It's more that the uncertainty is a strong argument against a "proper" tank though: There was always a chance of getting one of the best players on our board even with a "half tank", and the results simply confirm that.This year they got lucky and got their guy, last year they did not get their guy. Don't think the results based analysis changes my thoughts on the "half tank" strategy.
I mean hell, maybe Keyonte ends up with a better career than Scoot. And maybe if we did a proper tank in 22-23, we end up with Scoot and don't draft Keyonte.
It's not as cut and dry as "Proper tank = Getting a superstar". There's a great chance doing a "proper tank" meant unloading Lauri/Sexton and only getting marginally better value in the draft (or hell, even worse value).