We shouldn't judge it before we see what moves are made and what the results are.
We do know what we have tried hasn't worked. And going scorched earth is dumb.
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Why is it dumb? ****ing around longer means greater (almost exponential) opportunity costs incurred:
-To start: because of the play-in and desperate bottom-dwellers to get in, fewer teams are tanking than literally ever before. This shrinks the pool of potential win-now players which the Jazz would continue to be restricted to. That will constrain the value of whatever paltry assets the Jazz can use, and might force them to touch assets they should never think about (another lightly protected 1st-rounder in a year they might be rebuilding).
-Jazz are already limited on any more assets to burn. I am not too confident in Rudy's returning value and he'd obviously be the best piece to net returning value (which instead of nebulous future assets, would need to be win-now players, BUT COMING FROM WIN-NOW TEAMS. That's a bad trading partner).
-Will they have the stones to trade Mike and/or Bogey? And what win-now players are they going to get in return (it's the same problem as above), especially since Mike is looking cooked (this will be the last year to hope for netting value) and Bogey is expiring (which limits his value to a team that wants him for basketball reasons and not an expiring contract). Any of Rudy, Mike, or Bogey would be gets for a desperate team with bad management and/or future assets to burn... but we wouldn't be so much in the market for those at that point.
-All of this to descend into a wood-chipper: the aforementioned more teams than ever going for it and more teams finally getting healthy that will be WAY better than the Jazz (the Nuggets and Clippers come to mind, for starters).
-Lost opportunity to get into the top-10 of the draft for another year. Probably will be just good enough to convey the ****ing Favors pick in the late lottery if they stay that course.
I don't see the upside. I really don't. I don't know why anyone would think substantial improvement is reasonably possible or why Donovan would want to stay through his next contract anyway. Dragging this out in that way seems dumb to me, though there is the argument of grifting fans for a few years for greater revenues.
I'm really not throwing shade, but in my view, the only way to net surplus assets to re-tool for a win-now build is trading Donovan. And I'm not even endorsing that.