long time guy wrote:
If they don't sign Wade and Rondo which players were available in free agency? They'd have to fit under the cap which I can't remember at this point.
You still haven't provided an answer. It is easy to say they shouldn't have signed this or that guy. It's much tougher to say who they should have or could have signed. They turned Calderon and Dunleavy into Wade and Rondo. That is a vastly superior upgrade no matter how you look at it.
You keep adopting this pose that Rondo and Wade were literally the best the Bulls could do in this offseason. It's not the least bit compelling since a)I'd be hard pressed to think of many
worse free agent signings than Rondo this offseason and b)even if they were literally the best available, it's perfectly rational to suggest that maybe the Bulls still shouldn't have tried to pursue them.
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No full rebuild takes place without trading Butler. That will still be available at the end of this season. Taj will be off the books as well. You also overestimate the Bulls tradeable assets from last season.
Butler was the only one with value. The league knew Mirotic was a bum. They weren't tricking anyone with him
Well they most certainly aren't fooling anyone now, which is why it makes sense that the dynamic duo in the front office are only now looking to move him. "Try to sell only at the very lowest" doesn't seem like a strategy for a successful business person but it appears to be the GarPax way. Taj being off the books at the end of the year isn't something to be celebrated either; what has made you the least bit convinced that this front office is capable of getting anything close to his quality (and yes I know you don't like him, which only reinforces my point), especially since it's not like he was on some kind of onerous contract anyway?
Simply repeating that a full rebuild can proceed at the end of the season just illustrates point that it could have been initiated this season. Does the concept of opportunity costs not exist in y
our world?
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I make sense and so do they. You are providing a bevy of hypotheticals and none really make much sense. The Rondo Wade signings were mere stopgap moves designed to tread water for a year. It doesn't get you closer to a championship but neither does Calderon and Dunleavy.
I bolded the most important part. Why the hell are you celebrating or justifying moves you yourself admit don't get you to a championship? Why should treading water for a year be seen as anything other than a waste of time? What exactly are the Bulls going to have to show for these "massive" upgrades at PG and SF aside from a meaningless struggle for the eighth seed and a worse position in the draft?
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Another thing. Desirable draft pick? What does that mean? Anything outside of the top 4 or 5 isn't that desirable. The Bulls with Butler probably get you outside of that.
This is regarded as one of the more loaded drafts in the last few years and beyond that the top 8 are rated more closely to each other. There's no Lebron type standout but most agree that majority of the lottery picks project highly. I would think it would be useful to have a chance at landing closer to the top of that draft rather than treading water.
I must note it's hilarious how your initial post credited Wade with elevating this team from the 28 win range to 40, yet you now want to argue Butler would singlehandedly keep them outside of the top 4 or 5 when 28 wins would have put them there last year.