Some issues I have with some of your previous arguments:
Our biggest problem in the Finals against the Bucks was our lack of big man depth to use in defending Giannis.
See, I don't think that was our biggest problem. Our biggest problem was they figured out how to shut down our offense because we only had two shot creators and neither of them could be an unstoppable force. Those games where Giannis dominated still routinely came down to the end of games where our offense tucked tail and ran.
It was one of the main reasons I was a proponent of the KD trade. You don't win titles without an unstoppable offensive force. Neither Booker or CP3 are those guys.
Since Dario is a big man, it is reasonable to conclude that having him could have helped our problem. It seemed like your argument against this was more of a deflection, along the lines of you brought up Dario in the same breath as Kawhi Leonard, Dario is not Kawhi, therefore bringing up Dario is invalid. This is unreasonable to me.
No... Mainstreet brought up Dario to someone who pointed out that the 2021 team wasn't
that incredible of a team but benefited from MAJOR stars being out along the way. So, when Mainstreet brought up Dario, I called that comment absurd because it was tying those major injuries together with his own.
The idea that if we don't win a title this trade was a dumpster fire is derived from the fact that it reduces our assets and flexibility dramatically, and for a relatively long time, from where they were pre-trade. We've essentially locked ourselves into a diminishing value trajectory for the next six years.
See.. this is already judging the trade as a diminishing value when a) we're 7-0 so far and b) now have the best player in the game.
The likeliest outcome is that our team does not win a championship, degrades year by year due to aging stars, and we are a treadmill team at best for the last few years of this timeline.
Had we not made this trade, all moves would still be on the table, and most of the core of our team would still be young, hence, on an appreciating value trajectory.
yeah, as a middling playoff team who had already completely lost it's shine after last season's debacle and was continuing to lose that shine even more this season, considered an also ran by the media after half a season. Another early exit this year would have just continued to make this team look like their run was not just a brief one, but one that was pretty much over, settling in as a new era run of the mill 45-50 win Portland in Dame's Prime type team who might have a chance at a Conference Finals once in a blue moon, but isn't a real contender. Opportunities to get one of the top 3 players in the game don't come very often.
Thus, the future, i.e. our ability to position ourselves to win a title, would be much brighter. This is a reasonable take to me.
This team wasn't winning a title... ever... built around Devin Booker, Mikal Bridges and DeAndre Ayton. Anyone who believes otherwise has ignored what type of players are needed to win NBA Championships. And in order to get one of those players, Bridges and a buttload of picks were gonna be what was necessary to make that happen... whether that was KD or some other superstar... who we don't know would have come available.
Your take that the trade would not be a dumpster fire, because the team as previously constructed would not necessarily win a championship, is a non sequitur.
except that's not my take and to be honest, I'm tired of talking about this with Suns fans who a) don't get that and b) seem like they'd rather be right about the trade being wrong rather than enjoying what's going on and actually winning this thing.