The Wizards Feel Like The Wizards Again
Posted: Sun Apr 14, 2024 10:10 am
I put out insane gameplans. I played people out of position. I had Joseph Aldrich as a scoring option. I benched players who were doing a little too well. I didn't enjoy any of it. I ended up with the 6th pick.
But, it's over now. And thanks to a trade that would've made sense if I could tank properly, I was now under pressure to do what I was probably going to do anyway. It was time to get to work. So, I traded away #6 for three other picks in the same draft. Given that one of the guys I liked slipped to #6, I was probably too hasty there, but I didn't want to wait it out, decide I wanted to trade it after all, then have to make the pick anyways because real life interfered with trade discussions.
After the draft was through, I then focused on adding talent. I was pretty confident that Trantham and Shinn wouldn't attract much attention in such a large RFA market, so I sent them both team-friendly deals and used the cash I had left over from holds to sign Supreme Cook to an offer sheet. Ultimately he elected to stay with Brooklyn, but Trantham accepted his offer. Shinn wanted a little bit more than he was originally offered, so he took an offer sheet from Miami. I elt his preferred salary was reasonable, so I matched.
The UFA class was shallow on the high end, and deep on the mid-low end, so I knew I had to look elsewhere for talent. When Bryon Nelson became available, I knew I had to jump on the chance to bring him back to DC. I knew he had potential back then, and seeing him flourish on other teams after I failed to bring him back in UFA gave me Ken Dirks flashbacks. So after I made that deal, I moved onto UFA proper, which...was a bit more difficult. Like I said, there was a lack of high-end talent, but an abundance of the tiers below. So, instead of trying to get clever, I just went all-in on the high-end talent...and Amen Thompson decided to sign with us. That was only possible because of Kessler waiting to sign his new deal until it was clear that nobody was going to take our max offers. Fortunately, Amen did, and that single action put a cap on our best off-season in years.
I said that the Wizards feel like the Wizards again, and I meant it. I'm really excited about this team. This is what I enjoy, this is what gets me excited. It's nice to have an offseason that feels like a boost instead of a kick to the gut. It's time to have fun again.
Any questions?
But, it's over now. And thanks to a trade that would've made sense if I could tank properly, I was now under pressure to do what I was probably going to do anyway. It was time to get to work. So, I traded away #6 for three other picks in the same draft. Given that one of the guys I liked slipped to #6, I was probably too hasty there, but I didn't want to wait it out, decide I wanted to trade it after all, then have to make the pick anyways because real life interfered with trade discussions.
After the draft was through, I then focused on adding talent. I was pretty confident that Trantham and Shinn wouldn't attract much attention in such a large RFA market, so I sent them both team-friendly deals and used the cash I had left over from holds to sign Supreme Cook to an offer sheet. Ultimately he elected to stay with Brooklyn, but Trantham accepted his offer. Shinn wanted a little bit more than he was originally offered, so he took an offer sheet from Miami. I elt his preferred salary was reasonable, so I matched.
The UFA class was shallow on the high end, and deep on the mid-low end, so I knew I had to look elsewhere for talent. When Bryon Nelson became available, I knew I had to jump on the chance to bring him back to DC. I knew he had potential back then, and seeing him flourish on other teams after I failed to bring him back in UFA gave me Ken Dirks flashbacks. So after I made that deal, I moved onto UFA proper, which...was a bit more difficult. Like I said, there was a lack of high-end talent, but an abundance of the tiers below. So, instead of trying to get clever, I just went all-in on the high-end talent...and Amen Thompson decided to sign with us. That was only possible because of Kessler waiting to sign his new deal until it was clear that nobody was going to take our max offers. Fortunately, Amen did, and that single action put a cap on our best off-season in years.
I said that the Wizards feel like the Wizards again, and I meant it. I'm really excited about this team. This is what I enjoy, this is what gets me excited. It's nice to have an offseason that feels like a boost instead of a kick to the gut. It's time to have fun again.
Any questions?