Anyone who doesn't think adding a lottery level talent to our team in the long run would not help us in the big picture is being disingenuous or dishonest. Granted drafting is hit or miss but the old teams always added young to the old and a mix of both is handy. That being said, you can expect no Adam Silver help for the Celtics.
I agree. This potential pick has a lot of value. It is also valuable as a trade asset.
No question that there is great potential value in a lottery pick. The downside with an unintended tank (meaning just sucking) is that team culture and cohesion suffers and that takes time to restore. A 25 or 30 win season can lead to dysfunction including frustration among players and frustration with coaches and management. But the ideal being Joe plays young players, they develop, JB and DW take plenty of time recovering from occasional injuries, and JT decides to wait out the year.
Of course the other ideal would be miraculous development from Minott, Hugo, Baylor, Queta. And Brad swings a deal for a starting C at the deadline and JT is back 100% for April and playoffs.
People say this all of the time, but I think there is very little evidence it is true. I mean look at the defending champions. They went from a team that went to the playoffs for 5 straight years never winning less than 44 games, to immediately winning 22, then 24 games. They then won 40 games, 57 games, and last year 68 while winning the title.
Even the 1 year tanks have had great success, none more obvious than the Spurs that had gone to the playoffs 7 straight seasons, tanked for Duncan by winning just 20 games, and then never won less than 50 games for the 20 years Duncan was on the team and won the title in Duncan's 2nd year, just 2 seasons removed from that 20 win season. Did their culture suffer because of that 20 win season?
Teams win or lose because of talent. Teams have chemistry or they don't. Teams have bad cultures because they have players that are bad culture players not because they don't win.
I?ll defer on this. Not a battle worth fighting. I know the examples of Bird, Duncan (with Robinson) and others can turn a franchise around overnight. Winning solves culture issues, usually. So I?ll agree that the risk of culture demolition due to sucking isn?t huge. But we?ll see.
I just think people don't understand culture and how it is formed. We see teams with talented players that have had success elsewhere come together and have a terrible culture. We've seen bad teams have great culture and chemistry. Winning or losing does very little for culture. It is the players and how they fit that really dictates a culture. It is why you can see teams turn it around very quickly when the talent gets better or go to the crapper if they add 1 wrong person. Look at how bad the Cavs were, then Lebron comes back, and they are in the Finals (and they had a rookie head coach that no one liked).
Heck even the process Sixers went from very bad to 52 wins basically overnight when the talent got better and then they collapsed because their culture turned bad while they were a winning franchise.
Sorry but you are wrong about the 76ers.
The Process Sixers caused so many problems that they are still dealing with to this day.
Because Embiid was developed during that period, his injury issues were exacerbated by being lazy, having a poor diet and never being held accountable. Ben Simmons ego & stubbornness were never dealt with, and we all know how his career unfolded.
Jahlil Okafor early development was hampered by behavioural issues, lack of mentoring and roster construction around his strengths & weaknesses, same goes for Nerlens Noel.
Just last season the players had a go at Embiid for his lack of leadership & arriving late to everything.