I keep thinking back to my idea of a young talented PG and a vet wing who help handle the play-making duties. Seeing SR21's combination of elation and disgust encouraged me to make another mock off-season.
Trades:
None:
Draft:
At 4, the Spurs draft Sheppard
At 8, the Spurs draft Williams
At 35, the Spurs draft Mitc
At 48, the Spurs draft Ajinca (two-way or stash)
Graham (guaranteed), Branham, Bassey (guaranteed), CHI25 and Chicago's second-round pick for DeMar DeRozan (sign-and-trade) at $81M/3 with the last year non-guaranteed.
The Spurs sign Josh Richardson to a $22M/3 deal (using part of the MLE) with a team option for the final season.
The Spurs sign Xavier Tillman to a $12M/2 deal (using remainder of the MLE) with a team option for the second year
Sheppard, Jones, Wesley
Vassell, Richardson, Mitc
Williams, Johnson, Champangie
DeRozan, Sochan, Cissoko
Wembanyama, Collins, Tillman
Comments:
Whether you think DMDR or Williams is the PF or SF, I don't care. Unless Jeremy comes with a much improved ability to space the floor, I don't think he and DeRozan work well together, but I actually like the fit with DeRozan being there to provide vertical pressure and help Sheppard run the offense while Williams and Vassell hold down the wings. Wemby would have three PnR partners and plenty of spacing around him even if DeRozan means it's not perfect. I'd worry about the defense, especially by replacing Sochan with DMDR, but hopefully Sheppard and Williams offset that. By all accounts, DeRozan is a tremendous mentor and locker-room presence. He's never shown to be a contending player, but either he'll adjust to being a contributor on a team with a clear superstar who isn't him, or his stint will only last for two seasons. Richardson is another familiar face who should help stabilize a second unit which actually has a lot of talent and may just need the time and run to take advantage of it. Tillman is expensive insurance, but his contract allow the Spurs to keep their trade options open.
I wish there was a more obvious choice to start at PF than Williams. That's the weakest part of this roster. If the Spurs could get Middleton or build a time machine to bring in 32-year-old Nic Batum, it would be much easier to build a rotation that could both challenge for a playoff birth next season and continue to develop key prospects. Sochan is talented, but he's not good enough to where the team can put starting him as a core part of their roster build. I don't love Williams as the guy to replace Jeremy in the first unit, but I don't love any player projected to drafted around 8 to do that. The middle of the draft has Holmes, Smith, Klintman, Mogbo and Ingram. The Spurs have 35 but shouldn't be looking for a starter there. If we're being honestly, Pop would probably start Jones, Vassell, DeRozan, Sochan and Wemby for 30 games despite the bad spacing turning winnable games into losses before benching Vassell for Champangie for a few more games and finally moving first Jones and then Sochan to the bench around the ASB. But the actual season mechanics are for a different thread.