^
AllThatAmar makes some wild leaps of logic.
He wrote about something I tried to tell all the time. If Kanter was not the 3rd Pick Utah wanted him to be, the FO also have something to do with it. FO also knows that they did something wrong, so they tradet Enes to a very good team, to really help his career.
Especially this part:
"It’s an old, dare I say it out-dated, idea about development I see so many people online champion.
" If player X wants it bad enough, works hard enough in practice, and does all the right things distraction free – then they’ll get the minutes. You gotta earn it."
That’s fine. It’s perfectly fine if we’re talking about players on equal footing – like three or four high school kids who all played two years of J.V. ball. Or, say, a group of NBA Rookies who all played three to four years of NCAA ball. Having the guys "earn their minutes" makes no sense when you have 27 year old Al Jefferson going up against 26 year old Paul Millsap going up against 20 year old Derrick Favors going up against 19 year old Enes Kanter.
Big Al skipped college and went to the NBA, and by this point (the 2011-2012 season) had already played 14,590 regular season minutes over 7 NBA seasons. That’s an average of 2,084.3 minutes per season. The team had previously signed and traded away Carlos Boozer, a multiple time All-Star, away for a trade exception that the team then used to get Big Al and his bloated contract out of Minnesota so they could free up more playing / development time for Kevin Love. Love is now one of the best Bigmen in the league and an Olympian. The Jazz hitched their wagon to Big Al, and there was no way a 19 year old rookie and a 20 year old 2nd year player were going to displace his minutes. They could not be earned.
Paul had played three season of NCAA ball, 3,240 minutes, and was drafted in the second round. He worked hard and earned his minutes in a less crowded front court with more movement (at times Jerry Sloan used both Andrei Kirilenko or Mehmet Okur off the bench). By the time Tyrone Corbin was in charge Paul had earned his right to his minutes, and sat upon 11,297 combined regular season and playoff minutes over six NBA seasons with the Jazz. Paul played an average of only 1,882.8 minutes per season. Paul had succeeded all the bigs who were in front of him as a rookie. I do not believe that minutes could have been earned away from Paul either.
Derrick Favors was the #3 draft pick by the New Jersey Nets, who then traded him. Players who get traded during their rookie seasons do not inherit a lot of stability. Favors played 444 minutes in a Jazz jersey before they drafted another dude who was taller than him, but less experienced, and younger, who played the same positions.
Enes Kanter was a teenaged foreign kid who needed as many minutes possible to get the experience needed to reach the potential the Jazz brass saw in him when they saw him pre-draft."