Are NBA Draft Picks Overvalued?
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Without even reading it, though I will because it sounds interesting, I would say I agree with the hypothesis.
Not every team that tries to clear cap space and build through the draft is going to better their position, most will just end up right back where they started 3-4 years later. -
Cuban's basic premise is that it's become like Moneyball in the sense that now everybody knows draft picks are a good value... so they aren't anymore. Everyone is trying to dump veterans for draft picks and eventually it becomes so clouded that it's not really an efficient way to build a team.Comment
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Didn't I try and tell you this in the chatbox a month ago?Comment
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Sure you did. And I still don't think it's the right plan. The article is essentially Mark Cuban defending signing Devin Harris and Monta Ellis and not rebuilding to try to win a title.
I think, regardless of the inefficiency, the tank and acquire draft pick assets plans works far better.
You still can't wrap your head around the fact that's how Houston, Oklahoma City and Golden State built their teams (acquiring cheap assets to leave space for FA open, trading draft picks to acquire said "stars", making high profile first-round picks) which continues to cause the confusion in this case. I think it's a good piece on how other teams are doing business and trying to find the more beneficent way to build a winner, I'm just not sure it's going to go anywhere.Comment
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Sure you did. And I still don't think it's the right plan. The article is essentially Mark Cuban defending signing Devin Harris and Monta Ellis and not rebuilding to try to win a title.
I think, regardless of the inefficiency, the tank and acquire draft pick assets plans works far better.
You still can't wrap your head around the fact that's how Houston, Oklahoma City and Golden State built their teams (acquiring cheap assets to leave space for FA open, trading draft picks to acquire said "stars", making high profile first-round picks) which continues to cause the confusion in this case. I think it's a good piece on how other teams are doing business and trying to find the more beneficent way to build a winner, I'm just not sure it's going to go anywhere.
Because that's not how it works.Comment
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Christ people. I never said they built through the god damn draft, I said they built through acquiring draft picks or acquiring cheap, tradeable talent through the draft.
October 27, 2012: Traded by the Oklahoma City Thunder with Cole Aldrich, Daequan Cook and Lazar Hayward to the Houston Rockets for Jeremy Lamb, Kevin Martin, a 2013 1st round draft pick (Steven Adams), a future 1st round draft pick and a future 2nd round draft pick.
per http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2013/7/6...ba-free-agency
Kevin Martin came in a massive 2010 trade deadline deal where the Rockets took advantage of the Knicks' desperation to clear cap space in 2010. The main pieces: Houston sent McGrady to the Knicks and Carl Landry to the Kings and got back Martin, Jordan Hill and the option to swap picks with the Knicks in 2011 and 2012. Landry had been selected in the second round of the 2007 NBA Draft, showing Houston's consistent ability to find talent where other teams failed. That ability got them Martin.
Jeremy Lamb was selected with a pick the Rockets traded up two slots to get, sending the Bucks Samuel Dalembert. But Houston felt they could take Lamb in part because they had two other first-round picks. One, used on Royce White, was one of the two picks from the Knicks in the 2010 blockbuster. Another, used on Terrence Jones, came from the Timberwolves for Chase Budinger, a decent, but replaceable contributor.
One first-round pick came from the Raptors in the deal for Lowry. Toronto surrendered a pick that was top-3 protected in 2013, top-2 protected in 2014 and 2015, top-1 protected in 2016 and 2017 and unprotected in 2018. However, the Rockets would only get the pick if it fell in the lottery, meaning they essentially guaranteed themselves a high selection. The Rockets had initially acquired Lowry, a backup in Memphis, in 2009 in a deal involving starting point guard Rafer Alston. Many wondered about that deal at the time, but Lowry gave Houston several good years and eventually helped deliver Harden.
The other first-round pick was initially from Dallas. The Mavericks traded it to the Lakers in the 2011 deal for Lamar Odom that worked out poorly, and the Lakers moved it on to Houston as compensation for taking on Derek Fisher in a 2012 trade deadline deal for ... you guessed it, Jordan Hill. The pick is top-20 protected from 2012 to 2017.
The 2013 second-round pick was, ironically, a Thunder pick for a while, as they received it for dumping Byron Mullens on the Bobcats. However, the Thunder lost the pick as a result of a dispute with Boston over Jeff Green's medical history. The Celtics eventually moved the selection to Houston as part of a sign-and-trade arrangement to land Courtney Lee.
Look at how a team filled with veterans slowly morphed into a team with a ton of additional, easily tradeable draft picks and how all of those suddenly morphed into Dwight Howard and James Harden.
It's not building through the draft, it's using the draft and draft picks to your advantage to make sure you keep your salaries low and your assets high.Comment
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Christ people. I never said they built through the god damn draft, I said they built through acquiring draft picks or acquiring cheap, tradeable talent through the draft.
Recent draftee and 3 picks.
per http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2013/7/6...ba-free-agency
Look at how a team filled with veterans slowly morphed into a team with a ton of additional, easily tradeable draft picks and how all of those suddenly morphed into Dwight Howard and James Harden.
It's not building through the draft, it's using the draft and draft picks to your advantage to make sure you keep your salaries low and your assets high.
You're using essentially three generations of rostering to get to the end result. You can put any team under the same dumb flow chart and get the same result of how they got to each player on their roster.Comment
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So that's your counter? Seriously?
When did you become such a giant piece of shit? Seriously. I realize you watch 7 NBA games a year and you're a self-appointed expert of everything but if you aren't going to even counter with any type of tangible thought keep your mouth shut.
Once more if you actually read the fucking posts instead of immediately generalizing that since I wrote it, it must be stupid realize that 90% of the post is lifted from a fairly well publicized, far better researched SB Nation article from Mike Prada, who probably is a bit more familiar with how the NBA functions than you are, but don't let that get in the way of being a total fuck as usual.
It's not "my theory" or "my idea" it's been well publicized the lengths the Rockets went to create a roster flexible enough to bring in a star via trade and acquire a star via FA. Isn't that the point of roster construction and a discussion of building a roster, is going out a few years?
The roster used in the chart was 2008-2009, so apparently "three generations" but you clicked and read the article I'm sure, so you know that:
2008-09, the Rockets' most successful season. This was their roster and salary situation, via StoryTeller's Contracts Page:
Tracy McGrady: $20.37 million, contract expires in 2010
Yao Ming: $15.07 million, contract expires in 2011
Ron Artest: $7.4 million, contract expires in 2009
Shane Battier: $6.37 million, contract expires in 2011
Brian Cook: $3.5 million, contract expires in 2010
Luis Scola: $3.1 million, contract expires in 2010
Carl Landry: $3 million, team option for 2011
Brent Barry: $1.9 million, contract expires in 2010
Chuck Hayes: $1.8 million, team option for 2011
Kyle Lowry: $1.2 million, rookie contract ended in 2010
Aaron Brooks: $1.045 million, rookie contract ended in 2012
Dikembe Mutombo, Von Wafer, Joey Dorsey, James White: All minimum contractsLast edited by FedEx227; 08-05-2013, 03:06 PM.Comment
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So that's your counter? Seriously?
When did you become such a giant piece of shit? Seriously. I realize you watch 7 NBA games a year and you're a self-appointed expert of everything but if you aren't going to even counter with any type of tangible thought keep your mouth shut.
Once more if you actually read the fucking posts instead of immediately generalizing that since I wrote it, it must be stupid realize that 90% of the post is lifted from a fairly well publicized, far better researched SB Nation article from Mike Prada, who probably is a bit more familiar with how the NBA functions than you are, but don't let that get in the way of being a total fuck as usual.
Prada's article is equally as silly, trying to slant the idea that landing Dwight Howard and James Harden was some stroke of genius "years in the making" by playing Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon with roster pieces from 4-5 years ago...and showing the parts that lead to the team as will be constructed in 2013-14. It wasn't some ultimate grand finale for Morey. You could take any team in the NBA and play the same Six Degrees game with it.Comment
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The difference being other teams didn't land two top 20 players as a result of their mediocrity.
Hawks are about to try the Morey plan I feel, tread some water collecting affordable/movable assets so if and when a big piece falls in your lap (Kevin Love I guess?) you can pull the trigger. TBD how it works out in three years.Comment
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Interesting.
Are there other examples of this working (or even being attempted)? Seems to me it's the only way for the NBA middle of the pack purgatory teams to get out of that cycle.
With that said, if Howard doesn't sign with Houston, then what? Hold off that salary slot until next year by signing a bunch of one year deals?
I would figure at some point, when other teams copy this, there will be fewer and fewer teams willing to trade for these draft picks. Then what?Comment
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It's always up in the air, there is no perfect way to build a winning team in the NBA outside of getting really lucky. The point is the Rockets set themselves up to get lucky.
And Warner, to your last point, that's what Cuban is saying in the article. He went all in with this model after they won the title, he didn't get Howard or Williams so he had to sign Monta Ellis and now he's saying that the model doesn't work because everyone's trying to do it. There's some validity to that for sure.Comment
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Must make Monta Ellis feel like a million bucks when his owner says publicly that "I had to sign Monta Ellis. Sigh."Comment
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