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Because he's a pending free agent, I think the pool of teams willing to give up significant assets to acquire him is going to be quite small. Boston, maybe the Lakers, the Cavs? Who knows. But regardless, I think it's more likely than not Presti tries to move him for something rather than being left completely empty-handed the way he was with Durant.
My guess is he's going to drive that team right back into the deep lottery where he thinks he can work some more draft magic.
If I'm OKC, I'm trying to trade for a young, established star. Kyrie Irving would be my target. Or, better yet, Minnesota.... but the Wolves would be STUPID to make that trade. No chance in hell RW would re-sign there.
Spoiled? I don't know maybe? All they've known is success because their GM aced 3 or 4 drafts in a row and landed 3 guys worthy of being discussed as MVP caliber players (at various points, not all at the same time).How crushing though..... to lose two top five talents within a year of each other. I really wouldn't be surprised to see the team wither and die. Talk about the most spoiled fans ever.
Not one person has mentioned Dame?
Good. I'd hate to have to hunt you down.
Spoiled? I don't know maybe? All they've known is success because their GM aced 3 or 4 drafts in a row and landed 3 guys worthy of being discussed as MVP caliber players (at various points, not all at the same time).
The thing is, those three drafts were a long time ago (2007, 2008, 2009). Since then, his only major draft triumph was Steven Adams. It's not like he regularly spins magic.
If they lose Westbrook, I wouldn't expect Presti to replicate his prior success. I think he's a good GM, but there was also quite a bit of luck involved. I think he'll keep them competitive, but I wouldn't expect another OKC title contender in the next decade or so.
You don't think there's a bit of correlation between picking in the top of the lottery versus the back end of the order?
You don't think there's a bit of correlation between picking in the top of the lottery versus the back end of the order?
They stash euros or take upperclassmen/BPA. It's really a fool proof way to succeed when drafting 24-30 year in and out.The Spurs are perpetually in the back of the order and they still find talent.
Sure. and RC Buford is arguably the most accomplished GM the league has ever seen.The Spurs are perpetually in the back of the order and they still find talent.
Depends on the pick. Remember it actually got them TWO #1 picks, but nobody expresses surprise because Anthony Bennett is a steaming pile of garbage. Kevin Love is easily worth #1 in a weak draft, and it turns out Wiggins isn't all that.Sure, but a dude in the final year of his contract who has already said he wants out should not get you a #1 pick.
Good idea, but if I'm OKC I insist on Marcus Smart (not only is he more enticing, he actually played in Oklahoma).Westbrook & Landry >> BOS
Noel & Isaiah >> OKC
Bradley & Crowder >> PHI
http://espn.go.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=jfjpw6v
I'd agree with you except that both Harden and Westbrook were surprise picks. When you pick a player higher than anyone else would've and then that player turns out to be the best pick in the draft, and you do that twice, that's a pretty good indication that you know what you're doing.I'd bet against Presti (or any GM) getting even one top-five player even with a handful of lottery picks, let alone anything more than that.
As I said, I think Presti is a good GM and he's already done a good job starting the process of a post-Durant world with the Ibaka deal (which was impressive in that the deal would have worked with or without Durant). A handful of lottery picks I'm sure will help. But the value he got from 2007-2009 was flukish. I'd say the same no matter what GM pulled it off, even RC Buford or Jerry West. I don't consider those drafts to be indicative of much beyond a good GM on a historically unique hot streak, that's all.
Then Landry goes to OKC instead of BOS: http://espn.go.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=h37hwngGood idea, but if I'm OKC I insist on Marcus Smart (not only is he more enticing, he actually played in Oklahoma).
How funny would it be if he was traded to Golden State?
They stash euros or take upperclassmen/BPA. It's really a fool proof way to succeed when drafting 24-30 year in and out.
How crushing though..... to lose two top five talents within a year of each other. I really wouldn't be surprised to see the team wither and die. Talk about the most spoiled fans ever.
I'd agree with you except that both Harden and Westbrook were surprise picks. When you pick a player higher than anyone else would've and then that player turns out to be the best pick in the draft, and you do that twice, that's a pretty good indication that you know what you're doing.
I don't think Landry needs to be involved, because Philly has so much cap room. Also I think Philly should have Thomas (sucks for him, but he makes sense with them).Then Landry goes to OKC instead of BOS: http://espn.go.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=h37hwng
Though I don't know if OKC is bargaining from a position of strength to dictate the terms of the trade.
Yours is better. I was just trying to make one that worked, and was surprised when I did (it required Landry's contract - I didn't view him as an asset).I don't think Landry needs to be involved, because Philly has so much cap room. Also I think Philly should have Thomas (sucks for him, but he makes sense with them).
So:
http://espn.go.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=jlltwk5
Plus OKC gets the 2017 Brooklyn pick.
OKC doesn't have a position of strength against the entire league, but it has a position of strength against Boston. There's no way Boston gets Westbook unless they trade for him.
James Harden wasn't a surprise pick. Lots of people had him as a top-three pick.
Be that as it may, he's been "lucky" enough times to have reason to believe he's good at this shit. And more importantly, when you're in Oklahoma, the draft is the ONLY way to stockpile assets becauseBeyond that, whether a player is a "surprise pick" or not in no way rules out the role of luck. I wasn't saying he got lucky because he always happened to have a consensus blue-chipper waiting at his selection (as he did with Durant). I was saying he was lucky because even smart GMs don't have hit rates like that. And Presti himself has seven years of drafts since then to prove that out, as his drafts have been pretty mediocre overall even relative to where in the draft he's selecting.
