A number of things stand out to me after this trade.
1. James Jones continues to show little regard for draft picks and value. I guess you could call him a transcender, or you could call him incompetent. I'm not sure, but here's what I do know, at my count he has been on the wrong end of 3 trades: TJ, #6, and now JJ. He completely botched the value of the #11 pick. He also throws away 2nd round picks at an alarming rate. (I wasn't in each of the rooms, but I'd bet Indi, Minnesota, and Memphis were all laughing at us when we agreed to the deals.) No matter the results of the trades we SUCKED out loud on capitalizing on our value. There's almost NO EXPERT that thinks we didn't. Amazingly, we are being laughed at MORE than when with McD.
2. For those continuing with the "We're a better team" battlecry... Of course we are. It wasn't hard to do. We had no where to go but up. But here's what you have to ask yourself, does this help us 5 years from now? If we sacrifice the chance of special in the future for the certainty of mediocrity in the now, is it worth it? And that's what we are now, mediocre. And if you're hoping for some future trade or draft pick to help, you'll be putting your faith in a GM who was laughed at by Indi and drafted Cam Johnson at #11.
3. I really like Melton. I was a strong proponent for us acquiring him. However, I was also strong for Carter. He's EXACTLY what you want in a back up PG and he can play right now. He's one of the toughest PG prospects I've scouted. Once again, we traded "potential" for "production" when it comes to prospects. However, this time I agree with the move. (Isolated from the rest of the trade).
4. JJ was undoubtedly damaged goods. There wasn't a great answer to this dilemma. But to give him away early is just poor management of assets. If there was all this disdain for him mid season than he should have been gone then. We continue to trade at the lowest possible point. Amazingly bad.
One thing is for sure, these new moves undoubtedly are the foundation new era of the Suns. We are the "play it safe" team.
James Jones philosophy is plainly clear: potential is a GM killer and he refuses to become its prey.
I think that I disagree with 1,2, and 4 here.
1, 4. I think that you have assigned your own value to players and it is probably not the actual retail value. TJ needed to go. My opinion - they had been trying to trade TJ for a while with no takers. What they ended up getting was someone to take him into their cap space ($11.7M per year) and receive no contract back. Do you think that comes for free? Let's say Warren was a "tier 3" player (whatever that may mean - but higher than average value) - do you still think it is free to have a team absorb him into cap space and not give contracts back? The Suns did not want a contract back, or at least not the crap that must have been offered. I think "we" are wrong on the value here, which is why I disagree with you on the trade. There was definitely a couple of things wrong (if not more) with TJ. A decent scorer, but a knack for being disinterested, hurt, and sitting out. And ending up on the floor.
Once ATL traded for #5 with Hunter as the target, I think the Suns knew they weren't getting the player they really wanted. If the lottery luck had even been just little kinder, this whole offseason would look a lot different. You say White is "potential", I guess? JJ most likely thought not. Rubio now and for the next 4 is most likely better than White will ever be. So, no PG, Clarke apparently not all that, and the Suns need shooters. Candy-coating? Perhaps, but after the lottery results it was always going to be iffy with this draft. We all knew it.
Josh Jackson has negative value. I thought that before any of the legal issues, or team drama. He is not an intelligent basketball player. I don't think you can watch him and disagree with that. Some think that a coach can make a player intelligent. I don't think that is possible. I disagree with your inclusion of him in item 1 and disagree with 4. We sold way too late - not too early. The time to sell was after season one. Or definitely after the summer league in season 2. I firmly believe this was not the lowest point.
Second round picks, for a young team yearning for NBA talent and wins, have no value. In fact, they probably have negative value because you can't keep developing everybody as it just muddies the water. You can develop one, two, or maybe even three players. Those players are already on the roster.
2. Getting better definitely helps us 5 years from now. You are not defining your "chance of special" here. Josh Jackson becoming special? In one sense of the word - definitely. In the sense we would all like - quite doubtful. Melton was traded for Carter, essentially, so I am not thinking you meant Melton was potentially special.
I totally understand frustration with losing, ownership, the FO, the coaching, or whatever. But I also think that many fans have become conditioned to be upset. I am excited for positive new forward steps, even if there have been some backwards leaps over the last number of years. Rubio will still be trade-able in a couple of years if we get everything else in order and can find that dynamic PG of the future. What I do know is that Rubio is not going to hold us back from wins, which is great.