It seems pretty asinine to say the Thunder's rebuild hasn't "worked" just because all they've gotten out of it is a ton of regular season wins every year since 2009 and a number of playoff series victories, including a Finals appearance.
There's probably plenty more where that came from, too, provided Durant sticks around.
I'd be freaking ecstatic if the Celts ended up with a young team prepared to win 50-60 games every year for 5-10 years, even if they ultimately never won a title. That's a wildly successful rebuild.
Oh I agree. The Thunder are a model of what tanking can do and can yield. That is why it is a viable method, because you know it can work.
I know you didn't say it, but it's a sentiment I've seen thrown out there. "Well, they haven't won anything, so obviously tanking didn't work THAT well for them, even in the best case scenario."
Assembling a team of multiple superstars, winning 50-60 games for 5+ years, and making it to the Finals . . . that's a fantastic outcome for a rebuild by any method.
Heck, if the Celts had some worse luck in the '08 playoffs, we might be talking about the KG era in those terms. If all we got out of the summer of '07 was a half decade of contention and a single unsuccessful Finals appearance, would you call that a failure? I wouldn't. Certainly it would have been short of our expectations. Arguably what we got was well short of our expectations, thanks to KG's knee injury.
But still, as a fan of a Celts team that right now seems like it could be anywhere from two years to a decade -- or two! -- away from contending with a roster featuring multiple superstars, I can't sit here and say that the Thunder have had a disappointing run.