Social media has made professional athletes and teams more accessible, but one NBA team may have accidentally had that access taken a bit too far.The Orlando Magic are the second-worst team in the Eastern Conference despite collecting a huge group of top draft selections over the last several years. The franchise has struggled to rebuild dating back to the departure of Dwight Howard.Clearly change is needed when things go as poorly as they have for the Magic, but these types of things happen behind closed doors once the offseason hits. It seems Orlando was on the wrong end of a crazy social media mishap that revealed their future plans to the world.Patricio Garino, who signed a contract with the franchise for the remainder of the season, put his name on the line in one of the Magics' war rooms. His agent tweeted a picture of Garino signing with Orlando, but the real story is what's going on behind him.A massive white board with labeled columns, an assortment of NBA players' last names and various other things was plain to see in the photo. The agent has since deleted the tweet, but it was saved by various folks on social media once the strange occurrence was noticed.Here's a clear shot of the full picture, via Stefan Bondy of the New York Daily News:

The Magic have at least three clear columns separated. One for "hybrid" trade targets, another for "hybrid" free agents this summer and another for "spread big" trades. Here's a closer look at what those lists look like:

That's a lot of intel being spread out into the wilderness. The biggest reveal, though, is that the Magic are indicating that they've either considered or have been lobbed the idea of trading Aaron Gordon for Dario Saric of the Philadelphia 76ers. 

"Saric (For AG?)" is listed under the hybrid trade column, which seems to indicate the idea has at least been floated. It seems more likely that the Magic are the team behind that conversation, especially with how well Saric has performed in his rookie year with Philadelphia. 

If so, that's a pretty stunning revelation. Aaron Gordon seemed to be one of the key players the Magic were developing as the face of their franchise, and showing doubt in him is never a good sign for fans who believe in him or Gordon himself.

The Magic will likely note that there's nothing serious to the now-infamous whiteboard, but no matter what, that's a huge loss for them in the perception vs. reality department. 

The lesson? Don't have players sign contracts in the same room significant offseason plans are being laid out like a blueprint.