You guys can get creative with band aids, rubber bands, and false dreams. Reality is Cousins is on a contract for 3 years, and cluttering up the situation will not work no matter how much you want it too. Sometimes doing nothing is the better option. You guys get on our owner for tinkering too much, but hypocritically are trying to become some magical magicians with a poor cap situation and garbage filling up the room.
Good luck to you.
And when it does not work, and you are wondering what we can do next season. Remember there was a guy asking you to be patient.
actually, what i'll remember is an owner and gm that begged for patience from their fanbase, and asked that fanbase to trust in the process, before that owner and gm decided that they themselves were at a lack for patience, and fired a head coach who was beginning to coax a winning mindset out of his players. i don't necessarily disagree with you that "band aids, rubber bands, and false dreams" aren't likely to improve this team. but to think that the three years remaining on cousins' contract constitute anything but an extremely artificial timeline is more than a bit naive. the clock is ticking
now, and it's fast approaching zero...
you say that you have some concern that demarcus may not have endless patience. i say that's a
massive understatement; i say that it's been five wasted seasons in a career with hall of fame potential, and demarcus' patience is likely not just running thin; i'd hazard to guess that it's on life support. demarcus cousins' loyalty to this franchise was not in question while mike malone remained on the sideline. but when the only nba head coach that has ever managed to earn demarcus' trust was fired (without demarcus' knowledge or consent, no less), what loyalty of demarcus' was even left to squander? what patience of demarcus' had the franchise possibly earned?
there is no earthly reason that demarcus cousins and his rather powerful agent shouldn't demand a trade if the kings aren't at or above .500 by the end of next season. if cousins' loyalty extends beyond a sixth straight losing season for a small market backwater that's become an nba punchline under new ownership, then he's a much more gentle and kindly individual than anyone has ever tried to give him credit for. what does big cuz have to lose in demanding a trade, after all? that he might get saddled with a reputation for being "difficult"? hah! it's not as if the incredible strides he's made in both attitude and in his level of play have earned him much in the way of good will with the media, other fanbases, or nba referees. there's still always some imagined controversy following him around...
when the kings were winning, the narrative started to change. when the kings returned to their losing ways, the narrative reverted back in kind. he's gotta be sick of it. he's gotta be incensed to see former teammates of his ascending to the playoffs and contributing on those teams. he's gotta be looking at the accolades that other superstars are receiving, and he's gotta be comparing it to the one measly, injury replacement all-star appearance he can count to his name. honestly, i am continually amazed that demarcus
didn't lose his cool in the wake of the malone firing, that he managed to keep his fiery attitude under control. we saw the technical fouls increase under tyrone corbin and george karl, but cousins never quit on his team, and he never resorted to putting kings' management on blast through the media, though he had every right to do so, in my opinion. he just quietly simmered as the losses continued to pile up once again...
hell, at one point, demarcus actually
blamed himself for contracting viral meningitis, since it led to the kings' downward spiral this last season. this is all representative of near-inconceivable patience and loyalty from a young man who belongs to a generation that could be generously described as "short of attention span." that patience and that loyalty
has to have its limits. all of that simmering eventually
has to reach a boiling point. the kings' brass cannot afford to be idle after making such a mess of things. had they not fired mike malone, and had this team already been on the path to .500, then i'd say sure, "sometimes doing nothing is the better option." but now? a "wait and see" approach seems like suicide to me...
a gm like danny ainge is certainly no dummy; he likely sees everything that i see in demarcus cousins. i wouldn't be surprised if danny ainge himself leaked the rumor that the celtics were putting a package together to try and trade for demarcus, in the hopes that demarcus might be enticed by the prospect of playing for a franchise with such a storied history of success (with big men, in particular), and to play in the eastern conference, where playoff admittance isn't quite so steep. ainge is another phenomenally patient individual. he's a gm who waits for the right moment to strike, and when he does, he's usually got an exceptional hand to play. i certainly wouldn't trade demarcus cousins for anything in the celtics' war chest of assets, and i do not believe the kings would seriously consider such a trade this offseason. that said, if ainge can't sell the kings on a deal now, he'll be there waiting for the moment that demarcus' patience finally snaps and he demands a trade. by then, ainge's offer may be the best one on the table...