I find it fascinating that a few people are fascinated by Hinkie's "strategy".
Agree with those who counter that it is a completely obvious
approach to attempt to collect future stars. The only difference was Hinkie's commitment to
how long to be bad and the degree of badness (being so bad that a top 3 pick is a certainty). So, perhaps what people are fascinated by is that Hinkie was willing to be completely hated/villified by various parties. Is that the fascinating part?? Or that he would do the fantasy GM thing in a real league?
A. The degree of Sixer badness
B. The length of time being horrible
C. The damage to the franchise via A and B, plus alienated fans, agents, other teams, the league office, etc..
A plus B plus C added together is the reason Hinkie won't get to play with his accumulated assets, and if i were him I'd be majorly depressed about it, but he made his own bed with his excess (the other part I guess some are fascinated by).
What Hinkie-obsessed Celtic bloggers haven't answered in this or other threads is: What is his definition of a successful plan if one considers the level and quantity of suffering (which Boston fans would NOT have gone through...sorry but Hinkie would have lasted 8 months or so in Boston) endured?
Don't the Sixers have to win multiple titles starting a few years from now in order to be able to look back and say: wow it actually worked (the plan working is still not the same as saying it was worth it...that debates will also continue)
Colangelo has an easy job, which is to make the Sixers competitive again. Is that success? To be competitive again? I don't think so. That was not the point of such a massive tank. The point was stars and titles. And from that perspective the whole thing was an epic fail. You can only pay so many stars at once and keep so many self-groomed players.
Welcome back to competitive bball next year or the year after Sixers and Sixer fans. If you're really lucky you'll end up somewhere a bit better than the Magic, Nuggets, Wolves and Celtics 2 or 3 or 4 years from now. You may even be the Thunder of a few years back.
Hinkie is no magician, anyone can tank. We did it for Duncan way back, perhaps even more obviously. What is interesting with Hinkie is how he has managed to use his cap space to acquire extra assets.
Most of our big assets have come from the Nets trade, shipping out All stars for great value. The rest have come from savvy cap management by Ainge and opportunistic moves.
Hinkie didn't have garnett or Pierce on the team. He had Turner, Young, Holiday. So given that he couldn't produce the same haul we did he's decided to utilise cap space to absorb deals for picks, collecting assets that way. Yes at the same time he has tried to make the 76ers suck hard which does bring a questionable reputation.
I do believe there should have been some veteran presence in that dressing room the last few years. It wouldn't have added many if any wins but it would have added some professionalism to the locker room. Keeping Wallace would have been one such move.
However there is nothing wrong with taking advantage of the draft system. Hinkie was hired in May 2013, so he has had 3 years of tanking.
His first move netted Noel, solid.
Traded ROY Carter-Williams for the Lakers first, I think that's a good move.
Drafted Embiid, if he ever plays this was a good pick. At the time it was the right one.
Drafted Okafor, questionable given Porzingis was there but still he's a good player
Now if Embiid had been healthy, this year would be his sophomore year and I think we would start to see them build around him. It didn't work out, he re-injured himself and they tanked again.
Now they have 2 potential cornerstones in Okafor and Embiid and in the next year I expect them to decide which one to keep. The other will have great trade value as I'm pretty certain there will be multiple suitors. Add one of Simmons, Ingram and Dunn to that and it's a nice 1-2 punch. Some might say it's close to the Wiggins-Towns combo.
TL:DR Philly didn't have the stars to trade like Boston(or even Minnesota) so they did the best they could with the system that is in place