Agree with this.Its true. The real strategy is to get insanely lucky one way or another and make good decisions (that also require some luck) along the way. I think the reason the tear down was smart was in part because I feel the writing was on the wall (okay if others feel differently that's fine) and because we nabbed the future luck of a couple additional teams. That particular flavor of tanking hasn't been done much and has had a higher success rate. OKC/Boston... can't think of too many others though Philly did this just didn't have as big a head start. I think it was a smart start but we haven't nailed a ton of stuff since so its likely a longer process than I had hoped.
I wasn't against the tear down. I saw the writing on the wall, although it hurt at the time. I'm not against putting ourselves in position to lose (unless you trade Kessler!!). But I'm not going to sweat the minor sweetness that the season brings. And I'll occasionally point out that the odds of the kind of success we're all hoping for through tanking remain quite low when I think I see too much faith being placed in the tank.
Just wish we could enjoy the positive parts things that have happened and not have to sublimate everything to the goal of losing as much as we can. We've hardly enjoyed the Collins rejuvenation, Walker's big step toward really mattering in the NBA, Sexton's continued remarkable offensive efficiency, Juzang's big step forward, Keyonte's slow rise toward greater efficiency, whatever bright spots we've seen from Brice and Flip and company. We haven't been able to enjoy the road blowouts of the Heat and the Magic. It seems everything must yield to the tank.