I believe it is possible to build a contender without a top five pick.
Without drafting one, without using the pick in a trade, or without having one on your roster?
Are the Pacers a contender this year?
And I don't think you should count acquiring a former top five pick via trade or free agency, either. It is possible- reasonable even- for the Celtics to be able to build a contender in the next few years without ever picking in the top five, whether they keep the player or trade the pick.
I figured you'd cite the Pacers, but really I just wanted to know if you'd count having a top 5 pick and trading it away counted as "building a contender without a top five pick."
Well, it's definitely been possible doing it the opposite way (not drafting in the top-5, but at some point trading (or using free agency) to _bring_ a "top 5 pick" talent onto the team). That has been the most common pattern to get teams over the hump from 'playoff team' to 'title contender'.
Some useful truisms are:
1) Almost all title winning teams have at least a couple of top-5-drafted players as key players. Duh-uh. You need top talent to win.
2) The vast majority of top-5-drafted talent will end up moving to other teams before they end up on a contender.
3) Only a couple of top-5-drafted players in recent decades have managed to contribute to winning the title on the team that drafted them.
While I'm eager and hopeful that we get a good draft spot and get great value out of this draft, I'm simply not going to stress out over it if we end up picking, say, 10th or whatever. The historical trends are that having a top-5 pick isn't that big of a deal towards getting back to a title. I won't complain if we get one. But it won't be the end of the world if we don't.
If we don't end up with a top pick, Danny will just have to do some trade magic at some point to get that guy from some other team. Neither path back to the finals is necessarily going to be faster or slower.
I agree with most of your points here, except I think most people don't realize:
1)how many championship teams or teams that reach the NBA finals do so with at least one of their own top 5-10 picks.
2)How difficult it is to actually win an NBA championship...when only the very best franchises in the NBA control the NBA championship trophy cabinet. How many franchises have won the trophy in the last 25 years?
We're talking about top 5 picks here specifically in this topic, but looking at points 2 and 3 you made, if you change the pick to top 10, pretty much every title team in the last 20 years has at least their own top 10 drafted player and has added to that core.
If you re-worded point 3, most of those guys who left their team were pretty much conference finals or NBA finals appearance guys who's management could never build around them due to luck or bad choices etc..
How many of the last 20 years of championships have not been won by teams with their own top 5 or 10 pick (franchise guys in most cases- bench All Stars in worst cases) in place already?
Stars to attract stars and developing your own players is key, but....
Looking at the last 20 seasons of NBA champions and NBA finalists, you'll notice that every team that won or made the finals had their own drafted top 10 pick, The exceptions are the Pistons and Kobe on the Lakers- again another example where he went 14th but if he had to play in college was a top 5 prospect quite easily. They acquired the pick (player)by trading Divac.
Anyway, the list of those home-drafted NBA finalist/champs is:
Wade-Miami x3 +finals appearance. Pick number 3 (added Shaq)
Duncan- Spurs x 3(or 4?) +finals appearance Pick number 1 (joined Robinson first championship as rookie)
Pierce x1 2 +finals appearance Pick Number 10 (added KG + Ray Allen)
Dirk Nowitzki x 1 Pick number 9 (drafted by Mavs, added Tyson Chandler DPOY)
Lebron 1x finals appearance Cleveland Pick 1 (drafted by Cavs, added scraps lol)
Kobe 3+ 1 finals appearance pick 13 (Highschool) Draft day trade by Lakers. (added Shaq, Added Gasol, Drafted Bynum)
Bynum x 1 pick 10 (high school)
Shaq 1 in Orlando Pick number 1
Penny Hardaway 1 in Orlando Via first round pick, attained via trading away Chris Webber
Howard 1 in Orlando pick 1
Durant 2x finals appearance pick 2
Westbrook 2x finals appearance
Lets go back a bit further
Nets Kenyton Martin x 2 finals appearances pick number 1. (added Kidd)
Pacers Reggie Miller pick number 11
Knicks Patrick Ewing pick 1
Allan Houston pick 11
Bulls Jordan x 6 pick 3
Pippen x 6 pick 5
Jazz Malone x2 finals pick 13 (Added Jeff Malone)
Stockton x 2 finals pick 16
Sonics Gary Payton pick 2 (Added Perkins, Schrempf)
Shawn Kemp pick 17
Houston Olajuwan pick 1 x 2 championships (added Drexler + Thorpe)
Spurs David Robinson pick 1 (added Duncan)
The math holds a monstrous truism that without your own top 5 or 10 draft pick in place (who's become an All Star), the odds are STACKED against you.
People get a little too into dissecting previous teams IMO. It's true most title teams have players that they drafted in the top 10. It's also true that most teams that don't win titles have players on their roster that they drafted with a top 5-10 pick. Also, you're pointing out that the vast majority of these title teams have players that they picked in the top 5-10 that became all-stars. We have Rondo, who we drafted and who became an all-star. If we'd have traded up and drafted him 10th would we suddenly be more likely to win a title? Of course not. Some people (not necessarily you) argue that we need to pick top 5 because other champions did like there's magic involved, and we're basically doomed if we don't get such a pick.
Of course, the Bobcats and Cavs have had plenty of top 10 picks over the years, a few of them have been All Stars too.
I mean top 10 picks that turn into top 10 players in the NBA- particularly guys who are 'go to' in the final minutes of the game. Rondo (IMO) is a top 20-25 player at full health, maybe even better. He's had some great playoff series and if we judged him off this small sample size or his last playoff series he'd be a top 10 player. Why isn't he easily in the top 10 or better?
I'd argue that he's not a regularly reliable 'go to' guy in the scoring sense that can get an easy, reliable shot off on his own- when the team needs someone to take over like Pierce. Rondo will do one of the best jobs in the NBA of finding Pierce for his isolation move, but the very best guys in the game are those who you have faith in giving the ball with 20 seconds left to make a tough basket.
Rondo's shooting looks like it's getting pretty good at the moment- but I don't think he's ever been confident enough in his own shot to be 'the guy' in those stages of the game. We've argued/compared Chris Paul to Rondo and I think we both came to the conclusion that CP3 was slightly better than Rondo if by a tiny amount.
Why does CP3 generally get the nod over Rondo 'overall'? Because you can give him the ball every possession for the last 10 possessions and tell him to score the basket on his own OR make the correct pass feeling confident that he'll usually get off a high percentage shot, or get to the free throw line and convert, or make a great assist. There's pretty much CP3 and Tony Parker (or younger Nash) that can do this at the PG spot.
It's the one key 'x factor' that Rondo's been missing in his game. To his credit he's realized this and has been working on the jumpshot/shooting to take his game to that final level.
Those players control the NBA trophy cabinet, and pretty much every championship team on that list has had one of those top 10 players, whom they drafted themselves. They may have added to him to become a true contender but his presence meant the organization decided he had the mojo and confidence in him to be that building block. I'm not sure if Danny thinks that's what Rondo is yet. Maybe he does.
The good news is that if Rondo's new and improved shooting stays like this for the rest of his career, and he gets his 2p FG% back to where it was pre-injury- and lastly gets 90% of his athleticism back over the next 8-12 months we could be looking at our own top 10 player in the NBA who wasn't picked in the top 10- something quite rare in the NBA.
The task then is surrounding him with more top 10-25 players and hoping we don't get more injuries.
Fingers crossed.
I've gone close to wandering off topic but we still don't have one of those guys on our roster. Just because we get a pick in the top 10 doesn't mean that player will pan out, but those players generally come from top 5 to 10 picks in the lottery, and teams that win NBA championships have those players, generally one they drafted themselves or sometimes in much rarer case- a guy they drafted themselves outside the top 10, that has beaten the odds and worked his way into the top 10 to become a 'go to' guy in the NBA.
Fact= we don't have a top 10 player yet.
Fact= the majority of NBA championship teams have a top 10 player whom they drafted themselves in the top 10 and built around.