Pinwheel1
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I look at our players and I hear their comments and how hard they are playing. They certainly haven't given up on the playoffs. As a coach, I'm going to coach them like that. I don't want to bail on them. They've given everything they've had all season. We have to give it a shot. Whatever happens in the next 12 games, we'll take it game by game. I know there are people wanting me to bail on the season and play the young guys for the last month, I just don't think that's fair to the guys who have been putting it out there every night.
I couldn't agree more and I think this will do wonders with how the players will grow and listen to Stotts. He is awarding hard work and effort.
It's an interesting situation the team finds itself in at the moment. 3 distinct and reasonably realistic scenarios, each with their pros and cons...
- Making the playoffs (at the Lakers expense no less) provides inertia moving forward with both the team and fans. The sooner guys like Damian and Meyers can experience playoff basketball, the better it will be for them in the long run. On the downside, we lose a lottery pick (which DOES, however, result in added cap room in free agency and getting our pick back in what could be an historic draft next year)
- Miss the playoffs, stay at 12 - been talked to death, but a lotto pick is another asset and simple economics would suggest that it has more value now than a year from now. We'd likely be able to add a rotation player at 12. Downside, miss the playoffs and valuable development opportunity for the youngins, less cap space.
- Miss the playoffs, lose out on the lottery - Olshey called this "no man's land" the other day, but even THIS scenario isn't all THAT bad. Giving up our pick this year means more cap room this offseason and having our pick next year (which, along with adding drafting possibilities, opens up trading possibilities as well)...
Repped. I'd rather have a pick in next year's draft, free and clear, than late lottery pick in this year's draft...It's an interesting situation the team finds itself in at the moment. 3 distinct and reasonably realistic scenarios, each with their pros and cons...
- Making the playoffs (at the Lakers expense no less) provides inertia moving forward with both the team and fans. The sooner guys like Damian and Meyers can experience playoff basketball, the better it will be for them in the long run. On the downside, we lose a lottery pick (which DOES, however, result in added cap room in free agency and getting our pick back in what could be an historic draft next year)
- Miss the playoffs, stay at 12 - been talked to death, but a lotto pick is another asset and simple economics would suggest that it has more value now than a year from now. We'd likely be able to add a rotation player at 12. Downside, miss the playoffs and valuable development opportunity for the youngins, less cap space.
- Miss the playoffs, lose out on the lottery - Olshey called this "no man's land" the other day, but even THIS scenario isn't all THAT bad. Giving up our pick this year means more cap room this offseason and having our pick next year (which, along with adding drafting possibilities, opens up trading possibilities as well)...
???Making the playoffs (at the Lakers expense no less) provides inertia moving forward with both the team and fans . . .
???
Did you mean "momentum," which is the opposite of "inertia"?
???
Did you mean "momentum," which is the opposite of "inertia"?
