vslice02
Well-Known Member
Well I think - like Daniel Snyder and the Redskins - in many respects it was laughable. The difference with this team was Dallas focused more on "role players" (Chandler, Haywood, Marion) rather than the flashy high-scoring types (Antoine Walker, Antwawn Jamison, Raef LaFrentz, Nick Van Exel, Keith Van Horn). They would always go after the biggest FA fish in the pond - even if that guy happened to be Erik Dampier, and it's not like the Devin Harris draft-day trade, or the Kidd trade in '08 paid immediate dividends. Dallas also thought long and hard about acquiring Al Jefferson but decided to pass on the "scorer" instead for the defense/toughness of Haywood. If you're going to make tons of moves - they have to make sense and Dallas gradually figured out how to build a championship team instead of a fantasy team.I remember a few years ago many Jazz fans were laughing at Cuban, how he always tried to bring star players in, making trades, try different coaches. People were pointing to the Jazz, how we have stability, few trades, same coach for decades, and we are better off because of that. Well, Cuban kept trading, kept changing coaches, and after just 11 years he has a title to show for it. This is really an example of having a will and balls to win.
I love your optimism.Miami should slow down enough by the time young Jazz advance to the Finals...