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Building around Williams was a mistake, time to move on

I aint positive, but I think every championship team in the last 25 years had a red-haired guy on their team. If I'm right, we need to find a red-headed player. If I'm wrong, then mainly we just have to make sure we never put a red-haired guy on our team.
 
And you missed his point as well. Elite Wings can do everything, handle the ball, score and do it all. That's the point. And they were NOT the PGs for those teams no matter how much you claim they were. They didnt start at PG. Yes, they could handle the ball if needed, but still they are the SG or SF and they had a PG to often bring up the ball or atleast take a load of pressure off of them in terms of ball handling. But they can also handle the ball come crunch time.
Disdvantage with being a PG is that you have to bring the ball up the court every time, face tons of pressure and also generate offense for others, besides scoring for yourself. Magic Johnson was unique. You cannot compare Deron with Magic. Deron isnt 6-9. Isaih maye, thats about it. Billups was on a team that could go to any one of 4 guys on any given night for scoring. Rasheed or Rip or Tayshawn. Plus Billups was'nt treated like the MAX player there.He was just one of the many offensive options they had on a equal opportunity team. He was'nt like the clear standout offense guy there.

Also, We are talking about MAX PGs here.
Who was the last MAX PG to lead his team to the championship in the last 15 years?
Chauncey... seriously... I realized that you said he wasn't a max player, and this is me telling you that you're wrong. Exchange any other PG in the league at that point. Only ones that come away with a ring would be Nash, Billups, Kidd. The reason they had 4 guys who could score, was because they had one guy who could run an offense (and he shot pretty good as well)

You're getting too caught up in the position. If a point guard is the guy who brings the ball up the court, then Dwayne Wade and Scottie Pippen were the point guards. 7 championships between them.

If its the guy that calls/makes the plays...Kobe with 5 rings on his fingers is your point guard

If its the guy that most effectively distributes the ball throughout the entire team... hell I guess Tim Duncan was the Spur's point guard.


I'm not going to lie that size matters, because it does. However just because something hasn't been done doesn't mean it can't be done. Stock would have 2 rings if MJ wasn't there... its about context... and right now the point guards are more skilled and athletic then ever before... so they will become increasingly important. The prime for the first of the new breed of point guard is barely upon us with Dwill and CP3 only 2-3 years in. They'll get theirs... but I'm telling you now your elite wing needs the exact same players to win a championship as the elite point guard does... or Kevin Durant would be able to make it out of the first round of the playoffs.
 
The argument against elite PFs/PGs as contending leaders/lynchpins is busted by the outlier of the Jordan era. Put those players in this era, and the result is very different. Frontcourts, especially, are weakened, even while a team like the Lakers depends on its "dominant" frontcourt to win titles.

Could the Jazz contend with Deron? Really contend? Yes. But they won't.

From a priori to a posteriori, this organization has not, is not and will not make the necessary moves to contend. And if they make a move, as seen, it will often just as likely be the wrong move.

Would someone like to defend keeping Okur and Kirilenko in place of Boozer? Because, as events move forward, it's likely that, domino-like, that indeed means "moving on" without Deron.

Casually and causally this team is being run...the question is to where, and for what purpose? Because, um, the Jazz are spending more are on two worthless (at best) side-pieces than they would have had to spend on Boozer. Not smart, but typical for this organization of low-level sheisters.

Oh, but Millsap's lack of skillsets out of the high or low posts won't matter next to his misleading statline; the continued argument out of the FO on this level shows either a belief that their fanbase is full of morons (rather than...?) or, even worse, no ability or interest in calculating the difference between an individuated statline and real facilitation skills that Sloan's offense needs.

Oh well. That is the fallback plan: let Sloan squeeze as much juice out of this lemon as is possible in any haptic sense. It's almost metaphysics, witnessing Sloan in full 'Bad News Bears'/'Hoosiers' mode; too bad that the amazement is relative, as the ceiling will likely be mediocrity.

Frankly, if there's been a mistake made, it appears it was giving the Miller family an NBA team. Longform, they're still learning that they can't get 55 wins a season out of ten-man local Y rosters now that Stockton and Malone are retired.

What tragedy.
 
Elite point guards = no rings.

Look at 4 greatest PGs currently in the league - Nash, Kidd, CP3, Deron. 0 championships. Look at the teams who actually won anything in the last decade, all of them had either an OK (Billups, Parker, Rondo-08) or below average point guard (Fisher, Williams). And it goes way back - how many rings does Stockton have? Payton? Kevin Johnson? What great points were on the Bulls or Rockets rosters?

Great PGs simply soak up too much of cap space and do not produce enough: their teams are always well-run and consistently good, but never great. What about the favorite Jazz thing, pairing a great PG with a great PF? We tried it with Stockton and Malone, Deron and Boozer, the Mavs - with Nash and Dirk, the Suns - with Nash and Amare. Yeah, several MVPs came out of it, but again - no rings.

Now, what player brings rings? A great SG does, all three best ones have it - Kobe, Wade, MJ. A great center does too - Duncan, Shaq, Hakim.. Howard was pretty close, Yao was just derailed by injuries. The collection of inexpensive, but solid veteran players works too (although very rarely) - see the Detroit team. I deliberately left out the way to the championship via getting several superstars on the same team by trades - Utah is not L.A. or Boston.

The bottom line - if we keep trying building around Deron, we are doomed to being good, but not great. We need to trade him for a superstar SG or center - or for the first draft pick to draft such a player. Or the Jazz should try to assemble something like the Detroit team of 5 years ago.

Some of you thought this guy was crazy, but after KOC made the move you were all over his nuts. So, why don't you all tell this guy how right he was?

I agree.

Lets move on.

Lets trade Deron to the Lakers for Sasha(replaces Korver) and Luke Walton (he's kinda like Harpring) and maybe a 2nd rounder or something.

Especially you, you sack of ****.
 
Elite point guards = no rings.

Look at 4 greatest PGs currently in the league - Nash, Kidd, CP3, Deron. 0 championships. Look at the teams who actually won anything in the last decade, all of them had either an OK (Billups, Parker, Rondo-08) or below average point guard (Fisher, Williams). And it goes way back - how many rings does Stockton have? Payton? Kevin Johnson? What great points were on the Bulls or Rockets rosters?

Great PGs simply soak up too much of cap space and do not produce enough: their teams are always well-run and consistently good, but never great. What about the favorite Jazz thing, pairing a great PG with a great PF? We tried it with Stockton and Malone, Deron and Boozer, the Mavs - with Nash and Dirk, the Suns - with Nash and Amare. Yeah, several MVPs came out of it, but again - no rings.

Now, what player brings rings? A great SG does, all three best ones have it - Kobe, Wade, MJ. A great center does too - Duncan, Shaq, Hakim.. Howard was pretty close, Yao was just derailed by injuries. The collection of inexpensive, but solid veteran players works too (although very rarely) - see the Detroit team. I deliberately left out the way to the championship via getting several superstars on the same team by trades - Utah is not L.A. or Boston.

The bottom line - if we keep trying building around Deron, we are doomed to being good, but not great. We need to trade him for a superstar SG or center - or for the first draft pick to draft such a player. Or the Jazz should try to assemble something like the Detroit team of 5 years ago.

Well in the year Spurs got their last ring, Suns was the best team and they could win the championship if amare wasnt banned in the series with spurs. With stockton and malone, we almost won the ring.

So statistics doesnt always say the truth. If u wanna get a championship without a great pg, u should better have guys like KObe, Wade, Shaq,Duncan ... which appearantly we dont have. So for a team like utah, the best option would be a great pg, who can lift the performance of others. Utah shouldnt build the team around 1 or 2 guy, but they should build an equal team like Detroit did, Billups,Hamilton,Prince,Wallace, Ben W.
Noone was such a superstar but all the team was allstar. I think the strategy we should follow should be like this. And even with no addition to the current squad, but just a great pg like Kyle Irving, would make this team a contender already.
 
The originial plan was never to build around a point guard. It was to have a versatile, talented and strong front-line (Kirilenko, Boozer, Okur) with a solid point guard who could orchestrate the offense. In 2006-07, Carlos Boozer was Utah's best player, but Deron was the engine who sparked the team. At that point, they realized they had a solid 1-2 PG/PF punch.
During the latter-half of 2007-08, as Boozer went through personal problems, his FG% dropped - and he never again reached the level of play he had in 2007. As he struggled in the playoffs, the Jazz officially became "Deron Williams' team." Throw into that AK's injuries and inability to play well without handling the ball, Okur's injuries and Deron transitioning from a good young point-guard into a superstar - I think for KOC it was almost inadvertant how Deron became thee franchise cornerstone.

After losing Booze, Korver, Brewer and Matthews, they hoped Jefferson, Bell and the cheap vets would provide a quick-fix, but they weren't as close as they hoped, frustrations grew and with Jerry stepping down they decided it was a good time to rebuild - this time getting another frontline player to build around.
 
The best thing though is it looks like Utah heading into the right direction!!

? at pg (Harris is not the answer! Maybe Knight, Irving, Walker, Jimmer)
Hayward
Millsap
Favors
Jefferson

with Miles the 6th man. Great core for a rebuilding team with possible 4 lotto picks in the next 2 years. With very tradeable assets.

Ps I like the idea to sign AK for 3 years at 7-8 million (or less maybe a hometeam discount) then trade him for a lotto pick or young play. He would be a value at that and I think other teams would jump to have him on there team
 
The best thing though is it looks like Utah heading into the right direction!!

? at pg (Harris is not the answer! Maybe Knight, Irving, Walker, Jimmer)
Hayward
Millsap
Favors
Jefferson

with Miles the 6th man. Great core for a rebuilding team with possible 4 lotto picks in the next 2 years. With very tradeable assets.

Ps I like the idea to sign AK for 3 years at 7-8 million (or less maybe a hometeam discount) then trade him for a lotto pick or young play. He would be a value at that and I think other teams would jump to have him on there team

Miles should be 8th man, at best.
 
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