Older thread '20 NYK Off-season Thread

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Wargames

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Listening to the podcast the biggest takeaways was his belief that teams always draft the best player available. Most people have been focusing on guards, but if we’re at pick #6 is a guard the best player on the board?

I also liked the fact he wasn’t impressed with last years draft range for the Jazz at 23. It was a weaker draft than even this years draft.
 

RickyGQ

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Everyone we hire is respected but when they come here it never works out. :shaq2:

These aren’t names tho. With Brock and Perrin, these are guys that everyone agrees have been putting serious and unique work in around the league. (Like Scott Perry was when Mills hired him to be fair). But this is exactly what i want to see. We have a damn near infinite checkbook. There are no salary caps on front office positions. There’s no reason we don’t have the absolute best guys running the organization from the top down.
 

storyteller

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The Jazz View 2020 As "Draft Of Equality" - KSL Sports

In part two of our interview with Utah Jazz Vice President of Player Personnel Walt Perrin, the Jazz Notes podcast looks to dive into how NBA franchises use shorthand to diagnose individual drafts, and how the organization views the upcoming 2020 draft.

Scheduled for June 25, the NBA may be forced to push the draft back later into the summer or potentially early fall should league play resume during the summer months in light of the coronavirus pandemic.

In part one of the two-part series with Perrin, the Jazz scout said the team is preparing to proceed with the draft as scheduled.

When asked if the Jazz compare current and past drafts to find trends in the annual summer event, Perrin said that danger lies in comparing the build-up in one draft to the fall out of another.

“We may compare drafts to drafts,” Perrin said, “But when you do that, it’s got to be at the same stage of the draft. People can not say if it’s been a good, bad, or indifferent draft until three or four years down the road.”

“We look at each draft as an individual draft. This is what we have to look at, this is what we have to evaluate. We can’t evaluate them versus other drafts.”

One common practice teams will use as they prepare for the draft is separating players into separate tiers or “buckets” to identify draft ranges through the first and second rounds, a process the Jazz have already begun according to Perrin.

“We’ve started the process and we will be tweaking it as we go forward,” Perrin said, “In the past, we’ve had the workouts and the interviews to help us tweak the buckets … this year we may not have workouts, we don’t know for sure yet.”

Beyond tiers, the Jazz are looking at 2020 as a “draft of equality,” especially where they may be draft.

“I would say from the 15 pick to the 30 pick,” Perrin said, “You could probably have 40 guys that you’re looking at, maybe more … and it’s who you like in that particular range that is going to dictate whether or not you take them. There could be players taken in the late teens and early 20’s that other teams may have on their draft board at 35 and 40.”

While how teams approach the draft changes every summer as every franchise hopes to find a leg up in finding a diamond in the rough that can propel their franchise forward, has the value of the draft itself changed for the Jazz as a franchise?


“I think the draft is always important because we are a small market team,” Perrin said of the Jazz, “It’s important that we get the draft correct, not to say we don’t get free-agency correct. But I think it’s very important we get the Jazz draft correct because it gives us growth, it gives us controlled contracts, it gives us the ability to develop these players into stars with our developmental staff.”
 

RicanHavok

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I think if nothing else, Rose's hires indicate a nice reboot, or rebuild of the foundation. I think he realizes the Knicks gotta move like a small market team. I think for too long the Knicks been moving like they're the largest market due to income, because they are, but nobody wanna play on the team. Looks like Rose may be focused on the actual basketball side of the business.
 

storyteller

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I think if nothing else, Rose's hires indicate a nice reboot, or rebuild of the foundation. I think he realizes the Knicks gotta move like a small market team. I think for too long the Knicks been moving like they're the largest market due to income, because they are, but nobody wanna play on the team. Looks like Rose may be focused on the actual basketball side of the business.

It definitely feels good to see his first two hires being guys that aren't big names but have strong reputations and clear specialties. Aller comes in and you've got a cap expert; Perrin comes in and now we've got a scouting pro. Rose came in green but he's at least pulled in a lot of experience with those first two hirings. The big choices are still to come and will tell us a lot more (coach, draft picks, free agent targets) but the front office building at least looks good on the surface. That said, Mills hiring Perry looked promising too...so I'm cautious to get excited.
 

Kitsch

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I feel like Kobe may have been involved in some sort of capacity (even if it was just a conversation) in Kyrie's decision to sign with the Nets.
 
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