The ProcessTM is dead. Long live the ProcessTM
This literally IS The ProcessTM ... tank for a few years, collect boatloads of assets, try their darndest to land a superstar through the draft, and then try to put together a competitive team.
They are in phenomenal position right now. It's no guarantee they make the right moves from here, but so far The ProcessTM has set them up wonderfully.
You continue to rep this "boatload" of assets that Philly has. I think you are horribly mistaken that the league sees it the same way.
If Philly offered Noel, Okafor, Saric, and all of their 1st rounders this year...what player or players would they get back? Durant? Westbrook? Klay Thompson? Lebron? Paul George? Anthony Davis?
You tell us how this team gets competitive in 3 years with what they have. Trades only. No free agents because aint no one signing in Philly.
Think of every Celtic trade idea you can think of built around Marcus Smart and/or the Brooklyn pick.
That's the kind of trades Philly can make when they are ready.
In the previous post, a confused casual just accused me of "trolling" for suggesting Philly will have a bright future. The casual suggested I needed to make a clear prediction on which players Philly will trade for. That's inane.
It will entirely depend on who gets healthy, what the market is for their various players, who is available on the market when they are ready to try build a team, who they end up drafting, who they end up signing via free agency, etc. Nobody can make that prediction. The point is, Philly has plenty of assets, plenty of intriguing young players, more cap space than anyone, and plenty of options.
They aren't in that mode yet though. They are still in asset acquisition mode. As I've been telling people, they are unlikely to make moves to improve this team until the Summer. Per a report today:
The Philadelphia 76ers continue to be in the asset accumulation phase of their rebuild.
With the hiring of Jerry Colangelo in December, the 76ers appeared to be shifting away from Sam Hinkie's plan of an extended rebuild.
The 76ers remain interested in taking on bad contracts in order to receive more draft picks.
As expected, this they will stay the course in their attempt to land another solid prospect through the draft. They will likely begin to address their needs this Summer.
I do, however, stand by my belief that a competent GM can turn this team into a winner relatively easily. By all accounts, Colangelo is a competent GM. If he fails to turn this team around, I'll be completely shocked. He has every weapon at his disposal. This is a cake job for a good GM. Boatloads of assets, cap space, potential franchise cornerstones already on the roster... it's like a unicorn-level GM job. It would take a real idiot to mess this up.