I just don't get it (maybe because I don't want to). Even if you did pick up a few players at the deadline, you're still guaranteeing yourself a few years of, what, mediocrity? And what do you have to give up? From the article:
They’ll still have an eye on what they can develop that will make them better in the next year or more, he said, but the Nets have to do everything they can to project the idea that they’re getting better and that they’re a place that free agents should want to sign.
But they're not, and picking up a few middling players from teams that want JJ's expiring contract isn't going to convince anyone that they have a future.
And then there’s the part about wanting to do everything they can to avoid the abuse that would come if the Celtics were to walk away with a premier player in June because of that 2013 deal. It’s the kind of thing that could have an adverse effect on the Nets’ season ticket campaign.
Hey, Nets, the draft picks are gone. Poof. Disappeared. They're sitting in Boston, and that doesn't matter if they are the first, fifth or last picks. Do you really want to make yourself long-term worse just so your fans don't feel (quite as) bad? Lopez and Young are playing well. Trade them for 2017/18 picks while you can. RHJ and McCullough will be back by the end of the year. Let them get some reps in.
“Oh, I definitely think Brooklyn’s going to be one of the more active teams leading up to the deadline,” one NBA source said. “They’re already working. They don’t have a draft position that they’re trying to protect, so they’re going to be out there trying to make something happen that can get them better now and have the right effect down the line.
So they're looking for a trade that will make them better now
and in the future? Hey, that's great. So are 29 other teams. Who's going to be on the other side of that trade? I guess there's always Minnesota...
Mike