And yet I know you were a fan of the Kings in 1990. And that after all was when we tried exactly the same tactic -- traded away the whole damn team for draft picks, 4 #1s actually, and decided to gamble on the future. Knew when we did it we would lose games, and a lot of them, in the short term. Hoped that in the end we would win more than we would ever have otherwise (of course we executed the plan incompetently).
Its about perspective, scope. Fans normally lack it, and even if you have it you have to trust that the frront office sticks to its guns. Successful franchises have to have it at some point. If you are a front office that thinks like a fan you become the New York Knicks -- too terrified to ever rebuild and have a bad season that you admit to and know is coming, so you wallow and shift around crappy assets in a feeble attempt to fool the fanbase.
ALL franchises try to win (possible exception of the Clippers). It is just a question of timing. You can be focused on making sure you win 40 every single year and never get any better. Or you can be focused on trying to win 60 in 3 years, and accept winning 30 the next few as the cost. You are still trying to win, in fact the latter team is the one really trying to WIN. The other one is just trying not to lose. You're just taking the longer view and trying to win big in the long run, rather than small in the short run. Neither the Spurs, nor their fans, lose a moment of sleep over having a horrible season back in '96 or '97 or whenever that was. They are too busy admiring all the rings on their fingers.
A potential "rebuild" for us at this point is moving 3, maybe 4, players. That is all it takes to tip the scale, grab a high pick, clear up a ton of capspace to sign a major free agent, probably grab a few other picks and prospects along the way. Its certainly a viable strategy from our current position, and one explicitly aimed at "winning", as in really WINNING.
P.S. and this "tanking" language inserted into this thread is inappropriate. The players ALWAYS try to win. The question is what is the front office trying to win, and when?
My objection is to "tanking" the season, which is exactly what Packt said. Retooling, rebuilding, etc. is different. It happens.
As an aside, I make a conscious effort not to look back on the last time the Kings tried a major rebuild. It gives me nightmares. Simmons, Mays, Causwell and Bonner. Anyone who isn't a long-time Kings fan would be hard-pressed to pick any of those first-round picks out of a picture of players of that era...
Packt - The terms may be "semantics" to you, but to a lot of us they have a very different meaning. "Tanking" is intentionally losing; "rebuilding" is accepting a short-term downgrade by moving players, etc. as part of a plan to make the team better in the long run. BIG difference. The Chicago White Sox TANKED the 1919 World Series.