There isn't a team in the league wouldn't sign Covington, Stauskas, Wroten, Thompson, and Grant to their roster immediately if they were available (at least at vet minimum type contracts). Marshall had more suitors than just Philly last summer.
People love to talk in hyperbole with the Sixers. It is the new fun thing to do, but it is just silly talk.
Do you actually read what you write? Stauskas was a freakin' lottery pick and now you think it proves something to say other teams would offer him a vet minimum deal? That other teams would pay them peanuts to be the 12th or 13th guy on the roster? That's supposed to prove something positive about Philly, three years into a tank?
Mike
Um, did you not read the post I responding to?
You can do it. Say one small mistake or bad move the 76ers made? It won't kill ya i promise.
The Sixers have done some things I probably wouldn't have done, but that doesn't mean it was a mistake. For example, I wouldn't have drafted Saric. They already had Noel coming back from injury and had just drafted Embiid who was going to miss time. Adding another lottery pick who wasn't going to play for awhile seemed like an odd move, but I can't say it was a mistake either until I see what Saric actually does when he comes over. Saric might go on to a Hall of Fame career in Philly, or he might flame out of the league. You can't call that a mistake until you see what Saric does as a NBA player. What I can commend Philly on is they knew they wanted Saric so they went and found a trade where they re-acquired their own pick to move back a couple of spots and still got Saric. That is a brilliant move because they got the guy they wanted and additional assets.
I would have kept Aldemir, who I think would have been a quality backup big man. I would have made a harder push to keep Thomas Robinson, but who knows may TRob was out the door anyway.
The reality is, looking at the moves in a vacuum you can't say Philly lost any of them. The Holiday/Noel trade was a great move. The MCW/lakers pick trade is looking better and better. KJ McDaniel can't get off the bench in Houston at over 3 million a year (another great move from Philly).
Everyone says they should sign some veterans for leadership. Ok who? Everyone knew that team wasn't going to be very good, so what kind of veteran are they going to sign to that team. No one of "quality" was going to sign there unless it is was their last resort. I believe that will change this summer when the Sixers have an influx of talent i.e. Embiid, Saric, 1 or 2 high 1st round picks, and another couple of 1st round picks. That team won't look nearly as bad to incoming free agents and thus players will potentially be signed (and guys like Wood, Holmes, etc. won't be on the team).
Can you step back from this a minute and look at this objectively. There is a team that is a 1-20, just lost to a team's backups by 50 points, has recently suspended their best prospect for getting in repeated street brawls and lieing about it to the team, and you can't say they made one mistake aside from letting a backup big go and *possibly drafting saric a few years ago?
Doesn't that strike you as kind of insane?
With the exception of perhaps the warriors and spurs, I, and any other objective fan could list numerous clear mistakes that every single team, including the celtics, has made over the last 3 years. The fact that that is the best you can do for the 76ers is really troubling and is akin to what Hinkie's wife would say.
Because they went all in on the tank, which is the exact move I would have made coming off of the Andrew Bynum disaster from the prior administration. The Sixers had no future before Hinkie got there. They were destined to be a late lottery type team for the foreseeable future and had no one of any sort of real value except Holiday. They could barely give Turner away and got a 1st for Young (which was a nice trade). Spencer Hawes had limited value as well. They had traded away some future picks as well. What exactly were the Sixers supposed to do. And here's the thing, had they kept all those guys, they wouldn't have Okafor or Noel or Embiid. Saric maybe. They wouldn't be this bad, but they were never going to win a title. Even keeping someone like MCW, sure it makes them a bit better, but not enough to move the needle and they sold very high on him.
You don't see the potential of a true tank, which is why you can't see that Philly is doing exactly what they said they were going to do and sticking with that course.
What are all these mistakes you think Philly made? was it trading Holiday? was it drafting Saric? was it drafting Embiid? Was it drafting Okafor? was it trading MCW? I mean what do you think Philly did wrong, other than just saying they are terrible and should have made some imaginary moves?
I have said before what I think some of the mistakes were, and I will say again here.
1) Sign one or two vets to provide a presence for their young players, particularly Okafor. You can play the pretend game that no way anyone would sign there, but frankly that has been your weakest argument in this. The Twolves, expected to be pretty bad this year, signed 3 in prince, Garnett, Miller. The Lakers, with huge incentive to have a bottom of the league record signed Bass and to a lesser extent, Lou Williams. The nuggets, undergoing a complete rebuild kept around foye and nelson to provide leadership for Mudiay. The Blazers kept Kaman and brought back Henderson despite being in a full rebuild. You can argue it till you are blue in the face, but not getting one established veteran on that roster was a mistake. Their coach has come out and felt like it is. Respected and plugged in writers like Lowe have said they have seen the folly in this decision this year. Now does it 100% mean that the incidents don't happen with Okafor? Does it mean they have a better record, no. But if it something members of the coaching staff regret, national writers say was a mistake, I take their opinion much heavily than I take yours or Larbrd's (and frankly you both just come off as stubborn in this instance in light of what has happened the last month)
2) This is less concrete than number 1, but drafting Okafor last year instead of either 1) swinging for the fences with Porzingas 2) trading down and getting Mudiay and another pick. Very many people were skeptical of these two playing well together before the draft, and nothing we have seen in a quarter of the season has changed that. Considering multiple teams either tried (the Celtics being the most blatant) or have said they tried (the Mavs today), it is pretty clear they could have gotten a lot for that draft spot. If they have Mudiay today and another prospect they are not in the weakened position of having to trade one of their top 3 prospects because they all play the same position. We all talk about value, there is clear value lost right now 3 months later. I don't think the Knicks would trade Porzingis for Okafor and a mid-first rounder right now. Do you? So that is pretty hard to not argue as a mistake.
3) Accepting so many trades with pick protections as assets. You can argue over how much control they have over this, but it was a form of gambling that puts your franchise in a state of flux. A month away from the end of last season they didn't know if they were getting 1 or 4 draft picks. It looks like now they end up getting two picks in the high 20's. Some teams prefer early second round picks (possibly including the 76ers) than early second rounders. The protected picks suck because other teams don't want to trade for something that they don't know how valuable it is. Getting a Lakers pick sounds great in theory, but if it is going to keep getting rolled over for 3 years and could end up as the 15th pick, you end up much worse off than if you had just accepted the 8th pick in the first year. While I think it was fine to make one of these trades, continually doubling down but the organization in a position of weakness. I don't for the life of me understand how Larbrd can laugh and tell his charlotte story about how we have too many first rounders, but can't acknowledge Philly has put themselves in the same position with their endless collection of second rounders and protected picks.
This stuff isn't rocket science, and it isn't an overall attack on the 76ers management. Every team has made mistakes. Heck if turn it over to the NFL and the defending champion patriots I could point out tons of big mistakes in the last two years alone. Not acknowledging they made mistakes
and insisting they are exactly where they want to be on the heels of their best player being in off court trouble, the team getting blown out by 50 points to drop to 1-20 and angering other owners, and the NBA front office for costing the league money comes off as delusional.