Another thing to consider is that the lottery doesn't only happen for the #1 pick - it happens for the top three picks.
Even if the Nets rise to the 6th or 7th worst record in the league, we still have a reasonable shot at the #1 pick and a very decent shot at a top 3 pick. If you look at past drafts, it's not all that uncommon for teams in the 5-9 range to land anywhere in the top 3.
Teams like San Antonio (Duncan), Chicago (Rose) and Cleveland (Wiggins) have all come out with top tier prospects despite being positioned quite late in the lottery.
As long as the Nets remain in the bottom 6 our pick has significant value, and if they remain in the bottom three that pick is as good as gold.
I don't necessarily agree with this, but in part I agree that because we don't know yet what number that pick will be, I don't see Danny trading it this year for any of those players above.
Having said that, if we get the #4 pick in the draft, I think trading it for Kevin Love is a no-brainer.
If we got a #4 pick I would trade it for Cousins or Derozan, but not Love.
We need a guy who can carry us on offense, and preferably on who can also make a contribution on defense. DMC and Derozan meet both criteria, but in all honesty I'm not convinced that Love meets either.
I think that (much like Bosh) the days of Love being a top 10 scorer are long gone - I don't think he will ever be that guy again. Also defensively he is barely capable of holding down his own positions, let alone actually making a positive contribution.
I think that now days Kevin Love is a nice player, but not a cornerstone. I think you can be a potential contender with Love as your #3 guy, maybe even as your #2 guy. But if he is your #1 guy, I don't think you're going anywhere.
To be honest, I don't think Love
right now is any better a player than Isaiah Thomas is. He's no better on the offensive end, and I don't think he's all that much better on defense either.
With hindsight, the trade with the Nets was a steal.
Nope. It was an absolute steal the moment it was made -- and it was easy to see (if difficult to swallow due to the loss of Cs Legends).
First deal in NBA history with 3 unprotected first round picks.
Yep, I'm actually really surprised that more people didn't see how huge a steal it was.
The instant the Nets got Pierce and KG, it was blatantly obvious what their position was - they were all in (championship or nothing) on the next year or two, and didn't think (or care) about what was to come after that.
Between Joe Johnson (~$20M), Deron Williams (~$20M), Brook Lopez ($15M), Paul Pierce ($10M), Kevin Garnett ($12M) and Jason Terry (~$5M) that team was financially crippled in the worst way. To make matters worse, a number of the players either ageing or showing obvious decline (Johnson, Deron, Pierce, KG, Terry), and a number of the deals were long-term.
The day that trade was made it seemed very obvious to me that by the time that first 2016 draft pick came along, the Nets were going to be a BAD team. Their best players were all declining, they were set to be over the salary cap for years on end, and they had thrown away all their draft picks. They were going to become a really bad team, with opportunity to actually improve. I was expecting that we would probably get at least two top 12 picks out the deal of it, but I must admit I never thought they would fall THIS low THIS fast.
It was a genius move by Ainge. The Nets owner wanted had great visions of grandeur - he wanted his new Brooklyn team to bring home a title right at the start, to establish his legacy early on, and he was willing to sacrifice anything (including money and the future) to do it. Ainge new this and jumped at the opportunity to make a deal that was (to him, at the time) an obvious case of future highway robbery.