The pejorative "tanker"
gets thrown around here a lot these days. Here are just a few of the things that people using that term get wrong, over and over again.
#1. Tankers are not true fansThis misconception is easily debunked -- yes, tankers are fans. They care about the Celtics as a team and as a franchise. Nobody who takes the time to create a user name and post on a fan forum is a "pink hatter." Fans come in all shapes and sizes, and different fans have different priorities and ideas about what is best for their favorite team.
#2. Tankers are really commonWrong again. Based on the purest form of the implied meaning of the term, very few people are true tankers. Very few of the people who are labeled with this term actually want to see the team made as bad as possible, right away, by any means necessary, in order to get a top pick. Speaking of which . . .
#3. Tankers want the Celtics to be as bad as possible, right away, by any means necessaryHere's where a difficult little thing called nuance comes in. Arguing that it might be in the best interests of the team to shed future salary and open up playing time for the younger guys by trading away veterans doesn't necessarily track with this "tank! tank! tank!" narrative.
Smart organizations in rebuilding mode know that mid-level veteran role players are a luxury that only truly competitive teams can afford. Yet, they also know that it rarely makes sense to flat-out dump a player; there has to be value going both ways.
Most tankers, you'll find, believe that the main priority of the Celtics this year should be player development. This current Celtics team is just not very good; it makes sense for the team to focus on being really good 2-3 years from now, instead of worrying about winning this season.
#4. Tankers believe that a high lottery pick this year will solve all of the Celtics' problemsThis is a classic straw man. A quick search through the history of the draft will show you that plenty of top 5 picks have turned into crap players. Even top picks that yield a superstar don't always work out for the drafting team, since those players tend to hit their prime just before they hit UFA for the first time. Any modestly informed fan is aware of this.
None of that changes the fact that the most valuable asset a team can have in this league is a star player, and the cheapest and surest way to secure such a player is via the draft. The team doesn't even have to use the pick. A high pick, especially in a strong draft, is a great trade chip (the #5 in '07 made the Big 3 possible).
#5. Tankers want to see the coach and players intentionally lose gamesReally? As covered in #1, "tankers" are real fans, too, which means they probably watch at least some of the games. A team lacking in talent is bad enough to watch; a bad team that actually tries to lose is even worse.
The dream of most "tankers" is that the team plays hard every night, shows some good things, and falls short more often than not. Not because tankers enjoy watching the Celtics lose, but because this is a team that needs to add talent and every loss gives the team a better chance of avoiding a meaningless and detrimental playoff trip in a historically weak conference.
In any case, it's a non-issue because teams in the NBA hardly ever actually tank. Real life "tanking" occurs at the executive level, where management makes future-minded moves that inevitably cause the team to be less competitive in the short term.
#6. Tankers only care about winning championshipsThis is hardly an insult. Wanting the Celtics to win a championship is something all Celtics fans share in. The implication is that tankers just don't really "get" what being a fan is all about.
Wrong! Just because a fan of this team isn't invested in the hodge-podge '13-14 Celtics doesn't mean they can't appreciate the journey. For many, this rebuilding time is actually more interesting than the last few years, which were all about minor tweaks and hand-wringing about injuries and the longevity of aging players.
Many people labeled "tanker" will not be hugely disappointed if the Celtics fail to win a championship in the next ten years -- provided that the team makes smart moves to assemble a talented, exciting young core and strings together a number of highly competitive, entertaining years.
Fans of all description would probably be pretty happy with that. Reasonable fans can disagree about the best way to achieve that goal, however, and therein lies the source of so many inane arguments and name-calling around these parts.
So how about we just retire the word "tanker" already? Saying it in a broad way just makes you seem sillier and more narrow-minded than the people you're labeling.