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TripleThreat
Posts: 23106 Alba Posts: 1 Joined: 2/24/2012 Member: #3997 |
![]() Knixkik wrote:Whether they win or lose this round against the Bucks, the Heat have found a way to properly build around their 2 best players Butler and Adebayo and become a dangerous playoff team. Given the similarity in skill-sets, the Knicks should be borrowing this model to build around Barrett and Robinson; https://www.basketball-reference.com/executives/rileypa01x.html What the Heat were able to do was mine well late draft and in the UDFA and churn those players in trade. Post LeBron James, they were sort of stuck. They were basically the last team to use the old sign and trade system, so they were out 4 first rounders and a pair of 2nds for Bosh and LBJ. The league also changed the mid level exception post Decision, which took away a lot of their flexibility Wade refused to change his game ( learn to shoot a three and lose some weight) so that hurt them. Bosh was an unpredictable situation and it hurt their cap until the Chris Bosh Rule was created. Heat made the most of their situation but also gave out some head scratching deals because they needed to get to the cap floor. The Heat don't really have a model, they just hold ground until they can get a prime free agent to sign. They've had the advantage of using sign and trades to get the Bird Rights of key players. I don't think is a system that can be replicated. I do think how the Heat mine UDFA and late picks is something every team wants to have work for them too. If the Heat can't get Greek Freak, then what do they do with that carved out cap space? Their next best option might be Oladipo. What the Knicks need to do and have always needed to do is to pick a GM and head coach without optics in mind. Elevating Erik Spolestra was not a good optics decision at the time for the Heat. Nor the Nets hiring Atkinson. But they were good coaches. Michele Roberts is a good litigator, but she has no business in labor disputes, it's not her area of expertise. But she fits the optics that the NBPA wanted and when owners kept running them over, they had to pay for that decision. Adebayo was considered a reach at 14. So was Herro in his draft. If there's something that the Heat do very well, its to not give a **** what anyone thinks. LBJ wanted Spolestra fired. Riley said go **** yourself. The problem this version of the Heat faces is it's only suited to go after free agents. They don't have the trade capital to trade for a big name and still have a worthy roster afterwards. The cap floor is a real problem under the current system. It hurts the Knicks very badly but even causes problems for a team like the Heat. It forces you to spend money on players whose real market value don't reflect it. A workaround given at one of the MIT Sloans was a five year cap bundle. Essentially you take a projection of five consecutive years of cap and let teams spend it how they want as long as they hit the total benchmark at the end of year five. The other suggestion was using the rosters as the NFL does, i.e. an inactive list. And then prorate salary against number of games played. This would have prevented the horse ****ery that Tracy McGrady did in Houston. I mean he just ****ed the Rockets for ****s and giggles. The thing that helped the Heat was when they did have a millstone contract, it was a big one. If you are going to have bad contracts, one big one looks different than a bunch of small ones. One John Wall deal while he is injured is actually more valuable than a gaggle of Portis/Randle/Gibson/Ellington/Harkless. At least with Wall, if you absorbed it in a deal, you got picks and those minutes and roster spots can be used to audition other guys. The Heat were able to give minutes to audition players because they were able to trade some of their cannon fodder veterans off the roster. The Knicks were stuck because they had totally ****ed contracts like Calderon, Noah, Bargs, etc. Where this impacts the Knicks is to look hard at the retrade value of anyone they sign and make that a hard filter. Marcus Morris and Robin Lopez are good examples of good retrade value signings. I know this sounds counter-intuitive to many here, but one big ass bad contract is often a better long term compromise. |
Nalod
Posts: 71138 Alba Posts: 155 Joined: 12/24/2003 Member: #508 USA |
![]() I can’t remember my cars license plate but I know:
Briggs likes Christian Wood and his draft picks are Wiseman, Nesmith and Bane. |
fwk00
Posts: 22162 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 5/20/2015 Member: #6048 |
![]() TripleThreat wrote:NardDogNation wrote: I think they've demonstrated over the years that they can pull players from the scrapheap and give them the tools to succeed.... Good post. |
knicks1248
Posts: 42059 Alba Posts: 1 Joined: 2/3/2004 Member: #582 |
![]() Knixkik wrote:BRIGGS wrote:Knixkik wrote:franco12 wrote:NardDogNation wrote:The "Miami Model" has nothing to do with the players they have. I think they've demonstrated over the years that they can pull players from the scrapheap and give them the tools to succeed. What they do takes place behind the scenes and involves people that may not have even played college ball, let alone seen a NBA court. Unless we make a goodfaith effort to invest in our scouting department, medical staff, strength & conditioning team, our G-League, we'll never come close to touching what the Heat...or the Jazz...or the Raptors do on a year-in, year-out basis with no-name players. Seriously, the ****ing Raptors are elite without having a single lottery pick their rotation! I Can't believe you think that, that's like saying my arms are more important than my legs, you need both to fully function. Both are equally important because without a penetrating guard who's going to put pressure on the defense to collapse, your going to play east to west? Maybe in the days of post ups and ISO's that maybe have been the case, not today. ES
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BigDaddyG
Posts: 39853 Alba Posts: 9 Joined: 1/22/2010 Member: #3049 |
![]() knicks1248 wrote:Knixkik wrote:BRIGGS wrote:Knixkik wrote:franco12 wrote:NardDogNation wrote:The "Miami Model" has nothing to do with the players they have. I think they've demonstrated over the years that they can pull players from the scrapheap and give them the tools to succeed. What they do takes place behind the scenes and involves people that may not have even played college ball, let alone seen a NBA court. Unless we make a goodfaith effort to invest in our scouting department, medical staff, strength & conditioning team, our G-League, we'll never come close to touching what the Heat...or the Jazz...or the Raptors do on a year-in, year-out basis with no-name players. Seriously, the ****ing Raptors are elite without having a single lottery pick their rotation! Doesn't necessarily have to be a point guard. This is the age of point forwards. We've even seen Steph play off the ball for stretches. I agree, we do need a penetrator and creator. Maybe RJ has that potential, but we can't count on it. Always... always remember: Less is less. More is more. More is better and twice as much is good too. Not enough is bad, and too much is never enough except when it's just about right.
- The Tick
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knicks1248
Posts: 42059 Alba Posts: 1 Joined: 2/3/2004 Member: #582 |
![]() BigDaddyG wrote:knicks1248 wrote:Knixkik wrote:BRIGGS wrote:Knixkik wrote:franco12 wrote:NardDogNation wrote:The "Miami Model" has nothing to do with the players they have. I think they've demonstrated over the years that they can pull players from the scrapheap and give them the tools to succeed. What they do takes place behind the scenes and involves people that may not have even played college ball, let alone seen a NBA court. Unless we make a goodfaith effort to invest in our scouting department, medical staff, strength & conditioning team, our G-League, we'll never come close to touching what the Heat...or the Jazz...or the Raptors do on a year-in, year-out basis with no-name players. Seriously, the ****ing Raptors are elite without having a single lottery pick their rotation! Thats the thinking that got us where we are today..pointguardless ES
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BigDaddyG
Posts: 39853 Alba Posts: 9 Joined: 1/22/2010 Member: #3049 |
![]() knicks1248 wrote:BigDaddyG wrote:knicks1248 wrote:Knixkik wrote:BRIGGS wrote:Knixkik wrote:franco12 wrote:NardDogNation wrote:The "Miami Model" has nothing to do with the players they have. I think they've demonstrated over the years that they can pull players from the scrapheap and give them the tools to succeed. What they do takes place behind the scenes and involves people that may not have even played college ball, let alone seen a NBA court. Unless we make a goodfaith effort to invest in our scouting department, medical staff, strength & conditioning team, our G-League, we'll never come close to touching what the Heat...or the Jazz...or the Raptors do on a year-in, year-out basis with no-name players. Seriously, the ****ing Raptors are elite without having a single lottery pick their rotation! No, I'm pretty sure we've brought in enough point guards to fill a starting five. I think bad talent evaluation is what got us here today. Or do you think we just brought in DSJ to have a representative in the slam dunk competition? Always... always remember: Less is less. More is more. More is better and twice as much is good too. Not enough is bad, and too much is never enough except when it's just about right.
- The Tick
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technomaster
Posts: 23347 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 6/30/2003 Member: #426 USA |
![]() What is the Miami Heat model we're talking about?
* Make draft picks that ultimately end up better than draft value (Josh Richardson, Nunn, Adebayo, Herro). Richardson is a bit remarkable in that as a 2nd round pick, he far exceeded the value of lottery pick Justise Winslow... and has a premium skill set in today's game. I mean, I think this is a pretty standard playbook - you take some calculated risks and hope they pan out.
“That was two, two from the heart.” - John Starks
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jrodmc
Posts: 32927 Alba Posts: 50 Joined: 11/24/2004 Member: #805 USA |
![]() I may not know cap space from shinola,
but I know TripleThreat thinks LeBron is a ****tard. |
BRIGGS
Posts: 53275 Alba Posts: 7 Joined: 7/30/2002 Member: #303 |
![]() Miami is breaking the mold
RIP Crushalot😞
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franco12
Posts: 34069 Alba Posts: 4 Joined: 2/19/2004 Member: #599 USA |
![]() BigDaddyG wrote:knicks1248 wrote:BigDaddyG wrote:knicks1248 wrote:Knixkik wrote:BRIGGS wrote:Knixkik wrote:franco12 wrote:NardDogNation wrote:The "Miami Model" has nothing to do with the players they have. I think they've demonstrated over the years that they can pull players from the scrapheap and give them the tools to succeed. What they do takes place behind the scenes and involves people that may not have even played college ball, let alone seen a NBA court. Unless we make a goodfaith effort to invest in our scouting department, medical staff, strength & conditioning team, our G-League, we'll never come close to touching what the Heat...or the Jazz...or the Raptors do on a year-in, year-out basis with no-name players. Seriously, the ****ing Raptors are elite without having a single lottery pick their rotation! I agree bad talent evaluation has plagued the organization. But we need a pg far more than 3pt shooting. A solid pg can unlock a lot of talent that we have. Just imagine a real pg like Rondo running the p&r with Mitchell- that is an easy +10 points every game. Sure, add a 3pt shooter and that is an even better +10. But we have to find a better pg option than Payton, and if we don’t, we better bring him back and hope between him, Frank & DSjr one of those three can take a step forward. 3pt shooting is definitely 1b on our list. |
Knixkik
Posts: 35439 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 7/24/2001 Member: #11 USA |
![]() BRIGGS wrote:Miami is breaking the mold They really are. They have their 2 stars in Butler and Bam. They have their secondary playmaker in Dragic who can play on or off the ball. They have their 3&D combo forward in Crowder and 2 elite shooters/shot makers in Robinson and Herro. They are really only playing those 6 players. Nunn is out of the rotation essentially. On paper they have all of the pieces that you need in the modern nba. Robinson and Herro show that having elite shooters is worth its weight in gold. |
Nalod
Posts: 71138 Alba Posts: 155 Joined: 12/24/2003 Member: #508 USA |
![]() Bucks were 52-8 before stoppage.
They were the mold. MIami is kicking their ass and now the hot darling team. Getting Butler was huge. PHX a few weeks ago looked great. The new Mold? Portland did a great job once healthy and if stayed might have knocked off Lakers? |