So the foundation for your entire premise is that you believe that Petrie is a bad GM that only makes deals aquiring mediocre players such as you stated. And anything he's done in the past that was a good deal, if you admit that he made some good deals, is irrelevant.
No, that's not my argument.
You believe that if Petrie was looking for a good backup for insurance, he shouldn't have made the deal for Sergio, because he should have known that it was possible that Blair was going to be there,
No. I said GP's decision to trade the pick to acquire a piece that will be irrelevant had the consequence of losing the 31st pick which ended up being an opportunity to get a steal. I didn't say he shouldn't have done the deal BECAUSE of Blair, I said that his decision to make an irrelevant move had the consequence of losing the opportunity to get Blair. It's GP's method of choice to solve his PG issue is what I have a problem with.
or, he just shouldn't have made the deal because you don't think we needed a backup point guard for insurance,
Beno is injury prone. We all know that, as do the Kings. They also knew that the odds were heavily stacked that they would choose a PG or combo guard at their draft position. So they knew they would get a rookie PG and an injury prone mediocre PG in their backcourt. My problem is that:
1. If they felt their rookie may not have been ready, so what? This is the worst team in the league, so put the guy on the court. What is so wrong with playing a rookie when wins and losses don't matter?
2. If an insurance policy on Beno was to be made for a backup, then surely one could be obtained without giving up a pick or spending a lot of money.
or, he should have looked elsewhere for such a deal, although we don't know who or where or when such player would become available.
Oh c'mon. Are you seriously going to say that there was NO possibility of adding ANY backup point guard (remember, as a backup, and possibly 3rd string player, so talent isn't that much of an issue) to the roster at that time other than Sergio? Get real. I could go through the list of free agents, but I'm not going to waste my time.
So here's the question. If Blair hadn't been there, would the deal have been OK for you.
I've already answered this countless times, but for some reason you can't get it. I've already said that if Blair and the draft was removed from this issue, then the deal with Portland still accomplishes ultimately nothing for the Kings, because the addition of another backup doesn't change anything regarding this upcoming season. They are lottery bound with or without Sergio, and he is not the future of the point position for Sacramento.
I like Sergio, and was glad when I heard he would get a shot here in Sac, but this does nothing to change the team for the better in the big picture, because the team is rebuilding.
Or, is it that you just wouldn't have liked the deal no matter what, and If so, then the real premise is that you think trading a second round pick for another a few spots later, and a backup point guard, that Petrie has always liked, plus money is a bad idea.
It depends on the position of the team and the circumstances surrounding the season. For a contending team on the verge of a championship, a filler deal is usually the option instead of having a better draft position in the second round.
We know this team was the worst last season, and we know it will be at the bottom of the pacific division, and probably be a bottom 5 team yet again. What this team doesn't need right now is trading draft picks, even early second round ones, for a backup filler who will be gone in a year.
I mean Blair aside, it cost us virtually nothing.
But that's the entire point: dealing low value picks for nothing in return, aka an irrelevant deal. The decision to make a move that accomplishes very little cost the team a prospect because GP decided to get a mediocre addition who will do NOTHING for this team. So my point is, why does he continue this trend for these types of players when the situation of the team doesn't dictate it?
For once Petrie was proactive instead of reactive. Sitting on his hands is what he usually does. For once I thought the Kings got the better of a deal. But thats because I don't like Pendegraph.
And what is the alternative to: Rookie PG, + Beno, + filler? Oh right, there was no alternative, because GP just made a move which didn't change anything. How is that being proactive? How is that different than if he signed a guy to a minimum deal in free agency to come backup Beno in a potential 3rd string role? It's not different, and it didn't change anything other than costing the Kings a pick in a rebuilding period.
By the way. You have called me stupid twice now and I have yet to call you anything much less stupid. I've attacked your ideas, not you. I might think one of your ideas is stupid, but that doesn't mean I think your stupid. I've come up with some pretty stupid ideas in my time.
Well, you have implied that not just my ideas in this topic are stupid, but my thinking process is stupid, and that I'm childish in the way I evaluate this deal. It's semantics. Saying a person has a childish thought process and stupid ideas/evaluations is essentially calling them stupid. But whatever. I guess I'm too stupid to figure out why you continue to post in this thread when you have called it ridiculous and a waste of your time in multiple posts.
The bottom line is that I want this team to get better, and this deal didn't accomplish that. Not only did it not accomplish that, it actually ended up potentially doing the opposite in the long run. As a fan, I am not, and will not, be content with seeing this happen.