Austin Reaves and the Nets is Not a Good Idea

The NBA draft and free agency are right around the corner. Not to worry, I will do a draft preview closer to the actual day of the draft. But with free agency looming, news stories about possible deals are already popping up in the media. Let’s discuss.

The "big fish" as of right now seems to be Austin Reaves. I'm very tepid on Reaves. I think if he were playing in almost any other market, and putting up the same stats, he wouldn't be viewed as the prize possession he is because he plays for the Lakers. This is one of the few cases that the name on front of the jersey is more important than the one on the back. I think he is showing a tendency to be more injured, he is an inconsistent scorer, he pops off way too much and he is a liability on the defensive end of the floor. I also think he thinks he is better than he truly is in the world of the NBA. But, because he is finding himself wide open, given open driving lanes due to who he is teammates with, and because he can hide on defense, he is going to get a ton of offers. I personally think he will stay with the Lakers, he'd be an idiot not to, but that won't stop teams from chasing him. Right after the Lakers season ended, teams already popped up as possible suitors. I've seen the Hornets mentioned. I have read that the Bulls may pursue him. I'm sure a rebuilding team in a "smaller" market, like Sacramento may go after him.

This morning I read that the Nets are preparing a max offer sheet for him. The Nets front office is willing to give him four years and 175 million plus to be their number one offensive option. It seems as if they are ready to build a team around Austin Reaves. I openly laughed at the headline when I read it. This is so perfectly Brooklyn Nets coded. The Nets cannot ever seem to make a right decision within the front office. They almost nailed it when they got Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving to sign. And when they landed James Harden it seemed as if the Nets had done something right. But in true Nets fashion, it blew up in their faces. Kyrie Irving refused to get vaccinated. Kevin Durant couldn't stay healthy and demanded a trade. He also wanted the coaching staff and front office fired if he were to stay. And James Harden couldn't deal with the workload and asked to be traded as well. They couldn't get it together.

Even prior to this, the Nets have made some odd decisions in the past during free agency. Deron Williams seemed like a perfect fit when they lured him away from Utah. But he was never the true point guard leader they needed, and he was never able to stay healthy for a full season. They gave Andrei Kirlineko a bunch of money just to see him flame out in epic fashion. They signed Gerald Wallace to a nice offer sheet, but as much as I liked Wallace when he was on the Bobcats, he was not the frontcourt star they hoped he would be.

But, with the Reaves news dominating NBA headlines this morning, the only offer from the past that the Nets made that kept popping up in my brain was when they gave Tyler Johnson an offer sheet. Do you all remember that? Do you all even remember Tyler Johnson? For people who may not know who he is, or was at that time, Johnson kind of came out of nowhere as a member of the Miami Heat from 2014 to 2019. He had an up and down start to his tenure there, splitting time with the Heat and their D League affiliate, that's right, the G League used to be called the D League. But in 2016 through the 2018 seasons, something clicked for Johnson. He became this excellent bench scorer for the Heat. He played in 72 and 73 games both seasons, averaging around 12 points on 43 percent shooting. The media and Heat fans loved his energy off the bench and he became this niche basketball player that analytic people loved. He hustled, played his role and seemed destined to be a starter in the near future. The Nets saw this and decided he was ready to be given a sizable offer sheet. I want to say they offered him about 50 million for around four years. This was unheard of at the time for a bench player. He passed, the Heat gave him a one year deal and then he bounced around the league, never finding the success he found from 2016 to 2018. He went to Phoenix where he only played a total of 44 games in two years. He did find his way to Brooklyn eventually, playing a total of 47 games in two years. He then spent some time with the 76ers and Sant Antonio Spurs in the 21-22 season, playing a total of six games. I get mad Tyler Johnson vibes from this Austin Reaves news. Tyler Johnson should have stuck it out and played the role he was best suited for with the Heat. Hell, he could still be there if that was the case. But some other teams saw something, and a team like the Nets were ready to throw a bunch of cash at him and give him a bigger role.

It would not stun me at all, if Reaves were to sign with the Nets, if the same thing happens to him. Reaves would become another player who got paid and faded away. He is not a guy to build a team around. He is only successful because of the teammates he has around him. He will ot put up anything close to the same numbers with the Nets as he would if he stays with the Lakers. I find Austin Reaves to be incredibly overrated. And if he thinks that he is going to live up to a max contract, that is laughable to me.

The Nets need to stop with this nonsense of taking wild chances on unproven players. Do something right and pull this offer, or never even let it get out that you're thinking of doing it. Austin Reaves is not a player you can win a title with as your number one option. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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