Brian Grant? Michael Smith? Scott Pollard? Chris Dudley? Frank Brickowski? Ostertag?
The list goes on...
Brian Grant was a good looking offensive player and an all around starter in his youth. That pick wasn't about getting a defensive big, and he was actually a crappy rebounder for us.
Michael Smtih -- 2nd round throwaway pick.
Scot Pollard -- midseason waiver wire pickup
And what is this Brickowski stuff? So far as I know, Frank never played for either Portland or Sacramento, and even if he had, he was far from a traditional big. He was tough, but he was basically an offensive player, not a rebounder or shotblocker (in his best season it was 16.9pts 6.9rebs 0.4blks).
I will have to give you Dudley back in his Portland days -- had forgotten that was even still Geoff, and indeed, it may not have entirely been. That was in his final desperate year in Portland, by which time he was already in the process of being forced out by weasels whispering in Paul Allen's ear.
Bottomline, in two decades of being a GM -- 20 years -- Geoff Petrie has NEVER committed a major asset to getting a defense first big onto one of his teams. Never. Not a single major trade asset. No big $$ FAs. Not a single first round pick. Every move of significance has been made to get skill guys. The defensive bigs that he has occasionally messed with have all been fill ins. Not cornerstones, but patches.
Your stance that he actually PREFERS such bigs is just completely unsupported by his history. A guy who
prefers something will come up with them. In that same time period, Pat Riley, who absolutely loves big dominant bigs has coached and GMd Patrick Ewing, Charles Oakley, Anthony Mason, Alonzo Mourning, PJ Brown, yes our Brian Grant if you want to include him, Shaquille O'Neal, Udonis Haslem, and now Jermaine O'Neal. He also wins titles BTw, but that's an argument for another thread.