Dude, 5 is NOT almost 10.
Actually, I count 7 years out of 10 where we had a pick in the top 8.
Dude, 5 is NOT almost 10.
Whenever I read comments like this, I have to fight the urge to make clucking noises... You can't bring about any meaningful change by being afraid to fail, and that goes for any aspect of life.I see alot of ppl with this same sentiment. I wonder how true it really is. Are you really Happy with a loss? I mean think about it 1 team wins the championship every year out of 30. So lets say we go 4 or 5 years without breaking in the playoffs. Isn't that alot of time to hope for losses. I mean in the end when do you ever cheer for this team to win? Lets say we get that Star you want and we start off the season like 25-4 and your hopes are high and for the first time in 6 years you are rooting for wins and then that star get a career ending injury. do you then subject yourself to another 6 years of rooting for losses. By then its been 12 years of you rooting for "Your Favoirt Team" to lose so they can maybe win another 6 years from now.
Well, I guess you showed him... oh wait, except that's not what you actually said.Actually, I count 7 years out of 10 where we had a pick in the top 8.
I see alot of ppl with this same sentiment. I wonder how true it really is. Are you really Happy with a loss? I mean think about it 1 team wins the championship every year out of 30. So lets say we go 4 or 5 years without breaking in the playoffs. Isn't that alot of time to hope for losses. I mean in the end when do you ever cheer for this team to win? Lets say we get that Star you want and we start off the season like 25-4 and your hopes are high and for the first time in 6 years you are rooting for wins and then that star get a career ending injury. do you then subject yourself to another 6 years of rooting for losses. By then its been 12 years of you rooting for "Your Favoirt Team" to lose so they can maybe win another 6 years from now.
but having been a Cal fan, anyone who watched KJ would know he was a very good player who actually was being held back by the system he was force to play in. If I knew he was going to be a good player, I'm sure professional evaluators knew.
The question is, do you build a championship team with safe choice's? Was Peja a safe choice? Was J Will a safe choice? Was trading Mitch Richmond for Webb, a safe choice?
By the way, in the first few years of our drafting we had the 1st pick, the 3rd pick several 6 picks and 7 picks. Some of those drafts were weak on talent, but a good GM would have gotten more out of them.
Actually, I count 7 years out of 10 where we had a pick in the top 8.
First, no one is saying we purposely tank for 4-5 years. I'm saying if it looks like we'll suck anyway... this year, may as well turn that suckiness into a very good player.
Second, what if we tank our way into a franchise player (the way that Cleveland did in 2003) and then watch as he turns us into an even better team than any of us had ever dreamed of? What if that franchise player stay healthy and bring home several championship banners? Just as likely to happen as the scenario you proposed. Wouldn't you prefer that to just staying competitive?
I see where you're coming from, Entity. But for me, I see no point just making that 8th seed.
Whenever I read comments like this, I have to fight the urge to make clucking noises... You can't bring about any meaningful change by being afraid to fail, and that goes for any aspect of life.
I mean, seriously, "what if we actually did try to rebuild, and got a star player, and it blew up in our faces?" What the hell, man? Why are you so afraid to fail?
Why do people here, you in particular, insist on building up this bogus straw man? "all we have to do is get the #1 draft pick and suddenly we are elite?" Nobody on this board that even kinda-sorta knows what their talking about has ever said this, even once. Why do you put so much energy into attacking a position that no one has taken? NO ONE has said that all we need to do is get a #1 pick, and we're home free; no one of consequence, at any rate. What people have said is that building a winning team STARTS with a superstar. And your chances of getting a superstar are exponentially higher with a high lottery pick than without one. NOBODY has said that's all there is to it. So your insistence in arguing against this makes no sense whatsoever.... Its absurd to think for 1 second that all we have to do is get the #1 draft pick and suddenly we are elite...
You know what, I can't guarantee you that if the Kings Front Office committed to a true rebuild that we would get that superstar player in the lottery. And I can't guarantee you that, even if we did get that superstar player in the lottery, that it would all work out the way it's supposed to. But I can guarantee you that if Petrie keeps doing what he's been doing, we're going nowhere, slow... for a long time to come.... If we lose and get that great Lebron type pick then things went perfectly. Just don't look down on me and others for not want us to lose every game this year just so we have a chance to get a this great player who has never even played a college game yet.
I see alot of ppl with this same sentiment. I wonder how true it really is. Are you really Happy with a loss? I mean think about it 1 team wins the championship every year out of 30. So lets say we go 4 or 5 years without breaking in the playoffs. Isn't that alot of time to hope for losses. I mean in the end when do you ever cheer for this team to win? Lets say we get that Star you want and we start off the season like 25-4 and your hopes are high and for the first time in 6 years you are rooting for wins and then that star get a career ending injury. do you then subject yourself to another 6 years of rooting for losses. By then its been 12 years of you rooting for "Your Favoirt Team" to lose so they can maybe win another 6 years from now.
I like alot of others here are not willing to wait 18 years for the perfect team to come aboout in fact it may never come. So why not enjoy the good times (wins) and rant about the bad times (losses) and see how that turns out for you. I understand that we don't have a contending team this year. I hope for a playoff seed be it the 8th seed or whatever just to be able to watch this team I love so much for a few more games. I am not nor will I ever put my hopes for my team on an 20 year old who right now as I type this is probably grounded for not cutting the grass or taking out the trash.
Whenever I read comments like this, I have to fight the urge to make clucking noises... You can't bring about any meaningful change by being afraid to fail, and that goes for any aspect of life.
I mean, seriously, "what if we actually did try to rebuild, and got a star player, and it blew up in our faces?" What the hell, man? Why are you so afraid to fail?
I never said tank. I am talking about waiting for that star. The Atlanta Hawks have not been tanking all theses years they are just waiting for that draft pick to pan out. i don't want to slip in the same delema they are in.
not afraid to fail. Just not rooting for it as if its the end all be all of every franchise turn around. Its absurd to think for 1 second that all we have to do is get the #1 draft pick and suddenly we are elite. If we lose and get that great Lebron type pick then things went perfectly. Just don't look down on me and others for not want us to lose every game this year just so we have a chance to get a this great player who has never even played a college game yet.
Please enlighten us on who exactly is doing that and how.
Why are you so concerned about what kind of fan I am? I just don't focus on wins and losses on a rebuilding team, I focus on personnel moves and the kids getting playing time. I focus on the basketball, not the final score.
People want to rip the rebuilding through the draft idea to shreds but I don't hear anyone else coming up with better ideas on how to grab those necessary core pieces to become a contending team. Does anyone have any better ideas? Are we going to get James or Bosh as a free agent? Do you think teams are going to trade us all-stars for Bibby, Miller, or Artst? Are Garcia, Williams, and Hawes going to develop into all-stars? I'm not trying to pass this off as it is some magical bean stalk theory, but merely saying that we're so strapped in other areas we need the draft to get any real pieces.
I find these conservations interesting. I think anyone who has played sports at a competitive level hates to lose. I don't beleive any true athlete can go into any game and just tank it. Not unless he's been bought. The great competiters never give up. I personally could never handle playing with quiters. I do beleive that a coach or and organization can set a team up to lose. I have always felt that it was a bad idea, and sometimes can start a trend thats hard to break. I don't think that Petrie thinks that way, nor do the Maloff's.
Not much can really change with this organization until 2009 when some money comes off the books along with some baggage. I beleive that the organization has a responsibility to try and win regardless of the situation. The question is, do you do it with the future in mind, or with the upcoming season in mind. Do you push the future a little farther away for todays gratification, or do you start taking the baby steps now. You can try to win both ways, and nether way is irresponsible.
Judgeing by the conversations on this board, whichever way is chosen is going to displease someone. Ahh, but then it gives us something to talk about
I find these conservations interesting. I think anyone who has played sports at a competitive level hates to lose. I don't beleive any true athlete can go into any game and just tank it. Not unless he's been bought. The great competiters never give up. I personally could never handle playing with quiters. I do beleive that a coach or and organization can set a team up to lose. I have always felt that it was a bad idea, and sometimes can start a trend thats hard to break. I don't think that Petrie thinks that way, nor do the Maloff's.
Not much can really change with this organization until 2009 when some money comes off the books along with some baggage. I beleive that the organization has a responsibility to try and win regardless of the situation. The question is, do you do it with the future in mind, or with the upcoming season in mind. Do you push the future a little farther away for todays gratification, or do you start taking the baby steps now. You can try to win both ways, and nether way is irresponsible.
Judgeing by the conversations on this board, whichever way is chosen is going to displease someone. Ahh, but then it gives us something to talk about
I'm not asking players to tank, never was. I'm only asking for the team to put the w/l record into the hands of the young players and ship off most of the veterans if they can get better contracts and/or some valuable rebuilding pieces in return.
The problem if there were no guaranteed contracts would be that everyone would be playing for stats, in order to get a better contract. I know that happens already with the "contract year", but I think it would become ubiquitous, and any resemblance of team play would disappear. In my opinion, guaranteed contracts are the lesser of two evils.Guaranteed contracts are the bane of the NBA, in my opinion. Without them, teams would be able to clean up their messes much quicker and overall competitiveness would be better.
I don't think anyone is ripping the rebuilding through the draft idea - what we're ripping is the "rooting for the team to lose to get good draft picks" idea. High draft picks are no guarantee of having a great team (and neither is any other strategy in the NBA)
The problem if there were no guaranteed contracts would be that everyone would be playing for stats, in order to get a better contract. I know that happens already with the "contact year", but I think it would become ubiquitous, and any resemblance of team play would disappear. In my opinion, guaranteed contracts are the lesser of two evils.
The problem if there were no guaranteed contracts would be that everyone would be playing for stats, in order to get a better contract. I know that happens already with the "contact year", but I think it would become ubiquitous, and any resemblance of team play would disappear. In my opinion, guaranteed contracts are the lesser of two evils.
Why are you so concerned about what kind of fan I am? I just don't focus on wins and losses on a rebuilding team, I focus on personnel moves and the kids getting playing time. I focus on the basketball, not the final score.
People want to rip the rebuilding through the draft idea to shreds but I don't hear anyone else coming up with better ideas on how to grab those necessary core pieces to become a contending team. Does anyone have any better ideas? Are we going to get James or Bosh as a free agent? Do you think teams are going to trade us all-stars for Bibby, Miller, or Artst? Are Garcia, Williams, and Hawes going to develop into all-stars? I'm not trying to pass this off as it is some magical bean stalk theory, but merely saying that we're so strapped in other areas we need the draft to get any real pieces.
I resent the use of the word "ancient" to describe something that was barely twenty years ago.
I don't mean to rip the draft. It is the best way to rebuild. But I am not going to hope for losses this year or the next or the next hoping we land that player. Don't act as if a fan that wants to see his team win every game is an idiot because if the win to many games they can't get a high pick and can't get more wins 3 years from now when you are really wanting them to win because they are now young players and should be winning because we rebuilt and the vets are gone.
I never said tank. I am talking about waiting for that star. The Atlanta Hawks have not been tanking all theses years they are just waiting for that draft pick to pan out. i don't want to slip in the same delema they are in.
The Hawks? Some people think the Hawks try to build through the draft when they were doing the exact opposite. They were doing what some of you are proposing: win now, worry about the rest later.
Not only did the Hawks not waited for their draft picks to pan out, they traded away draft picks for veterans. They are a perfect example of what happens when you try to win now instead of being patient. They traded the #8 pick for Lorenzen Wright. Traded the #3 pick for SAR. Traded two #1 picks for Joe Johnson.
Since you mention them, the Hawks is what happens when you don't try to build through the draft. They drafted players who are more ready over guys with much higher potential and tried to fill their needs through the draft instead of picking the best players (Childress over Deng/Iguodala; Shelden Williams over Roy/Gay; Law over Thornton/Critenton; Marvin Williams over Chris Paul because they thought Joe J could play PG).
We won't be like the Hawks. In fact, no other team in the NBA is anything like the Hawks. They are virtually at a level all their own. But if we had the same draft picks as they did, we'd be a dawn good team now with Gasol, Chris Paul, Iguodala and Brandon Roy. All the more reason getting a high draft pick is better for our future than finishing 8th.
No they drafted Williams over Roy/Gay because both were looked at as 2/3s and they had 7 or 8 G/Fs on the team at the time. Their frontcourt was empty, they had no idea that Josh Smith would get stronger and become a PF. Same reason they drafted Law over Thornton, they needed a PG. Not more 3s.
They drafted Williams over Paul because Williams was looked at as a guy with potential to be a star, and they were worried with Paul's size. But everyone knew Paul was the better player. That was a pick based on potential. So you're dead wrong on that one. They drafted because a player played a certain position, not because 1 was more ready than the other.
Honestly though, when they got SAR he was still a pretty young guy. He was only 25 or 26. They thought they were getting a faily young all star PF. Unfortunately for them SAR started losing his athleticism which was what made him good and they couldn't get a good GROUP of players around him. They didn't know Gasol would be this good. They didn't know SAR would start losing his athleticism(his last 2 seasons there his BPG fell by half to 0.5). Bad trade? Yeah. But it could have just as easily turned out good for them.
I liked the Joe Johnson trade. They needed a franchise guy. He's not a franchise guy but he's the closest thing there was and he's still young. That wasn't a bad trade. Especially not if they start to play better this year.