Question for Process supporters: At what point will you be willing to say that it hasn't worked? If they don't make the playoffs next year? In two years? Or if the Process is about more than just making the playoffs, how far do they need to advance in the playoffs, and in what time frame? And is it about sustainability? Do they need to have multiple years of deep playoff runs?
I'm not trying to bait anyone. From my perspective, it has failed already. They've gone through a full-cycle of rookie contracts, have already had to jettison their first two lottery picks, and are still a bottom 5 team. But for those who think it is still working, what is your benchmark? There has to be something to say it was worth it, right?
Why? Philly has Embiid, Saric, Simmons, a top 5 pick this season and a Lakers pick that could still deliver a valuable player. If that core wins a championship 7 or 8 years from now, will you still think it was a failure?
First of all, eight year plans are ridiculous in any professional sport. You obviously have to have some idea of where you are going in the future, like when considering the draft or freeing up salary cap space, but 8 years is almost twice the length of the average NBA career.
Secondly, if all the Hinkie plan gets you is one championship in 10 or 11 years, you might not consider it a failure but it is clearly inferior to most other successful plans pursued by NBA teams. Ainge, for example, took over in 2003 and won a title in 2008. That's half the time with about 1/4 the painful losing.
Mike
This doesn't make any sense to me. You're saying winning one championship in 10 or 11 years isn't good but you use Ainge as an example of a good manager but Ainge has only won one championship in 14 years.
Confused logic aside, my point was: how can you judge The Process when the players it has garnered haven't shown what they can do yet?
Ainge has already rebuilt lottery teams to good teams twice in that timeframe.
Love, love, love this point!
TP
Most teams will only win one championship every 15 years or so, no matter how well run they are. The question is what you're willing to accept being when you're not winning a championship.
Is it better to be a laughing stock for 7~8 years at a time just so maybe you win a ring once every 13 years instead of once every 15 years? Or is it better to have a respectable team even when you're not in title contention?
7-8 years of being a laughing stock? this is the 4th year, unless you are counting the Bynum year then you are in the 5th year, and I highly doubt the Sixers are a laughing stock next year (as they borderline aren't one this year). They won't be good or anything, but unless they have a bunch more injuries, I can't see how they aren't at least a mid-30 win team. I mean they are on pace for just over 29 wins this year, and they have been devastated by injuries and will add at least 1 more top 10 pick this summer (plus will have the #1 pick in the last draft come back from injury).
The Sixers won the 82/83 title. They went to the Finals in 00/01, were in the conference finals in 84/85, but otherwise 2nd round was the best they did. They've won 50 games 1 time since the 89/90 season (that was the 01 Finals team). You aren't talking about the Celtics or Lakers here, and frankly the Sixers have a better history (even since the title in 83) then more than half the teams in the league. Winning a title is difficult. Only 1 team does it every season, which means 29 teams don't win the title. And if you look at the titles since the Bulls began their run (26 completed seasons), Jordan won 6, Duncan won 5, Shaq won 4, and James has won 3, which leaves just 8 titles to everyone else. Of course of those 8, 2 of those went to the Dream and 2 of those went to Kobe. That leaves just the 4 single title winners of the Celtics, Pistons, Mavs, and Warriors (who might go on to win multiple titles themselves). Even pre-dating the Bulls the Lakers won 5, Celtics won 3, Pistons won 2, and the Sixers won 1. That is every title since 1980.
It just isn't easy to win a title, so making that the requirement just seems like a strange thing to do, especially since the Sixers only had the worst team in the league once, and haven't even had the worst 3 (or 4) year period in league history. They are bad, but they aren't even the worst team ever.