I have some misgivings about the future swap but it's just the worst-case doomsday scenario that has people sweating it a bit. The reality is that the swap's expected value is actually quite low, and it's probably more likely to have no value at all than it is to seriously hurt us.
Expected value is a great phrase / description.
That is all I want to talk about here - expected value - nothing else. The idea of expected value.
My position is that a pick that far out has no expected value. You cannot reasonably predict a value upon that draft pick. I am fine with putting a value on this year's pick, next year's pick, two years time ... things start getting dicey 4 years out. 5 years out is complete darkness. You know nothing
[edit: not quite nothing, whatever is next to nothing].
The number of teams in this league that are completely different to whom they were 5 years earlier is massive. Even talented teams, young teams, teams who were considered teams of the future, who within 5 years time end up being completely different to origin. To what fans expected of them; of where they expected their team to be.
NBA teams change so much in such a short space of time. Average lifespan for a team is about 3-4 years. Giving a pick 5 years away is giving up an unknown value = not an expected value, an unknown value.
I am fine with giving up that unknown value if you are getting back a major bounty - a star talent. You take those risks in order to get those major difference makers. You swing for the fences because the return is so great.
You don't take those risks for a solid starter. For players like that you want to be able to put an expected value on what is going out because what is coming back is not great enough to swing wildly at the fences and hope for the best.