The draft, free agency and trades. The triumvirate of roster building. The perfunctory answer of GMs across the league when posed the question, "How are you looking to improve the roster?"
But is it really that simple? Isn't a team's...
The draft, free agency and trades. The triumvirate of roster building. The perfunctory answer of GMs across the league when posed the question, "How are you looking to improve the roster?"
But is it really that simple? Isn't a team's ability to develop their young players of tantamount importance? Top 10 picks still bust with regularity while some teams are resourceful enough to find key components from less heralded prospects. Do these picks bust because they are landing with bad teams... which may suggest that organizational issues may be landsliding right from the top? This may explain why every player selected by the Charlotte Bobcats cringes when his name is called on draft day.
Do teams that overachieve just scout better? That is certainly part of the equation, but I think player development is vital to maximizing roster potential through less obvious routes. For teams not in the sexier markets, who can just plunder teams for already developed players, a nurturing soil that is conducive to help young players realize their potential is a key cog to success.
"How are you looking to improve the roster?" How about coaching up the talent that is already there.
San Antonio Spurs:
The perdurable core: Tim Duncan #1, Tony Parker #28, Manu Ginobili #57
Gary Neal signed as undrafted free agent
Tiago Splitter #28
Danny Green (drafted #46 by the Cleveland Cavaliers where he played 115 minutes before being waived and joining the Spurs where he was waived again before sticking)
Kawhi Leonard (drafted #15 by Indiana Pacers and acquired in draft day trade)
Indiana Pacers:
Paul George #10
Lance Stephenson #40
Tyler Hansbrough #13
Danny Granger #11
Roy Hibbert (drafted #17 by Toronto Raptors and traded to Pacers, which is the only team he has ever played for)
Milwaukee Bucks:
Ersan Ilyasova #36
Brandon Jennings #10
Larry Sanders #15
John Henson #14
Phoenix Suns:
**crickets chirping**
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Judging by the pesky chirping crickets it appears that the Suns have fallen short of creating an environment that fosters positive growth. There has been a change in the culture, but it has been for the worse, which bottomed out as the team sunk to new depths last season. Not only has a somber pall shrouded the team, causing many pundits to predict multiple top five picks for the team in its bleak future, but to be blunt... the young talent on the team pretty much sucks.
P.J. Tucker, basically a 27 year old rookie that the team pulled off the scrap pile, was better than any player on the roster under the age of 26. That was more of a scouting win, though, because it's difficult to make the argument that the Suns "developed" a 27 year old player who came right out of the gate swinging.
Here are the Suns last 12 draft picks (newest to oldest):
Kendall Marshall
Markieff Morris
Gani Lawal
Dwayne Collins
Earl Clark
Taylor Griffin
Emir Preldzic
Robin Lopez
Malik Hairston
Rudy Fernandez
Alondo Tucker
D.J. Strawberry
Robin Lopez is easily the best player on this list that the Suns developed. I would also concede that he's the best player on this list still in the league. The second best player? Rudy Fernandez, who was shipped out to the Portland Trail Blazers, when the Suns were still in the practice of selling draft picks for cash, before returning to Spain three years ago. That's a full roster of "talent" that could very well comprise the worst team fielded in the history of the NBA. Good job Suns.
Now let's shift gears back to the lists of other teams I sampled.
San Antonio Spurs:
I know that a large contingent of Suns' fans despise this team, but the truth of the matter is that they are just flat out better than Phoenix. Sure, having a bona fide franchise player in Tim Duncan gift wrapped to the team helps, but from front office to coaching to scouting to drafting to player development to trades the Spurs have been consistently better than the Suns for the entirety of this cent