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Lol now that's what I'm talking About! I pass the torch to you while I am out of commission
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Lol now that's what I'm talking About! I pass the torch to you while I am out of commission
Pros use youtube to get their point across. 80's music videos are my weapon of choice.
Back when I was young, we used Boxxy images. Like so:
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(Demotivator styled images were also popular in that generation. Man, I'm really dating myself.)
Back when you were young they wrote songs like "Over there" to try to troll the opposition...
[video=youtube;uSCbppDHp78]

I am very old.
When I was young, "trolling" meant throwing tea into a harbor to make the British nerd rage.
When you were young, trolling actually meant getting into a fishing boat.
So if Pritchard had selected Durant and Durant had been hit by a car, handicapping him for life, the outcome would clearly indicate a poor decision?
Your reasoning is extremely flawed. You can't judge outcomes on an individual decision basis, because there's a huge amount of luck that determines whether any single decision works out or not. You may make the "right" call based on the information at the time and then have events outside your control and outside anyone's ability to predict kill the outcome. I'm not arguing, here, whether the Oden decision qualifies as such, just that that principle is what makes judging single decisions by results a bad idea.
To judge by results, you have to take an entire body of work, because it's much more reasonable to assume "luck" evens out over a bunch of decisions and you're left with skill/ability as the determining factor. Looking at Pritchard's body of work, he took what was arguably the worst roster in the league and turned it into one of the best, talented enough to win 50 games despite myriad injuries.
So, therefore, I'd say that in a results-oriented business, Pritchard got results. Not only was he not the worst GM in Blazers history, he was among the best in franchise history. You're free, of course, to decide that selecting Oden over Durant is the only thing to consider, that Oden is a bust and Durant is a superstar and that that makes Pritchard the worst GM in franchise history. It just seemed poorly reasoned.
I'd say Joe Dumars is worse because he drafted Darko over Melo, Wade, Bosh, etc.
I'd say Joe Dumars is worse because he drafted Darko over Melo, Wade, Bosh, etc.
Yea, but he has some slack since he did 2 things:
1. He traded an injured Grant Hill for part of the Pistons championship team, stiffing Orlando.
2. He showcased Jerry Stackhouse and then was able to parlay him into Richard Hamilton.
Sure he fucked up with Darko. But at least he did some good shit to counter balance the bad.
I would give my left nut to get Geoff Petrie back. His teams bottom out every once in a while, but he always slowly and surely builds them back up. He has a good eye for tough players and makes shrewd draft picks.
I don't know if I'd give him credit for the Grant Hill thing. They wanted Hill back. He decided to leave for Orlando, which was a huge loss for them (or so they thought), but they were able to strike back and convince Ben Wallace to sign with them. In the end, the two teams did a sign and swap of the two players, but make no mistake, they wanted Hill back.
I am not so sure. Sometimes what you see from a team is just a facade. We see what they want us to see. What is really going on behind closed doors is another matter. How many times have you seen teams saying they aren't trading a player, and then the player is traded?
It was a long time ago, but it seemed like nobody knew how bad Grant's injury really was. Orlando never would have signed him to that huge contract if they had known, similarly to Portland never drafting Oden if they had known his knees would have so many problems. It's possible that Detroit knew, but I don't think they did.
It could also be possible that one of the following "many" surgeries he underwent is what really fucked him up for a long time. I believe at a certain point, they decided to just take his whole ankle apart and rebuild it because all their previous work had fucked it up.
Oden was not hit by a car, he was damaged goods with the medical data to back it up.
The most important decision in the hands of KP appears to have been Oden vs Durant, and it clearly to this point was the wrong decision.
...
I have to assume that the Blazers did their due diligence and went with the risk. When you take on risk, you also have to own the outcome(hence the term risk).
Presti's greatest achievement was Westbrook. Ibaka looks nice too. I really liked the trade for Maynor as well. Other than that, not impressed.
Yeah. Other than that he hasn't done anything.
Ed O.
Presti's greatest achievement was Westbrook. Ibaka looks nice too. I really liked the trade for Maynor as well. Other than that, not impressed.
I remember I really wanted Westbrook at the time of the draft, but he kept on climbing up everybody's draft board after his workouts.
Wasn't Bayless projected higher than Westbrook until it started getting close to the draft?
