiller
Bench
I would say that is better than average for any GM, so a B.
Can you name a GM other than Isiah Thomas and Chris Mullin who has not upgraded the team this offseason.
I would say that is better than average for any GM, so a B.
danny ainge, kevin mchale, kiki, billy king, whoever runs the magic/jazz/trailblazers/sonics/nets (and your exluded mullin and thomas).
this doesn't include the teams that are already good: spurs, mavs, clippers, heat, suns.
and the teams that upgraded: bulls, hornets, pacers, raptors, bobcats, lakers, rockets, bucks, hawks, wolves.
the teams that downgraded: pistons, grizzlies.
the teams that did nothing: wizards, cavs.
whew. long answer to a rhetorical question. where does geoff fit?
and the teams that upgraded: bulls, hornets, pacers, raptors, bobcats, lakers, rockets, bucks, hawks, wolves.
My B grade had a lot to do with not signing Bonzi to a 10 million dollar a year deal too.
My B grade had a lot to do with not signing Bonzi to a 10 million dollar a year deal too.
I think the B grade has a lot two do with the previous three drafts that we have had. We can all see that Kevin Martin pick was a steal at 23. Francisco has shown flashes and he could be a very solid reserve this year. Then the pick of Douby, like Martin, could prove to be a steal in another year or two. Geoff has very quietly focused on developement of young players without completely dismanteling the team. I see only good things from our group of young players. Once some of the big contracts come off the books Geoff will have more negotiating power.
SacTownKid said:I still wouldn't rule out any trades. While I don't think any major moves will occur until after the season is underway, whatever pieces that don't fit will stick out like a sore thumb and will be dealt with.
I like Kenny Thomas as a basketball player. I think he fits in well with our starting group as long as he understands his role, rebounding and inside presence, not shot taking or play making. No one is going to do what Webb did for this team, but that being said, I don't see keeping Kenny a problem, as long as he can act like a team player.
just typed this out and it didn't get posted so i guess ill try again.. I gave it a D
- While other teams in the West may have done little to improve that doesn't change the fact that our offseason was a net loss of talent. Yes it was good we didn't overpay for Bonzi but we could have just sat on our original offer until he signed it given the fact no one else could give him more money
- To compare, last offseason we let Mobely walk which was a loss of a talented guy for nothing. To compensate, we signed SAR to the mid level exception, and took a risk trading an aging Bjax for Bonzi which paid off. We then signed a backup pointguard to replace BJax. All the moves filled needs and overall the talent level increased.
::IE we lost a starting 2 guard, and backup Point Guard and needed a 4 after trading CWebb. We went out and traded for a starting 2 guard backup point guard and signed a starting PF. All the guys we signed or traded for had histories of performing in the NBA at a solid level.
- This offseason, we went in not really needing much in my oppinion perhaps some front line depth and a backup point guard. with guys like wright, pryzbilla, and maaglore all switching homes depth type bigs were there. When we lost Bonzi we needed a starting 2 so we promoted Kevin to the starter, making us thinner off the bench. The two guys we signed don't have strong NBA pedigress as they are guys who have been around a bit and have never performed at even a marginal level. They certainly don't have the pedigrees of the guys from last offseason.
- After pushing the Spurs and surging after the Artest trade I thought the roster was one that required only marginal kinks to be one of the best teams in the NBA. Looking at the roster now I think we'll realistically finish the season anywhere from the 6-9 position in the west. The Spurs, Mavs, Suns, Clippers are well ahead of us. The Nuggets and Grizz are just a little more talented. We'll be fighting it out with the Hornets, Lakers, Rockets, for the last two spots. I think we're the best of the four, but the Hornets had a great offseason and could take another step and you never know when the Rockets could get healthy and be tough.
After struglling through TONS of lottery teams any time we make the playoffs is a joy, but can I say it was a passing offseason? (C being passing) If the object of every offseason is to improve your team then no, I can't say we're better than the team that lost game 6 to the Spurs, although I do agree with VF that this is a better team than the one that started last year and was in the cellar till artest joined the team.
Hardly; the Grizzlies were the team fading down the stretch, not the Clippers. Games that the Clippers lost towards the end were mostly to enable them to take advantage of the hosed-up playoff seeding, knowing that they were better off facing Denver than they were facing Dallas. LA probably could have easily passed Memphis if they had wanted to; I personally watched them essentially "tank" at least two games towards the end, one of which was AGAINST the Grizzlies.And I still don't get the whole "Clippers are better" thing.
If you extended the season by two weeks, most likely, they wouldn't have even made the playoffs.
Clippers are okay...not bad. But, they're not all that wonderful, IMO either.