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Has our future position gotten better, worse, or stayed the same since trading Rudy/Donovan?

Has the value of our future position gotten better, worse, or stayed the same since the trades?

  • Better

    Votes: 4 6.7%
  • Worse

    Votes: 52 86.7%
  • Stayed the same

    Votes: 4 6.7%

  • Total voters
    60
We’d be in good shape had we made the necessary moves before the season started after we traded DM and Gobert. 10-3 start was devastating.
While I agree that we should have tanked harder that first season, who was the 5th pick that year and would they really be making much of a difference?
 
While I agree that we should have tanked harder that first season, who was the 5th pick that year and would they really be making much of a difference?
Ausar Thompson, Bilal Coulibaly were still on the board… both potential cornerstone players.
 
While I agree that we should have tanked harder that first season, who was the 5th pick that year and would they really be making much of a difference?
Maybe we get the fifth pick, but how do you know it would’ve been the fifth pick? And even if it’s the fifth pick, maybe we trade up at that point with all the assets we had back then with three picks that year.
 
As pissed as we all are. Think how Ainge, Smith, Hardy ect all are. The plan backfired.
Fan support will drop significantly from all of this. Most of my friends that grew up jazz fans don't even turn any of the games on this last year. Their kids don't watch or care. Once you lose them, you don't get them back.
Someone in our family has had season tickets for over 30 years until 2 years ago when I quit. I am not sure folks will not come back but what has happened makes no sense. We are in a bad spot because we got the pick we were most likely to get and we were betting it all on being intentionally crappy.
 
Someone in our family has had season tickets for over 30 years until 2 years ago when I quit. I am not sure folks will not come back but what has happened makes no sense. We are in a bad spot because we got the pick we were most likely to get and we were betting it all on being intentionally crappy.
I think people are more open to considering this after the emotions of the lottery coming on the heels of an entire season of building anticipation. But the reality is that even if we were to have won the lottery, we still have a very, very steep hill and great chasm in front of that still requires a massive amount of luck and perfect execution to get to. That is, if we're talking about a championship. If we're talking about being a playoff team yeah, sure, whatever. But that wasn't the reason we got ourselves into this thing to be a "good" playoff team. But because everyone has been beaten down by the process, I'd imagine people would be thrilled at the possibility of seeing a "playoff" team take place (even with Flagg... lots of teams like Dallas with Luka or current Giannis with Milwaukee, etc.) and fail to realize that the goal posts moved and that team still is far away from championship aspirations.

tl;dr Even if we won this year, we'd still need to hit a massive home run next year, in addition to numerous triples and doubles in the next few years, all without striking out because it's already 2 down.

So while the emotion is allowing people to more clearly see reality, this reality has always been there.
 
I have a bone to pick with this pick that I’ll detail at some point later, but it’s another speculative value one like all the Cleveland, Minnesota and Lakers picks whose value we watched go up in smoke. That is to say that we never seem to fully appreciate how quickly the landscape changes (which can work both ways). Nobody anticipated Cleveland becoming the regular season champions or Donovan to re-sign. Yet here we are. Everyone anticipated Minnesota sucking and here we are drafting in the 20s. Everyone liked the idea of “controlling someone’s draft for x years” when you include swaps, but now we’re seeing that the swaps aren’t even redeemable. Then the Lakers pick (“bro nobody could have predicted the Lakers being gifted Luka”). And the Lakers still being a dumpster fire doesn’t negate that pick from being in the 20s.

Everyone looks at the Suns future prospects now and assumes the pick will have a lot of value. Maybe it will. But there’s a high chance of volatility and them making the playoffs could also happen. If that happens, congratulations…. we’ve traded three late first rounders for one late first rounder. If that’s the case (and we’re kidding ourselves if we’re not acknowledging the real probabilities on this outcome), then the only thing keeping a deal like that from being the worst trade in history is just scale.

Everyone thought Phoenix and Chris Paul were irrelevant and one trade later they’re in the finals. Obviously it’s not exactly the same organization and not bound by some type of historical precedent magic, but it’s just one example of things changing fast. This trade sounds great but there’s a pretty good non-zero chance that it’s a complete doozy.

I'm actually not saying the pick is the most valuable asset because I think the Suns will be bad by the time it comes around and we will be able to use it to draft a good player. Its valuable as a trade asset because it doesn't convey for 6 years. The variance therefore contains a non-trivial possibility that the pick may end up in the ultra-valuable upper range of the draft, and is therefore worth more, today, than any other picks we own outside of our own that convey over the next 2-3 years. The pick will likely depreciate in value like the others have as time passes, so if it is not used in a trade in the next couple years it will probably devalue. But right now, today, it is quite valuable.

Though the whole crappy system they've developed around the draft that encourages 2/3 of the league to tank every year to some degree and 5 or so teams to tank hard every year kind of devalues it. Since they don't own the pick they won't have incentive to tank hard, so no matter how crappy their team is in 6 years, it'll be hard for them to accidentally lose more than the myriad teams trying to lose on purpose. So instead of having a shot at being good on its own, the best you can probably hope for is for it to be in the 10 ish range, and then also win the lottery. The possibility of that happening still makes it valuable though for speculation purposes.
 
I think people are more open to considering this after the emotions of the lottery coming on the heels of an entire season of building anticipation. But the reality is that even if we were to have won the lottery, we still have a very, very steep hill and great chasm in front of that still requires a massive amount of luck and perfect execution to get to. That is, if we're talking about a championship. If we're talking about being a playoff team yeah, sure, whatever. But that wasn't the reason we got ourselves into this thing to be a "good" playoff team. But because everyone has been beaten down by the process, I'd imagine people would be thrilled at the possibility of seeing a "playoff" team take place (even with Flagg... lots of teams like Dallas with Luka or current Giannis with Milwaukee, etc.) and fail to realize that the goal posts moved and that team still is far away from championship aspirations.

tl;dr Even if we won this year, we'd still need to hit a massive home run next year, in addition to numerous triples and doubles in the next few years, all without striking out because it's already 2 down.

So while the emotion is allowing people to more clearly see reality, this reality has always been there.
Agreed. And there was no reason to put the Jazz in that deep of a hole. Danny got incredibly lucky in Boston and seems to assume he will get incredibly lucky again. I would rather have a plan.
 
I'm actually not saying the pick is the most valuable asset because I think the Suns will be bad by the time it comes around and we will be able to use it to draft a good player. Its valuable as a trade asset because it doesn't convey for 6 years. The variance therefore contains a non-trivial possibility that the pick may end up in the ultra-valuable upper range of the draft, and is therefore worth more, today, than any other picks we own outside of our own that convey over the next 2-3 years. The pick will likely depreciate in value like the others have as time passes, so if it is not used in a trade in the next couple years it will probably devalue. But right now, today, it is quite valuable.

Though the whole crappy system they've developed around the draft that encourages 2/3 of the league to tank every year to some degree and 5 or so teams to tank hard every year kind of devalues it. Since they don't own the pick they won't have incentive to tank hard, so no matter how crappy their team is in 6 years, it'll be hard for them to accidentally lose more than the myriad teams trying to lose on purpose. So instead of having a shot at being good on its own, the best you can probably hope for is for it to be in the 10 ish range, and then also win the lottery. The possibility of that happening still makes it valuable though for speculation purposes.
The nice thing about an unprotected pick that far out though, is that IF the Jazz can turn it around AND the Suns are garbage then, you give yourself the potential to add a top draft prospect at a time that you have no business being in that position. I’d much rather own other teams draft picks and be able to build my strongest team possible in order to make that scenario play out.
 
Worse. I think Lauri and Walker were good surprises but we didn't sell off Lauri and haven't hit big on any of our picks or gotten lucky. I wouldn't say its way worse but its worse.
 
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