A great many Kings fans were ready to toss Marvin Bagley out the door for a late second rounder. Monte McNair assessed the market, determined it was for buyers, recognized Detroit's interest in Bagley (perhaps the only team out there with genuine interest) and exploited it to get a player that was very clearly on his radar. Somehow, he turned the most disappointing pick of the 2018 draft--a player whose value was assumed to amount to nothing more than a bag of chips--into Donte DiVincenzo and added wing depth. He wasn't kidding last night when he said he had work to do after introducing the media to Sabonis/Holiday/Lamb.
As with the Sabonis trade, Monte got his guy, but I'm pretty impressed with his ability to bolster the Kings' wing depth and length while not committing long-term money to any of those extra pieces and not sending out any draft picks.
In my estimation, Sabonis + DiVincenzo + flexible wing depth is of considerably greater value than Haliburton + Buddy + Bagley. In a vacuum, of course. Bottoming out may ultimately prove to have been the more sensible path forward. But Monte has reiterated time and again that he's never had any intention of tanking and stockpiling youth/picks. When taken at his word, and considering his stated goals, his work at the trade deadline gets an A- from me. Moving Holmes for someone like PJ Washington would have bumped this up into the solid-A/A+ territory.
And hey, Monte's still got his first rounder this year. It likely won't be as high as it would have been without these moves, but I think Monte's feeling himself. It's an asset he preserved. If he does nothing more than make his selection and go home, I am confident in his ability to find great value outside the top picks of the first round.