Joshyjosh31
Starter
At this point, I think I've been annoying enough to those who worship draft picks as our only savior. I'll bow out. Have fun.![]()
The other choice is to worship the play-in blowout that has no light at the end of the tunnel
At this point, I think I've been annoying enough to those who worship draft picks as our only savior. I'll bow out. Have fun.![]()
You are correct. But we've been going through about 20 years of the same ineptitude (except for one abnormal bright spot a couple years back), and the current ownership was in place for over half that time. Until we see evidence of REAL change, I'll reserve the right to be skeptical that a pee-poor driver changing from a Ford to a Dodge is still going to be anything more than a pee-poor driver, just with a different car. The signing of Dennis, not working out something with Keon, etc., hasn't exactly given me a lot of hope. Playing the vets, sitting the youth, banishing Carter to the bench, etc., all indicate to me that things haven't changed that much...
What's that definition of insanity again?
At this point, I think I've been annoying enough to those who worship draft picks as our only savior. I'll bow out. Have fun.![]()
As always, what's the alternative? Nobody's parting with their established superstar who's young enough to take the time to build around from scratch, so what's the plan if it doesn't place a great deal of emphasis on the draft? Shipping off future first rounders for a Mikal Bridges or a Desmond Bane? Trading for a distressed asset and pinning hopes on their sudden transformation? Trying to coax a star-level free agent to Sacramento, despite the market disadvantages? I mean, the dice roll of the draft remains a more probable pathway to sustainable success than other pathways they could conceivably trod. If you're able to snag an upper-tier talent or two in the draft, you've secured an actual path forward, and then you can do the work of angling for fit on the trade market or signing mid-level free agents who can't turn their nose up at the Kings.
It's certainly not an absolutely foolproof, airtight strategy, but for the Kings, in 2026, there just aren't any attractive pathways to sustainable success. The last fifteen years are an object lesson in the dangers of not having a plan, of not executing a long-term strategy. Scott Perry might very well be another in a line of poor GMs the Kings have hired in the years since Geoff Petrie. But even poor GMs occasionally find their way to success in this league. Sometimes it's due to luck. Sometimes it's due to getting out of the way. Much of the time, emphasis on the draft for a few years can get you to a winning record even if you don't have the acumen of a Sam Presti.
The league gives lip service to sitting guys out. Watch Utah.And how do we do that without losing our lottery pick for blatant tanking? We have too much talent (mismatched, but talent) to land bottom 3. And even bottom 3 still only promises a #4 pick statistically.
I'll say it again:
The league is intentionally discouraging the approach you are basing your entire premise on and has effectively GUARANTEED that nobody can "bank" on a top 3 pick.
It's up to ping-pong balls and we're going to keep seeing teams outside the top 5 dropping in to get top picks.
This is pathetic. He can’t possibly be happy doing this every season over there in Utah. They’ve been tanking for a decade
This is pathetic. He can’t possibly be happy doing this every season over there in Utah. They’ve been tanking for a decade
Go trade somebody and then announce it. It’s all you have to send out on social media.
Would be nice if Nawlins could find its way out of the bottom 5. Zero incentive to be bad so hopefully they can find themselves on a winning streak
Is this a job posting for yes men?