The designer of that tank and the guy who brought in those "assets" was fired. Suggests to me that Philly themselves don't think it's working. And I know people defend Hinkie. But clueless teams without any solid veteran presence or the ability to have young players learn roles that would eventually allow them contribute to good teams don't develope players and agents don't allow their clients to go to a team like Philly. Per Boston's tank. They had two bad years. It was more a decision to not force something earlier than what they ultimately did. The centerpiece of getting Garnett was Big Al and he was not the result of tanking into the lottery. They also had a star player in his prime. Boston title was much more analogous to the current cavs or the heatles and Definately not a repeatable model for most teams in the NBA to try to copy. Conversely the retool has had proven success. Dallas for example was at the top of the NBA floundered and hired a better coach retooled the core with more old guys like Chandler Kidd Butler and Marion. That produced a championship. They fired Hinke because they were the laughing stock of basketball and not really making any progress on the court. Drafting guys like Noel, who everyone knew would miss his rookie season, Embiid who was drafted 2 years ago and hasn't played a game, and Saric who everyone knew wouldn't see an NBA court for a couple of seasons, made it so the team on the floor was godawful. Ownership was pushed by the NBA to hire Colangelo to move quicker. So no tanking to that degree did not work for Hinke, but Philly is an extreme example of tanking. They basically exchanged every player with trade value for draft picks for like 3 full seasons and put a d-league team on the court. But all that said, I believe it is working considering all the assets they have now. All moot though because even though I am for tanking as a concept, I would never be in favor of Philly's style of tanking. There are other ways to do it that don't involve putting out an unwatchable product for the better part of a decade. Ok. But I guess my question is this: what do you consider the main currency in the NBA, lottery picks or cap space? The Bulls have virtually no cap holds outside of two years. Why tank when you could be decent and still have the future space.