Entering the final day of the regular season earlier this month, the Pelicans just needed a victory to secure the No. 6 seed in the West. However, they lost that game, lost their first play-in game, and lost star forward Zion Williamson in that contest to a hamstring injury that turned out to be a season-ender. New Orleans ultimately claimed the No. 8 seed in the West, but was quickly dispatched by the Thunder in a four-game sweep.
Speaking on Tuesday to reporters (Twitter video link), head of basketball operations David Griffin said there were “so many positives” to take away from the season, pointing to the Pelicans’ league-best 28-14 road record and their sixth-best net rating (+4.6). But while he acknowledged that the team was once again bitten by the injury bug at an inopportune time, he said the front office can’t just bring back the same group and hope for better health luck next season.
“In the past, we’ve always erred on the side of continuity, and our takeaway has always been, ‘Let’s see this group healthy.’ I think we’ve seen it enough,” Griffin said. “I think we had a really, really good opportunity to see Zion play a career high in games. I think we saw it for segments of time well enough to understand that we’ve got a lot of work to do. Because it is a historically good Western Conference, there are teams that didn’t make the playoffs that are going to get radically better this offseason. We need to do the same. I think you’ll see a real sense of urgency from all of us to do that.
“… I want to be really, really clear,” Griffin added (Twitter video link). “This is not going to be a summer of complacency. It’s time to get better.”
The Pelicans aren’t quite as loaded with draft assets as they once were, but they’re still in good position to make a deal heavy on picks. They control all their own future first-round selections, an unprotected Lakers first-rounder (they can take this year’s No. 17 pick or defer it to 2025), an unprotected Bucks first-rounder (2027), and swap rights with Milwaukee in 2026.
Here’s more on the Pelicans:
- The Pelicans will face a significant decision this offseason on Brandon Ingram, as the star forward prepares to enter the final year of his maximum-salary contract following an ugly series vs. the Thunder (14.3 PPG on .345/.250/.895 shooting). As Christian Clark of NOLA.com writes, if they don’t want to enter next season with Ingram on an expiring deal, the Pels will have to determine this summer whether to trade or extend him. “That’s not in the front of my mind right now,” Ingram said after Monday’s Game 4 loss. “This is a place where I got my first All-Star (appearance). Where they let me be myself. I have good relationships with everyone. But you never know. I will take a few weeks off and think about what’s best for me, what’s best for my family. Then take it from there.”
- While sorting out Ingram’s future will likely be their top priority, the Pelicans have plenty of important items on their summer to-do list, according to offseason previews from ESPN’s Bobby Marks (Insider link) and Mark Deeks of HoopsHype. Trey Murphy will be eligible for a rookie scale extension, Naji Marshall will be an unrestricted free agent, and New Orleans would presumably like to find a center who can reliably close games after having to bench both Jonas Valanciunas and Larry Nance in certain matchups. Valanciunas will also be a free agent this offseason.
- Adding a traditional point guard to their roster may be another item on the Pelicans’ offseason to-do list. Asked today about that possibility, Ingram acknowledged, “It would definitely be helpful” (Twitter link via Clark). CJ McCollum has been New Orleans’ primary point guard since being acquired from Portland, but it’s not his original position.
Idea 1
Warriors get Ingram
Pelicans get Wiggins and Kuminga
Idea 2
Warriors get Ingram and Nance
Pelicans get Wiggins and Draymond
ingram is a downgrade from kuminga for the warriors. No!
Brandon Ingram looks bad right now because he just returns from a knee injury.
Except he’s averaging less than 60 games a year played since his rookie season, he’s injury prone. Giving up Kuminga, who is five years younger and just starting his ascent for Ingram should be a no go from the Warriors.
What? Are you even aware that both teams must agree to any trade? You goobs always act like this stuff is as easy as taking advantage of your drunk buddy in a fantasy league.
“If it works on a trade machine it works”
My top 5 GMs ranking (past 4 years: 2020-2024)
1. Sam Presti of the Thunder (small town)
2. Pat Riley
3. Tim Connelly
4. Brad Stevens
5. David Griffin
Pels should really consider trading Zion. Dude had demonstrated his ability to not be available when it matters. Is he ever gonna be healthier than he was this season? Seems unlikely.
You just laid out a couple of reasons as to why no team should trade for the guy that you want NO to trade.
Pelicans never win as long as long as Zion is there
Well he wasn’t there for the thunder series and they also didn’t win soooo
Agreed,
Really, the Pels are the darlings of the 2K community. On paper and in theory, they should be a contender, but it’s not reality.
Every year Zion dresses up for your team, you’ve got to expect that he will miss significant time. CJ should not be at the point. A combo of Ingram’s health and his streakiness is a concern. Val puts up nice numbers for a 5, but they’re hollow stats.
There are some nice pieces in NO, including some of the you get guys like Herb, Trey and Dyson. A big move/blockbuster is going to be needed though or what you saw in 23-24 is what you’re going to get year after year.
Zion often dresses up for his teams… Just not in uniform…
Another team out of it’s depth with it’s talent in this loaded Western conference…
Zion and Ingram are great second stars… Relying on them is fools gold… Injury prone and just not going to give you what Luka, AD or Giannis will when healthy… The Pels want Zion to be a Jokic level player but he isn’t close…