elindholm
edited for content
but in the end, we aren't winning a championship with him in the forward or center position because defense wins championships
The Suns won't win a championship for at least the next ten years, which will be after Stoudemire has retired, so that's not a useful yardstick. I think a lot of this board is in denial about how far the Suns are from being relevant again. It's not enough to say "blow it up and rebuild"; it takes time even to acquire the assets to rebuild.
Getting a top-3 pick, for example, hardly helps. Let's look at the last 12 years of those picks:
1999: Kenyon Martin, Stromile Swift, Darius Miles
2000: Elton Brand, Steve Francis, Baron Davis
2001: Kwame Brown, Tyson Chandler, Pau Gasol
2002: Yao Ming, Jay Williams, Mike Dunleavy
2003: LeBron James, Darko Milicic, Carmelo Anthony
2004: Dwight Howard, Emeka Okafor, Ben Gordon
2005: Andrew Bogut, Marvin Williams, Deron Williams
2006: Andrea Bargnani, LaMarcus Aldridge, Adam Morrison
2007: Greg Oden, Kevin Durant, Al Horford
2008: Derrick Rose, Michael Beasley, O. J. Mayo
2009: Blake Griffin, Hasheem Thabeet, James Harden
2010: John Wall, Evan Turner, Derrick Favors
Of the 36 players on that list, only three -- three! -- have won titles: Gasol, Milicic, and Morrison. Milicic and Morrison were bench-warmers, so they don't count. That means it's really just Gasol, and of course even he would be nowhere had he not been gifted to the Lakers.
The other 33 have a few deep playoff runs between them, but that's it. And furthermore, none of the teams who drafted any of those players -- not a single one -- has won a title since making that pick, whether or not the player is still on the team. (Edit: Oops, Detroit won after taking Milicic. That's one.) And in almost every instance where the player has left the team since being drafted, the team is no better off than they were when the player was there.
Some of them may still get their chance, of course. But the point is, having a high lottery pick has, at least for the last twelve years, been terrible at getting a team to championship-caliber. You can make a bunch of excuses about supporting cast this or bad management that, but should we really expect the Suns to be any more fortunate?
Now, of course, if we go back to 1997, we find Duncan. But even if you expand to the top-5 picks (instead of top-3), you find only one other case, Dwayne Wade at #5 in 2003.
Conclusion: Building a championship team through the lottery is a myth. Almost any other strategy has a better chance of working.
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