SoberasHotRod
Well-Known Member
Jazz lose by 5
POR loses by 6
TOR loses by 6
CHA DNP
POR loses by 6
TOR loses by 6
CHA DNP
Short form troll meets long form trollBeautiful post
Already heard them all a million times silly goose.LOL, all hail cognitive dissonance. The pro-tanking crowd is so unused to pushback or situations where they cannot browbeat dissent that they refuse to deal in good faith with anyone who doesn't drink their Kool-Aid.
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Really just need coach to buy in completelyPut painstaking energy in drafting the best possible talent.
Always looking for the best value in trades.
Intentionally hiring a talented coach.
Having a quality front office.
Having a good development staff.
Keeping good players like Lauri, Sexton, Kessler, JCx2.
Playing heavy the younger players and a couple start to break out.
To tank perfectly you can't do all these things. You probably can only do two or three of them. Our culture still pushes to try to excel but then we want the team to go against this and lose. It's incongruent messaging/approach from the fans, the coach staff, management team and the culture
We applaud great picks in the draft and good performance and good trades, a good Lauri signing but we also want be last in the NBA. How do we pull that off?
I'm sorry that you dont like the definition. My condolencesMy point is that this definition is far too broad. It empowers tanking advocates to advance any number of specious arguments supporting the Jazz tanking strategy while dismissing any skepticism, notwithstanding that much of the evidence cited is irrelevant to the Jazz's situation. The Jazz's tanking strategy is not good because other teams may have used diverse means to deprioritize wins (e.g., sitting star players); it's a good strategy because there's evidence or good reason to conclude that tearing down a competitive, winning team and stockpiling draft picks is a viable path to winning a championship and preferable to other possible options (e.g., competent, creative team building around an existing core) with reasonable odds of success in a reasonable period of time. Again, this is not just about being a good team or winning games. We were a good team and won lots of games during the Mitchell-Gobert era; it's about winning a ring. To deny this context is being disingenuous.
ThisIn here tanking as a term is used for any strategy that deprioritizes wins. Whether its Spurs in 1997 who opportunistically sucked for just 1 year or whether its The Process Philly who build a god awful roster so they wouldn't even accidentally compete or whether its the Jazz who sold their stars in hopes to find hidden gems (and a haul of draft picks). Those three are not comparable strategies at all, and neither should we look for correlation between their success and failures.
Its not about "being as bad as possible" and its not about 1 or 10 years. Its essentially just a mindset that draft position is higher priority than getting into playoffs. That puts a lot of teams into the scope of the term, but not all bad teams are tanking. Some are just inherently bad despite their effort going the other way.
You can disagree with that usage of the term all you want, but it just is how its used around these parts.
You just proved his point.Short form troll meets long form troll
Who cares about the "definition"? The debate should be about whether our strategy is a good or not, whatever title you wanna give it.My point is that this definition is far too broad. It empowers tanking advocates to advance any number of specious arguments supporting the Jazz tanking strategy while dismissing any skepticism, notwithstanding that much of the evidence cited is irrelevant to the Jazz's situation. The Jazz's tanking strategy is not good because other teams may have used diverse means to deprioritize wins (e.g., sitting star players); it's a good strategy because there's evidence or good reason to conclude that tearing down a competitive, winning team and stockpiling draft picks is a viable path to winning a championship and preferable to other possible options (e.g., competent, creative team building around an existing core) with reasonable odds of success in a reasonable period of time. Again, this is not just about being a good team or winning games. We were a good team and won lots of games during the Mitchell-Gobert era; it's about winning a ring. To deny this context is being disingenuous.
All hail the guy who thinks he’s the first to pushback against tanking lol. It’s not that I’m not used to it… it’s that I’ve been around this block 100 times. I dont have time to walk it with you.LOL, all hail cognitive dissonance. The pro-tanking crowd is so unused to pushback or situations where they cannot browbeat dissent that they refuse to deal in good faith with anyone who doesn't drink their Kool-Aid.
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LFG....where exactly? The 9th pick? Again?
The definition of a successful tank is much more interesting than the actual definition of tanking. If the championship is the definition of a successful tank then almost all talent acquisition and team building strategies are low probability.While I think @Schrödinger's Gerbil makes some good points, I find my self on the other side of their key point. For me, we shouldn't try to define tanking more narrowly; instead we should probably define it more broadly. To me, the intentionality isn't most important. It's the fact of losing (especially over multiple years consecutively) that's important and the likelihood of success of building a championship contender based on the resulting draft picks.
I think that's what most arguments about tanking here boil down to: are we losing enough in any particular year so we can get top draft choices and thereby all-pro/mvp-type talent, and will we go at it for a long enough period?
With this type of definition, I find the evidence shows that the value of tanking is somewhat low (though admitting that it can work in a minority of cases).
Maybe so, but I can't tell you how many times I've seen the championship-or-bust justification for tanking. Something like: "I want to see a Jazz championship in my lifetime, and the only way we'll get there is through a true tank."The definition of a successful tank is much more interesting than the actual definition of tanking. If the championship is the definition of a successful tank then almost all talent acquisition and team building strategies are low probability.
That was how I knew it wasn't worth a conversation.when they define tanking to exclude sitting David Robinson to get tim Duncan just to make their argument better i stop caring what else is read. David Robinson could have played at least a portion of the season, but management felt it was better that he sit the entire season (umm... cough tanking). Management making decision to prioritize a higher pick next year is my definition of tanking. Players dont tank. players want to win. Management tanks.
I agree and its kind of right... sorta. The other ways are to draft an MVP where Giannis and Jokic were drafted... which we are also able to do as we have additional picks.Maybe so, but I can't tell you how many times I've seen the championship-or-bust justification for tanking. Something like: "I want to see a Jazz championship in my lifetime, and the only way we'll get there is through a true tank."
7'+ with foot injuries aren't a rush back...That was how I knew it wasn't worth a conversation.