Essential1 wrote:
Originally Posted by
mgrand15
Essential1 wrote:
If the Cavs make the right pick at 1st and 4th.. They will still land in the lottery next year (Sorry guys)... They gotta hope for the Bulls scenario where they steal the 1st pick.. Because if you remember the Bulls had the smallest % to get the #1 pick, but won and got Derrick Rose..
If you have 3 top 5 picks within 2 years sign them all to multi year contracts.. Entice an up and coming superstar to join the team.. Pick up some of the essential bench components.. There will still be a lot of cap room to try to get that solid #2 option, and you would have one of the better teams in the league... Not to mention a really good coach if Gilbert sticks with him, which I'm sure he will considering the whole fiasco of last off season..
Hope for you Cavs fans...
Your guide to NBA Success:
- 5 top 3 picks including 2 number 1 overall picks
- Sign superstar
- Essential bench players
- Use cap room to sign a #2 option
- After all this talent, they'd still need a really good coach
How many NBA teams even remotely fit that description? That would be like OKC signing two more superstars after drafting Harden.
1. Bryon Scott pretty good coach to begin with.. I was saying they have a good coach...
They have a #1 and a #4 this year... Pretty conceivable they end up in the lottery next year..so if the lottery ball bounces their way next year they could have a top 5 again....Like when the Bulls were odds at the 13th pick but ended up getting the first pick by chance..
Your math is wrong from you I said 3 top 5 picks....
if they make the right draft choices they will have a solid core.. With a good coach already and a solid core,
if they cant find someone who wants to be the face of the franchise..
Then they have never had/will have what they need to convince people who would play a smaller role to come in....
That's absolutely
plausible... never has happen in the history of this franchise and cant see it ever happening.
Best case only scenario is build a team ala like the championships run pistons and have a team of good players non allstar allstars. Lebron was the except and only superstar the team really has ever had, and he even left, and the reason he somewhat stayed was cause he was a homer. That was a fluke and the odds of a major elite superstar leaving an major market/team with great management/ownership with business sense to go to a team that hasnt shown signs of this ever.... plus just the city and state alone is far-fetched wishful thinking.