I don’t really disagree with you but the Celtics traded for mid 30s Holiday and Horford and the pacers traded for 30 year old SiakamLipoli390 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:15 pm I love Giannis. He’s one of my three favorite non-Wolves players in the League along with Steph Curry and Jalen Brunson. But I can’t remember the last time a team pushed itself over the hump to win a first championship by trading for a star in his 30s. And as great as Giannis still is, I see his body breaking down with the way he plays as he heads towards his 31st birthday next December. He was an iron man in his first few seasons playing nearly every game but since then he’s missed a lot of games each season, He’s played more than 67 games in only one of his last six seasons. Other than two years ago when he played 73 games, he’s played between 61 and 67 games in the other five of those six seasons. And that’s all when he was in his mid to late 20s. As great as he is, you don’t swap a ton of assets for Giannis. Given the penchant of Wolves fans to obsess over player flaws, I can imagine complaints we’d see on message boards about his free throw shooting and lack of any perimeter scoring. I can also imagine the complaints about him missing 20 games, which has been typical for him the past six seasons.
I’m just not interested in chasing stars in their 30s with huge offloading of assets to get them. That’s not what OKC or Indiana did. That’s not what the Celtics did. That’s not what Golden State did during their dynasty years. That’s not how you build a championship team. The Thunder traded an older star (younger at the time than Giannis is now) to the Clippers for a very young SGA and the pick they used to select Jalen Williams. We know which team came out on top.
So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
Re: So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
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Re: So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
.Lipoli390 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:15 pm I love Giannis. He’s one of my three favorite non-Wolves players in the League along with Steph Curry and Jalen Brunson. But I can’t remember the last time a team pushed itself over the hump to win a first championship by trading for a star in his 30s. And as great as Giannis still is, I see his body breaking down with the way he plays as he heads towards his 31st birthday next December. He was an iron man in his first few seasons playing nearly every game but since then he’s missed a lot of games each season, He’s played more than 67 games in only one of his last six seasons. Other than two years ago when he played 73 games, he’s played between 61 and 67 games in the other five of those six seasons. And that’s all when he was in his mid to late 20s. As great as he is, you don’t swap a ton of assets for Giannis. Given the penchant of Wolves fans to obsess over player flaws, I can imagine complaints we’d see on message boards about his free throw shooting and lack of any perimeter scoring. I can also imagine the complaints about him missing 20 games, which has been typical for him the past six seasons.
I’m just not interested in chasing stars in their 30s with huge offloading of assets to get them. That’s not what OKC or Indiana did. That’s not what the Celtics did. That’s not what Golden State did during their dynasty years. That’s not how you build a championship team. The Thunder traded an older star (younger at the time than Giannis is now) to the Clippers for a very young SGA and the pick they used to select Jalen Williams. We know which team came out on top.
You're right Lip, Giannis isn't all a bowl of cherries. He can't shoot free throws and he should never shoot 3's. He also plays so hard that he constantly breaks down. But he is perfect for Ant like KG was perfect for Pierce and Ray. We would have a great chance to win a couple NBA championships right now. It's interesting to think about.
Re: So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
I’m 100% in for Giannis trade. I think Jaden has to go as the main piece and probably Randle too. If Randle isn’t included then he has to go in a separate move. Randle and Giannis simply don’t fit. My only concern is starting Rudy next to Giannis as two non shooters, but Giannis might be ok. I think Naz fits great next to Giannis and I would try to keep him. I’d also do everything possible to keep Shannon and Dilly. I think a trade of Jaden, Randle, Clark, 17 and a future protected 1st would be my offer.
This leaves you with Rudy, Giannis, Shannon, ant, Ddv as starters. Then you bring, Naz, Dilly and hopefully NAW off the bench along with a center at 31 and then you give miller a chance at the rotation too.
This leaves you with Rudy, Giannis, Shannon, ant, Ddv as starters. Then you bring, Naz, Dilly and hopefully NAW off the bench along with a center at 31 and then you give miller a chance at the rotation too.
Re: So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
And as Cool mentioned, the Celtics traded for KG when he was 31. We could go back another decade to Houston trading for Clyde Drexler to be Hakeem's #2 guy in his early 30s. They won a title the year they traded for him.kekgeek wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:23 pmI don’t really disagree with you but the Celtics traded for mid 30s Holiday and Horford and the pacers traded for 30 year old SiakamLipoli390 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:15 pm I love Giannis. He’s one of my three favorite non-Wolves players in the League along with Steph Curry and Jalen Brunson. But I can’t remember the last time a team pushed itself over the hump to win a first championship by trading for a star in his 30s. And as great as Giannis still is, I see his body breaking down with the way he plays as he heads towards his 31st birthday next December. He was an iron man in his first few seasons playing nearly every game but since then he’s missed a lot of games each season, He’s played more than 67 games in only one of his last six seasons. Other than two years ago when he played 73 games, he’s played between 61 and 67 games in the other five of those six seasons. And that’s all when he was in his mid to late 20s. As great as he is, you don’t swap a ton of assets for Giannis. Given the penchant of Wolves fans to obsess over player flaws, I can imagine complaints we’d see on message boards about his free throw shooting and lack of any perimeter scoring. I can also imagine the complaints about him missing 20 games, which has been typical for him the past six seasons.
I’m just not interested in chasing stars in their 30s with huge offloading of assets to get them. That’s not what OKC or Indiana did. That’s not what the Celtics did. That’s not what Golden State did during their dynasty years. That’s not how you build a championship team. The Thunder traded an older star (younger at the time than Giannis is now) to the Clippers for a very young SGA and the pick they used to select Jalen Williams. We know which team came out on top.
I think one of the things that makes a Durant or Giannis trade unique is that you are bringing them into a team that has already had playoff success and an alpha in Ant.
Re: So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
Yes, but those are the exceptions. I’ll add that the Celtics didn’t give up any key players to get Jrue. they traded Robert Williams and Malcolm Brogdon and a couple picks. Similarly, the Pacers traded Nero’s, Bruce Brown and Kris Lewis along with picks for Siakam. None of those guys traded for Jrue or Siakam were as important to their teams as Jaden McDaniels is to the Wolves. And none of them had untapped upside like Jaden has. As a fan, I’m excited to see the players that McDaniels and TSJ will become in a couple years as they enter the prime years of their careers at the same time as Ant. Add Naz to that mix with the defensive anchor vet, Rudy Gobert. Then there’s Clark and Dilly. There’s the still 28 year old Donte on a cheap deal who could be a big help to the Wolves or a nice trade chip for a key role player.kekgeek wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:23 pmI don’t really disagree with you but the Celtics traded for mid 30s Holiday and Horford and the pacers traded for 30 year old SiakamLipoli390 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:15 pm I love Giannis. He’s one of my three favorite non-Wolves players in the League along with Steph Curry and Jalen Brunson. But I can’t remember the last time a team pushed itself over the hump to win a first championship by trading for a star in his 30s. And as great as Giannis still is, I see his body breaking down with the way he plays as he heads towards his 31st birthday next December. He was an iron man in his first few seasons playing nearly every game but since then he’s missed a lot of games each season, He’s played more than 67 games in only one of his last six seasons. Other than two years ago when he played 73 games, he’s played between 61 and 67 games in the other five of those six seasons. And that’s all when he was in his mid to late 20s. As great as he is, you don’t swap a ton of assets for Giannis. Given the penchant of Wolves fans to obsess over player flaws, I can imagine complaints we’d see on message boards about his free throw shooting and lack of any perimeter scoring. I can also imagine the complaints about him missing 20 games, which has been typical for him the past six seasons.
I’m just not interested in chasing stars in their 30s with huge offloading of assets to get them. That’s not what OKC or Indiana did. That’s not what the Celtics did. That’s not what Golden State did during their dynasty years. That’s not how you build a championship team. The Thunder traded an older star (younger at the time than Giannis is now) to the Clippers for a very young SGA and the pick they used to select Jalen Williams. We know which team came out on top.
Part of my thing is that I don’t like star chasing because it detracts from the joy of watching a team develops. As a Bulls fan who grew up in Chicago during the MJ era, I loved watching that team come together as the franchise drafted Jordan and then build around him by drafting Pippen and Grant — later drafting Kukoc. They build their core through the draft with players around the same age and then filled in the rest of the pieces in various way via trades and free agency but also drafting BJ Armstrong. Golden State did the same thing drafting Curry, Thompson and Green. They eventually signed Durant but only after they had won a championship and set the record for most wins in a season without him. And they acquired Durant via free agency rather than trading a boatload of talent and other assets to get him. OKC has build its current best NBA team in the same fashion. It’s not the only way to build a championship team, but it’s proven to be the most effective and most sustainable. The one thing that hasn’t worked well is trading massive assets for stars in their 30s.
Re: So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
Yes, but those are the exceptions. I’ll add that the Celtics didn’t give up any key players to get Jrue. they traded Robert Williams and Malcolm Brogdon and a couple picks. Similarly, the Pacers traded Nero’s, Bruce Brown and Kris Lewis along with picks for Siakam. None of those guys traded for Jrue or Siakam were as important to their teams as Jaden McDaniels is to the Wolves. And none of them had untapped upside like Jaden has. As a fan, I’m excited to see the players that McDaniels and TSJ will become in a couple years as they enter the prime years of their careers at the same time as Ant. Add Naz to that mix with the defensive anchor vet, Rudy Gobert. Then there’s Clark and Dilly. There’s the still 28 year old Donte on a cheap deal who could be a big help to the Wolves or a nice trade chip for a key role player.kekgeek wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:23 pmI don’t really disagree with you but the Celtics traded for mid 30s Holiday and Horford and the pacers traded for 30 year old SiakamLipoli390 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:15 pm I love Giannis. He’s one of my three favorite non-Wolves players in the League along with Steph Curry and Jalen Brunson. But I can’t remember the last time a team pushed itself over the hump to win a first championship by trading for a star in his 30s. And as great as Giannis still is, I see his body breaking down with the way he plays as he heads towards his 31st birthday next December. He was an iron man in his first few seasons playing nearly every game but since then he’s missed a lot of games each season, He’s played more than 67 games in only one of his last six seasons. Other than two years ago when he played 73 games, he’s played between 61 and 67 games in the other five of those six seasons. And that’s all when he was in his mid to late 20s. As great as he is, you don’t swap a ton of assets for Giannis. Given the penchant of Wolves fans to obsess over player flaws, I can imagine complaints we’d see on message boards about his free throw shooting and lack of any perimeter scoring. I can also imagine the complaints about him missing 20 games, which has been typical for him the past six seasons.
I’m just not interested in chasing stars in their 30s with huge offloading of assets to get them. That’s not what OKC or Indiana did. That’s not what the Celtics did. That’s not what Golden State did during their dynasty years. That’s not how you build a championship team. The Thunder traded an older star (younger at the time than Giannis is now) to the Clippers for a very young SGA and the pick they used to select Jalen Williams. We know which team came out on top.
Part of my thing is that I don’t like star chasing because it detracts from the joy of watching a team develops. As a Bulls fan who grew up in Chicago during the MJ era, I loved watching that team come together as the franchise drafted Jordan and then built around him by drafting Pippen and Grant — later drafting Kukoc. They built their core through the draft with players around the same age and then filled in the rest of the pieces in various way via trades and free agency but also drafting BJ Armstrong. Golden State did the same thing drafting Curry, Thompson and Green. They eventually signed Durant but only after they had won a championship and set the record for most wins in a season without him. And they acquired Durant via free agency rather than trading a boatload of talent and other assets to get him. OKC has built its current best NBA team in the same fashion. It’s not the only way to build a championship team, but it’s proven to be the most effective and most sustainable. The one thing that hasn’t worked well is trading massive assets for stars in their 30s.
Last edited by Lipoli390 on Fri Jun 06, 2025 3:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
My favorite flyer PG option is Lamelo Ball
Re: So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
Paul Pierce was already 31 when the Celtics traded for KG. Hakeem was nearly 30 when they traded for Drexler. Moreover, KG and Drexler were the perfect complementary players for Pierce and Hakeem respectively. In each case, the team was pairing a ball-dominant wing or guard with a non-dominant/relatively low usage big.Q-is-here wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:36 pmAnd as Cool mentioned, the Celtics traded for KG when he was 31. We could go back another decade to Houston trading for Clyde Drexler to be Hakeem's #2 guy in his early 30s. They won a title the year they traded for him.kekgeek wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:23 pmI don’t really disagree with you but the Celtics traded for mid 30s Holiday and Horford and the pacers traded for 30 year old SiakamLipoli390 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:15 pm I love Giannis. He’s one of my three favorite non-Wolves players in the League along with Steph Curry and Jalen Brunson. But I can’t remember the last time a team pushed itself over the hump to win a first championship by trading for a star in his 30s. And as great as Giannis still is, I see his body breaking down with the way he plays as he heads towards his 31st birthday next December. He was an iron man in his first few seasons playing nearly every game but since then he’s missed a lot of games each season, He’s played more than 67 games in only one of his last six seasons. Other than two years ago when he played 73 games, he’s played between 61 and 67 games in the other five of those six seasons. And that’s all when he was in his mid to late 20s. As great as he is, you don’t swap a ton of assets for Giannis. Given the penchant of Wolves fans to obsess over player flaws, I can imagine complaints we’d see on message boards about his free throw shooting and lack of any perimeter scoring. I can also imagine the complaints about him missing 20 games, which has been typical for him the past six seasons.
I’m just not interested in chasing stars in their 30s with huge offloading of assets to get them. That’s not what OKC or Indiana did. That’s not what the Celtics did. That’s not what Golden State did during their dynasty years. That’s not how you build a championship team. The Thunder traded an older star (younger at the time than Giannis is now) to the Clippers for a very young SGA and the pick they used to select Jalen Williams. We know which team came out on top.
I think one of the things that makes a Durant or Giannis trade unique is that you are bringing them into a team that has already had playoff success and an alpha in Ant.
The situation with the Wolves is far different. We’d be trading for a 30+ year old player to pair with our 23 year old star and giving up a key young piece (Jaden) to get him. Moreover, Giannis and Ant are both ball dominant players. They need the ball in their hands a lot to take full advantage of their talents. So I actually don’t see Giannis and Ant as a particularly good fit. I come back to Kevin McHale’s mantra - it’s not the five best players it’s the five players who play best together. Of course we’re seeing McHale’s mantra play out this year in the form of OKC and Indiana. I’ll note also that KG missed very few games in the seasons leading up to when he was traded to the Celtics - very different from Giannis. I’ll also note that the Rockets won the NBA championship the season before they acquired Drexler so I don’t think we can say that acquiring him got them over the hump. Finally, think about who the Celtics and Rockets gave up for those two guys. Neither team gave up a player comparable to Jaden McDaniels even before factoring in Jaden’s still untapped potential.
Getting over the hump into the NBA finals, much less winning a title, by trading for a star in his 30s is historically rare. Trading for a 30+ star to pair with a 23 year old existing star would be unprecedented and trading someone of Jaden’s caliber, who is the same age as Ant, seems even more out of whack with how teams become champions. Meanwhile, the list of examples where trading for 30+ stars has failed is pretty extensive. And then I come back to Giannis missing around 20 games in five of the last six seasons when he was in his 20s. Star chasing is fun for fans but bad for business if your business is winning titles.
Last edited by Lipoli390 on Fri Jun 06, 2025 8:53 am, edited 5 times in total.
Re: So What's Your Plan? The Offseason Roster Construction Thread
You make a good case here Lip, and indeed it's probably a long shot that we could even acquire Giannis.Lipoli390 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 06, 2025 8:38 amPaul Pierce was already 31 when the Celtics traded for KG. Hakeem was nearly 30 when they traded for Drexler. Moreover, KG and Drexler were the perfect complementary players for Pierce and Hakeem respectively. In each case, the team was pairing a ball-dominant wing or guard with a non-dominant/relatively low usage big.Q-is-here wrote: ↑Thu Jun 05, 2025 10:36 pmAnd as Cool mentioned, the Celtics traded for KG when he was 31. We could go back another decade to Houston trading for Clyde Drexler to be Hakeem's #2 guy in his early 30s. They won a title the year they traded for him.
I think one of the things that makes a Durant or Giannis trade unique is that you are bringing them into a team that has already had playoff success and an alpha in Ant.
The situation with the Wolves is far different. We’d be trading for a 30+ year old player to pair with our 23 year old star and giving up a key young piece (Jaden) to get him. Moreover, Giannis and Ant are both ball dominant players. They need the ball in their hands a lot to take full advantage of their talents. So I actually don’t see Giannis and Ant as a particularly good fit. I come back to Kevin McHale’s mantra - it’s not the five best players it’s the five players who play best together. Of course we’re seeing McHale’s mantra play out this year in the form of OKC and Indiana. I’ll note also that KG missed very few games in the seasons leading up to when he was traded to the Celtics - very different from Giannis. I’ll also note that the Rockets won the NBA championship the season before they acquired Drexler so I don’t think we can say that acquiring him got them over the hump. Finally, think about who the Celtics and Rockets gave up for those two guys. Neither team gave up a player comparable to Jaden McDaniels even before factoring in Jaden’s still untapped potential.
Getting over the hump into the NBA finals, much less winning a title, by trading for a star in his 30s is historically rare. Trading for a 30+ star to pair with a 23 year old existing star would be unprecedented and trading someone of Jaden’s caliber, who is the same age as Ant, seems even more out of whack with how teams become champions. Meanwhile, the while the list of examples where trading for 30+ stars has failed is pretty extensive. And then I come back to Giannis missing around 20 games in five of the last six seasons when he was in his 20s. Star chasing is fun for fans but bad for business if your business is winning titles.
It's interesting you talk about both needing the ball in their hands. I have heard pundit after pundit talk about getting Ant help in that regard - that he needs another ball handler and creator. By definition, that takes the ball OUT of Ant's hands more and allows him to space the floor, cut, come off pin downs, etc. Giannis obviously fits the definition of a guy that can do a lot of damage with the ball in his hands and potentially free up Ant to do more damage as an assist receptacle.