Maybe he hurt himself because they didn't let him freaking play basketball for an entire season.
Great movie by Hinkie. Putting out fake story about Embiid so it looks like they will go big at 3 to scare teams into trading up to get Okafor. This is why I would blow the man.
- burrs
Has anyone confirmed the nature of the "setback"?
Iggy looks healthy.
I would still say they were more reckless than duped with the Embiid pick. There are enough cautionary tales about bug guys with foot problems at a young age to scare off most teams. But not Hinkie!
Lowry, I think you absolutely correct in your comment regarding other GM's. However, other GM's weren't drafting. The Sixers were drafting. In that spot, given the Sixers plan as established from Josh Harris on down Burrs is 100% correct in that Embiid was the pick in that situation for the Sixers. Doesn't mean it will work. However, it was the right call and everyone went in eyes wide open. It also speaks to the private equity model the Sixers have employed. They stockpile assets and take their shots based on the value presented. Embirrd was the value and they have additional pickes due to the uncertainly of the entire draft process. Now if you want to argue that's why tanking to the degree they've done is not the right approach a la KJB, that's a separate argument and one we could debate. I simply cannot find fault in the Embiid pick at that spot for the Sixers. Now if I'm some other team it might not have made sense due to whatever needs/situation they had at the time.The "if it works out, he'd be a genius" line of thinking is what prevailed at the time and still does I guess. But I've never understood why everyone's so ready to laud his genius if it works, but forgive the downside if it doesn't. In real life, that's not how it works. Embiid is the linchpin of the whole taking and rebuilding plan. If he turns out to be an Oden, Bowie, etc., Hinkie should be fired no questions asked. That's what any real company in the world we live in would do. He had all the information in front of him, he got to find out the guy injured himself just doing workouts after a lot of time off from another injury, and proceeded in the face of a known risk.
As far as having the third pick in a two player draft or similar, that's tough, but you still have to make the best pick possible. E.g., the Wall draft had one real good player and the Sixers took Evan Turner. Could have done better than that.
I really tend to doubt "nearly every team in the league takes Embiid in that spot" as burrs put it. Am thinking it's 50% at most. Executives being held accountable for putting a decent team on the floor the next year would not have for starters. And I tend to think some teams that were rebuilding would've stayed away too, whereas Hinkie was all over it becauseit offered a built-in excuse to tank another year. But we'll never know.
Completely disagree. It's the same model. They accept the draft is based on risk. So you have a system that enables you to take as many shots (multiple picks) because in an unpredibile environment the numbers say take more shots. That's exactly what they did. They flipped their two biggest assets in Holiday and MCW before they lost value all to acquire more shots in the draft. It's exactly the model the Sixers have followed.Adp from I experience I can say that the private equity model means a few things, but taking huge gambles like Embiid is not one of them, nor is stockpiling assets and not monetizing them. So to the extent you're trying to say that the building of the team/Hinkie Plan is following a private equity model there I can't agree.
Cutting costs, generally levering it up (probably not necessary so much here) and reaping the rewards of a cash generating business then selling at a profit in 5 or 6 years after purchase are the core features of a private equity model.
If Harris wants out in that time frame he can get out with a big profit, he bought at a time when all assets were depressed, and pro sports franchises were just about to take another huge leap in value. I don't think he cares whether the Hinkie Plan works or not. He knows that he's making money while he owns the team and when he sells whether or not the team is good. And he's keeping expenses as low as possible -- that's probably the only part of the Hinkie plan he cares about.
Let's not forget... Daryl Morey was the analytics driven personnel guru in the Rockets front office. Hinkie was the penny pincher (CAP SPACE). Not that those two don't overlap, but that was the dynamic.