Q12543 wrote:AbeVigodaLive wrote:Once again... I'm even more disappointed in the Wolves last season. Why did I follow that team for so long?
Dieng is a poor man's Horford/Favors... and then there's Wiggins, Towns, Rubio and LaVine. 4 of those guys are even good to great to OMG defensively!
And the team still lost 53 games and finished 28th on defense. What a disappointment.
[Note: I don't mind Dieng. He's fine as a 4th or 5th option. He's improved... that's huge. And the cap situation is fine for now. I don't know how that translates down the line though. We know Towns and Dieng can lock down the frontcourt on a 53-loss team. And probably even a .500 type team. The question is whether he's good enough to be a starting PF worth $50+M on a 50+ win team? The difference can be huge. I don't know the answer to that. But I do know I give a lot more weight when comparing stats to guys on winning teams vs. guys on 66- and 53-loss teams. Damn you Shareef Abdur Rahim... you did this to me!]
Heh, indeed. We all have our favorites, but you'd think we came off a 55-win season reading some of our commentary on our players. If these guys are all as great as we think they are, then it appears that the sum of the parts is about 2X better than the whole. I guess we can just blame poor Sam Mitchell for all that is wrong! How could he not take this collection of all-stars and get them to at least the 4th seed!?
Here is the reality from my perspective. If I look at ALL of last season, not just the final 30-some games, but all of it, we had three plus players: Rubio, KG, and Towns; three neutral-ish players: Wiggins, Miller, Dieng, and Prince; and a bunch of negatives: Everyone else.
I think the hope rests in that at least one plus player just keeps getting better (Towns), two of the neutral guys flipped to positives in the second half and hopefully stay there (Wiggins and Dieng), and there is hope in at least three of the negatives moving to neutral or better in the near future (LaVine, Bjelica, and Jones).
And yes, a better coach will help too.
I'm not sure why we have to assign blame for a season in which our favorite team almost doubled their win total...I look at last season as a successful one that positions us for another big leap this year. The fact of the matter is young teams don't win consistently, and the Wolves' core was younger than anyone last season. Of the 6 players that played the most minutes, 5 of them were in their first 3 years, and the 6th (Rubio) hasn't reached his peak either. Despite playing a bunch of kids who don't really understand the NBA yet, we played .500 ball over the last 2 months of the season...that's reason for huge optimism.
And yes, Gorgui was one of our key players in our late-season success, and we need to find a way to retain him. I keep mentioning OkC as a model for us, and we can learn 2 things from them.
1) We can expect improvement this year like OkC experienced in 2009-10. when the lightbulb turned on for their young stars and they won 27 more games than the previous year. That's what happens in the NBA. and our roster looks a lot like the 2009-10 Thunder in terms of being positioned for a big step forward.
2) Contracts have to be closely monitored to ensure you can keep all the good players you want to keep (without getting into the lux tax), Having to give up Harden really hurt the Thunder, because Durant/Westbrook really need a third star (and better supporting players).
Gorgui is not likely to be a star, but it's not easy to find 6'11" young players with his shooting touch, work ethic and smarts. 2016 was a very good thirs year for him, as he improved his PER to 17.17 (3rd on the team behind KAT and Rubio) and made good strides in his PnR defense. NBA players usually continue to improve into their 4th and 5th years, and there's no reason Gorgui can't be a 20 PER guy with even better defense than last year. Thibs needs to decide whether he wants to offer a max contract to a guy like Horford, or lock up Gorgui at a much more reasonable price and cover the PF position with an improving Belly and G, and perhaps a few minutes from KG. I prefer the latter option, and would endorse extending G this summer (even at an amount that might seem a little high at first) as a first step to keeping this promising young core together.