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Anyone else think we should've kept Millsap?

Good Lord what does Sap have to do to earn a little Jazz fan love? The guy has been a top defender for two years in a row. You going to give Draymond the edge because he is on the 2nd best team in NBA history with a player who arguably just had the very best season of all time? Put Sap on that team and all his numbers go up.

Draymond's assist are insane tho, I give him that. But I don't know how else you say an 18.8/10/3.6/2.0/1.9 per 36 and .556 ts% is worse than 14.5/9.9/7.7/1.5/1.4 per 36 and a ts% of .587.

Sap is the hub of a middle of the road offense. Draymond benefits from possibly the best offenses the planet has ever seen.

LOL. No deserves a proper bitch Sap.

Draymond is a waaaaay better passer and leader (off the charts intangibles) and a better defender. He also can play many positions depending on the situation while Sap is very limited in being able to do so and lacks that same crazy flexibility on each end of the court. I'd also trust Green much more than Millsap in a big spot.
 
The problem was that none of the three players: Millsap, Favors and Kanter wanted to come off the bench. And now with Gobert, the same problem would exist.

But the real issue was that Lindsey wanted to rebuild. He wanted lottery picks to get a superstar. And he has netted Burke, Exum and Lyles with those "high" lottery picks. Lindsey screwed the tank. Jazz needed to be worse to get a higher pick. The only way this works out to be better is if Exum becomes a superstar.

Forgive me if I don't hold my breath.
 
Tanking as a team-building strategy doesn't work.

Unless you tank your way to lebron james.
Or if you have some bad injuries to some really talented players and just decide to over-rest them and tank. (isnt that kind of what happened to the spurs when robinson got hurt and they drafted duncan?) Then you get a top 5 pick (duncan, lebron, durant, curry, etc) and your injured and very talented players heal up and come back the next year. Boom. contender.

Those scenarios are rare though. So you are mostly right.
 
He was one of my favorites as well until his last season where he quit trying a lot of games and pulled the same move as Kanter just didnt talk about it. He wanted out of here for awhile.

Where is a link or evidence that paul didn't try hard? I hear some Jazz fans use this to justify getting rid of Millsap. It is total nonsense. Paul was playing hurt and NEVER complained about anything when he was playing on the Jazz. I never once read or heard Paul say he wanted to leave. The Jazz made it easy because they didn't offer him another contract.
 
Unless you tank your way to lebron james.
Or if you have some bad injuries to some really talented players and just decide to over-rest them and tank. (isnt that kind of what happened to the spurs when robinson got hurt and they drafted duncan?) Then you get a top 5 pick (duncan, lebron, durant, curry, etc) and your injured and very talented players heal up and come back the next year. Boom. contender.

Those scenarios are rare though. So you are mostly right.
Curry wasn't a top-5 pick, and the only other player on your list who's won a title on his original team is Tim Duncan, whose team didn't really tank to get him (and had the 3rd best odds of receiving the 1st pick -- Boston, the worst team that year, drafted Chauncey Billups 3rd overall and traded him during his rookie season for Kenny Anderson).

Just look at Sacramento, Minnesota, and all those old Clippers teams. You have to add talent wherever you can to compete. Yes, you might get lucky and end up with a generational talent in the draft, but it's not really something you can plan for.
 
Where is a link or evidence that paul didn't try hard? I hear some Jazz fans use this to justify getting rid of Millsap. It is total nonsense. Paul was playing hurt and NEVER complained about anything when he was playing on the Jazz. I never once read or heard Paul say he wanted to leave. The Jazz made it easy because they didn't offer him another contract.

My evidence is watching him play that last season. He gave up a lot on plays and didnt put in his usual effort consistently. Especially on defense he would hustle on offense and pull the Boozer style defense the last half of the season. Seemed clear to me. Just like it was clear Korver refused to take open shots his last season here to preserve his record. But people also wanted him back badly.

Milsap also let it be known that he wasnt happy about Jazz not offering him a contract and then matching Portlands contract to bring him back.
 
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First, I love Millsap and he was great even in his down year.

But numbers virtually the same in his last year at Utah? You've got to be kidding. How about down across the board. Rebounds down 13% from 9.7 to 8.4. Points down 11% (16.6 to 14.6).

If you like advanced stats, BPM down from 5.0 to 3.8. WS/48 down 14% from 0.179 to 0.154.

Turnovers up, steals down. Only improvement was in blocks.

Over the course of a season these are statistically significant drops. And all these reinforce my "eye test" on him for the year.


Even if you love Millsap like I do, you need to take off the rose colored glasses and see reality.

Maybe your memory is a little foggy but Millsap played hurt a lot his last couple of years. The difference was he didn't sit when he should have. The guy was a warrior and was under appreciated by many fans. Jazz fans love to criticize a player when they leave so they feel better sbout him leaving(he was declining, didn't play hard, wanted to leave, choked etc) People say he wanted to leave. I don't remember one quote about him wanting to leave. All he said was he wanted to be a starter, how can anyone hold that against him?

Aa far as him developing in Atlanta, the fact that Millsap continues to improve is why I love the guy. Paul was unleashed in Atlanta, he developed his 3 pt shot when he was in Utah, the coaches just didn't allow him to shoot it as much.
 
My evidence is watching him play that last season. He gave up a lot on plays and didnt put in his usual effort consistently. Especially on defense he would hustle on offense and pull the Boozer style defense the last half of the season. Seemed clear to me. Just like it was clear Korver refused to take open shots his last season here to preserve his record. But people also wanted him back badly.

Milsap also let it be known that he wasnt happy about Jazz not offering him a contract and then matching Portlands contract to bring him back.

He should have been unhappy about his first contract negotiation. Jazz messed it up like they do a lot when it comes to contracts negotiating.
 
Over the years, I think that Jazz have made a number of bad personnel moves, in particular:

1. Letting Korver go (I never understood why we didn't resign him; he didn't cost all that much)
2. Letting Millsap go (We never figured out how to use him properly, and if we had, he could have played alongside Favors as a stretch 4 or as a 3)
3. Letting Matthews go

I don't regret letting Kanter go.
 
Tanking as a team-building strategy doesn't work.

It worked with Duncan, and would work with others if they had good management. It might work in new york with the zinger.

The cavs are a poor example because they pretty much threw up their hands and expected to get a title because they had Lebron and 11 scrubs.
 
Maybe your memory is a little foggy but Millsap played hurt a lot his last couple of years. The difference was he didn't sit when he should have. The guy was a warrior and was under appreciated by many fans. Jazz fans love to criticize a player when they leave so they feel better sbout him leaving(he was declining, didn't play hard, wanted to leave, choked etc) People say he wanted to leave. I don't remember one quote about him wanting to leave. All he said was he wanted to be a starter, how can anyone hold that against him?

Aa far as him developing in Atlanta, the fact that Millsap continues to improve is why I love the guy. Paul was unleashed in Atlanta, he developed his 3 pt shot when he was in Utah, the coaches just didn't allow him to shoot it as much.

Thanks for reinforcing my main points. You agree that Millsap declined a bit in his last year (you add injury as a possible reason for his decline). And you agree with my other point that we would not be assured that he would have been unleashed and he may not have developed at the same pace had he stayed in Utah.

So what part is fuzzy to you?
 
It worked with Duncan, and would work with others if they had good management. It might work in new york with the zinger.
Maybe you missed my other post, but...

1. The Spurs didn't have a tanking strategy. David Robinson got hurt, and the Spurs got lucky and moved up two spots in the lottery.
2. Zinger? Really? Also, I don't think anyone thought the Knicks were tanking going into last season. They got hit with a bunch of injuries, and made trades around the deadline to rid themselves of bad players and contracts.
 
My evidence is watching him play that last season. He gave up a lot on plays and didnt put in his usual effort consistently. Especially on defense he would hustle on offense and pull the Boozer style defense the last half of the season. Seemed clear to me. Just like it was clear Korver refused to take open shots his last season here to preserve his record. But people also wanted him back badly.

Milsap also let it be known that he wasnt happy about Jazz not offering him a contract and then matching Portlands contract to bring him back.

I do not believe a player of Millsaps character in a contract year did not give 110%. This post is typical jazz fan illogic.
 
Over the years, I think that Jazz have made a number of bad personnel moves, in particular:

1. Letting Korver go (I never understood why we didn't resign him; he didn't cost all that much)
2. Letting Millsap go (We never figured out how to use him properly, and if we had, he could have played alongside Favors as a stretch 4 or as a 3)
3. Letting Matthews go

I don't regret letting Kanter go.

DeMarre Carol was the biggest blunder. He did not cost much to resign.
 
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