Criticizing a path that somebody else takes is easy. Taking action yourself, actually deciding on a plan forward, is harder, and opens you up to criticism from others.
I have expressed disappointment with how the off-season has gone, and the path the team appears to be taking. That's easy for me to do.
Armchair GMing isn't exactly hard, of course. But I figure, I ought to be able to say what I would have done instead, if I'm going to criticize. I can only suggest what I would have done based on the alternatives that seem to have been available. As a mere fan, I don't know all of the possibilities going on behind the scenes. Therefore, I won't suggest anything outrageous -- no draft day trades, no major free agent signings, no July 1st blockbuster three team deals.
Just a glimpse at the sort of plan I'd have preferred to see play out over the last couple of months.
Draft day:
Failing a trade up into the top 10 to take an exciting prospect, I'd have drafted players with a realistic shot at earning playing time due to the needs of the team, while still focusing on getting some of the best talent available.
#16 - Sam Dekker
#28 - Montrezl Harrell
#45 - Dakari Johnson
All three players address a team need and have the talent to outperform their draft position. Check.
Free Agency:
In free agency, I would target younger bench players with experience in a winning culture who might break out given a larger role.
I can't say for certain who would or would not have signed in Boston, but I think the following names would have been in play if we could offer them a chance to earn a starting spot.
Kosta Koufos - 4 years / $33 million
Cory Joseph - 4 years / $30 million
Koufos could earn a starting spot in Boston instead of playing behind DMC in the chaos of Sacramento. He's an upgrade defensively and on the boards.
Joseph has a similar skillset to Ainge draftee Terry Rozier, but he's proven at the NBA level with San Antonio. Earning playing time for Pop is a big deal. Like Rozier, CJ could be a better fit next to Smart than Avery Bradley. But what gives? The Celts have lots of guards.
Well, that would be the case until I made the following move:
Trade: Bradley + Turner to Dallas for Justin Anderson + 2020 1st
I'd explore other options, too, like seeing if Sacramento would trade McLemore for Bradley in their win-now fervor, or if Utah would be interested in sending Alec Burks, Elijah Millsap and a future pick our way for Bradley and ET.
In the end, I think taking advantage of Dallas's desperation to find decent players would be the easiest solution. Yes, they committed big time to Wes Matthews, but who knows when he'll be fully healthy? Bradley gives them much needed depth and insurance in case Wes takes longer to recover. ET gives them some bench scoring and ball-handling on the wing, another need.
Dallas has always been willing to part with draft picks, so squeezing them for Justin Anderson, who has some 3-and-D potential similar to former Mav Jae Crowder, along with a 1st rounder that vests well in the future, seems like a plausible scenario.
The resulting team
Joseph / IT / Pressey
Smart / Young / Anderson
Crowder / Dekker / GW
Sullinger / Olynyk / Harrell
Koufos / Zeller / Dakari
Average age of the starting lineup: 23.4
The team ends up committing more long term money to Koufos and Joseph, and the only big contract to use in a trade is GW. Still, I don't think preserving cap space is terribly important given the cap environment over the next couple of years (i.e. everybody has way too much), and a 10 million dollar expiring is still a substantial chip.
For my money, seeing if guys like Joseph, Sullinger, Crowder, or Koufos can be consistently productive as starters is more likely to yield valuable trade chips than acquiring established commodities like David Lee and Amir Johnson, anyway.
I wouldn't be over the moon about that team, but the focus remains on building up younger assets while planning to try to find a major talent in the draft first and worrying about making a big splash later in the process.
What do you think? What would you have done differently?
Overall I like what you've done but I would make a couple little changes.
First the draft.
#16 -
Sam Dekker#28 -
Montrezl Harrell#33 -
Jordan Mickey#45 -
Robert UpshawI'm not sold on Dekker completely but I think he'd be solid behind Turner and Crowder, and when Turner is done next year behind Crowder or even could take spot depending. With Harrell I was his biggest fan all year and was dying for us to take him at 28, when watching the Cardinals you saw more of him then Rozier. Plus he'd fill a need for when Sully, Bass are gone. I'd still draft Jordan Mickey because I believe he could be a Ben Wallace type player, undersized but with some muscle to him could play an undersized center an power forward. I take a risk at Robert Upshaw, just on what he COULD be, Lakers could have a steal there with him.
Free Agents
Bismack Biyombo - 2 years 5.7 million what he got from the Raptors
Jae Crowder - 5 years, 35 million, love this signing for us.
Gerald Green - 1 year, 1.3 million as he signed with the Heat, could bump him to a 2 year.
Trades
Denver -
Kenneth Faried Boston -
Gerald Wallace, Tyler Zeller, Kelly Olynyk, Boston 2016 1st
Pacers -
Roy HibbertCeltics - 2017 2nd rounder, same price as the Lakers gave up.
As you can see I don't do the David Lee trade because the money goes to Denver for the Faried Deal.
Team After - Can have 15 players and dress 13. So Young could stay in d-league as well as someone else.
Center - Roy Hibbert, Bismack Biyombo, Robert Upshaw
Power Forward - Kenneth Faried, Jared Sullinger, Montrezl Harrell (Can play the 3 if needed to), Jordan Mickey
Small Forward - Jae Crowder(Can play the 2), Sam Dekker, Even Turner (Can play 1-3)
Shooting Guard - Avery Bradley, James Young, Gerald Green
Point Guard - Marcus Smart, Isaiah Thomas
Hibbert is a 1 year gamble no different then how the Lakers are looking to do. The Faried trade is to give us a long term power forward. He's a hustle guy and also a run style power forward who would benefit with Smart, Thomas, Bradley and Crowder.