I hope you have a Plan B: the problem with putting all your eggs in one basket is that, sometimes, there are holes in the basket. Ask the '96-'97 Celtics.
What happens if 4-5 of these allegedly "can't miss" prospects wash out, and are busts? What happens if, by June, this is only a three-player draft, and we end up with the fourth pick again?
EDIT - Hell, let's say, for the sake of argument, that they're all as good as advertised. Realistically speaking, we're not going to end up with the worst record in the league, no matter how bad we play, or if we try to "tank." We're not worse than the Celtics, we're not worse than the Wizards, we're not worse than the Jazz. Hell, records after four games notwithstanding, we're probably not worse than the Sixers or the Suns. Even if management decides to tank, we're probably not any worse than the seventh-worst team in the league. Which means that we could end up with the tenth pick in the draft, and then we'd have gone through all that for nothing. What's your spin going to be then?
i tend to agree with you. i hate hope-and-a-prayer strategies, because it's not a strategy at all. that said, your question of "what happens?" is made moot by circumstantial evidence. the kings may not be "bad enough," but this roster is going absolutely nowhere. though i remain dissatisfied with the new regime's first offseason on the job, the maloofs didn't do vivek and co. any favors by finally relinquishing their vice grip on this particular set of players. the fact of the matter is that the team's current assets provide very little future flexibility. until the kings are winning in front of regular sell-out crowds at a new downtown arena, sacramento is simply not a free agent destination. even then, i imagine it's still going to be difficult to coax major talent to this city. and, at present, the kings are also well short of the kind of assets necessary to trade for major talent. that leaves the draft, and if a front office is going to bank on any draft at all, i'd prefer if it to be the 2014 draft...
so, "what happens" if the kings luck into wiggins or parker or smart and they bust? well, then the kings have to start the process over again. however, this upcoming draft represents the best possible chance at bringing an impact player to sacramento in the near future. except, under more favorable conditions made possible by the new regime, the kings must then
commit to developing their young talent, rather than alienating that talent from its potential. paul westphal alienated demarcus cousins and threw him under the bus, feeding into DMC's victim complex and setting back his development. keith smart undermined tyreke evans by shifting him off-ball and playing him out-of-position. now evans, a powerful top-four pick with a killer dribble drive, is coming off the bench in new orleans. you cannot
waste the inexpensive years of a rookie contract by stunting the development of talented young players...
coach malone's early approach to ben mclemore's playing time gives me some confidence that the new regime is capable of properly developing a guy like wiggins or parker or smart. the nba is filled with "what-ifs," but this draft, more than any other in recent memory, is worth banking on. what else are the kings going to do? hope that sacramento turns into a free agent mecca? hope that a trade package of any combination of john salmons, marcus thornton, patrick patterson, travis outlaw, chuck hayes, and jimmer fredette will yield a star in return? good luck with
those strategies. in my estimation, the kings need to swing hard at a chance to get into the top-5 of the 2014 draft, snag a potential impact player, and surround cousins/draft pick/mclemore/thomas with veteran, defensively-inclined roleplayers...