jb wrote:But what might be a good exercize would be going back over those drafts and do the really unrealistic practice of perfect 20/20 hindsight and cherry pick the very best options we could have opted into. Then put that team on paper vs contenders. Would that get us to top 5 or 6 level team quality?
Jim, I'm not sure that exercise gets us far, because the perfect-hindsight pick in year x affects the draft position in years (x + 1) and beyond.
e.g., I wanted the Cavs to draft Amare in 2002. But if they do that, then they likely (can't say for sure without a souped-up DeLorean and a kid in a sailor vest, but likely) finish with more than 17 wins in 2002-03, and then maybe they don't get the top pick in the 2003 draft (although "settling" for Melo would not have sucked).
That said, if you feel like throwing up in your mouth a little bit, consider that:
- in 1999, the Cavs took Tragic Langdon #12, with Corey Maggette and Ron Artest still on the board;
- in 2000, they traded the rights to Jamal Crawford for the rights to Chris Mihm (hard to do any other hindsight on that draft, as that draft class smoked the biggest pole in draft history);
- in 2001, they took DeSagana Diop with Joe Johnson still on the board;
in 2002, they took Juanny over Amare.
And I will go to my grave convinced that the summer of 2004 paved the way for Bron's eventual departure. With Al Jefferson and Josh Smith on the board, Paxson shat away the pick by using it on Luke Jackson. In hindsight, I would have preferred the Cavs just forfeit the pick. Would have loved hearing David Stern announce, "with the #10 pick in the 2004 NBA Draft, the Cleveland Cavaliers select: no one". They would have gotten better value that way, for sure. Not saying that Jefferson or Smith would have been the ideal #2 guy alongside Bron, and either one of them would have duplicated the skills of the guy who REALLY should have been here in Boozer, but it would have given the Cavs a nice young player to pair with Bron. Coulda, woulda, shoulda.