Hey, I'm the one dealing in reality, you're the one dealing in mock drafts.
Embiid was the consensus number one according to every news outlet before breaking his foot. You can stick your head in the sand pretend this isn't the case but it is. Wiggins freshman season was seen as a disappointment by pretty much everyone and raised red flags about him. He's raw and a big gamble so it would have been flat out stupid to keep him given Lebron's age when they could have gotten an all star in his prime. Love just looks like he is a lot worse than everyone thought he would be.
Hey, I'm the one dealing in reality, you're the one dealing in mock drafts.
Truth.com
In your reality Wiggins is a can't miss prospect who has better value than what was considered a top 10-15 player in the league so must be some sort of bizarro reality that can only be seen by sticking your head up your ass.
He alone doesn't have better value than Kevin Love, but Wiggins + Bennett + the Miami 1st rounder + cap space > Kevin Love. They'd lose a year waiting to use that cap space, but hey it's not like they're the championship favorites this year anyways... I've been pretty consistent with this opinion since before the trade happened.
And damn bro you're getting mad. I'm sorry reality didn't align up with the mock drafts. Can't change that, but if you wanna go ahead and regale me with tales of Embiid before he broke his foot--do it.
They did it in the Finals this past season. If you meant that as a shot a Wade's production, that's a different thing. The point is that Wade and James didn't really fit together on offense as much as they just stayed out of each other's way.
Well, they didn't have Asik until later in the off-season. The Rockets were looking for some type of compensation, and they probably would have taken some of Cleveland's haul over the NO pick. New Orleans had apparently been considering trading Anderson for a while already. I could totally see a package around Thompson as having been enough for the Pelicans to move him had they not gotten Asik.
I mean now that you're saying it I can see it, but I feel like it's disingenuous to say that because the Lebron Heat teams that won championships relied on Dwyane Wade's off ball movement. They did fit together, and that's how they won championships. When they didn't play together well, they won nothing. Lebron might have gotten his numbers in last year's finals but the offense overall wasn't anything amazing. (esp in comparison to the Spurs')
There's better articles and videos out there, but this is the basic idea...I'll find you some better examples if you want.
I think that shows that Wade can play off the ball, not that he was a good fit with James. Bosh can shoot threes, but he really didn't fit well with Lebron and Wade, because he bread was buttered in the high post. In the same way that Bosh's spacing was critical to the Heat's success, Wade's off-ball movement allowed the Heat's offense to work. But Wade was only really Wade when he got the ball at the elbow and was allowed to go to work, which didn't happen very much when James was on the floor.
I appreciate the analysis, though. I do agree that the two played off each other more than I implied. I think that was the result of teamwork (effort on their parts to make it work), though, rather than them being complimentary in their skill-sets. It's similar to how Duncan and Splitter can play together even though neither one can maximize their play if they're together.
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