candrew
Well-Known Member
I don't expect the guy to be a defensive stopper but this video is horse ****.
It’s the GSW pick we ownedwho trades a knock down 3pt shooter for a future second from the current nba leader? maybe he has holes in his game, but shooting is one of the hardest things to learn. let's go development team! (i admit, i love these kinds of players)
Niang can be the Quin whisperer for him.Mentioned in another thread, his defense his horrendous. Very slow lateral foot speed. Nick Nurse did his best to play zone with him in and he still couldn't recover to his man. Hesitates to shoot unless wide open (but tends to make the contested shots he takes). Should excel in Jazz offense.
Unfortunately when he couldn't stay on the floor with one of the worst defensive teams in the league is a red flag. Hopefully Gobert can provide some better backup to allow the guy to provide positive net value. To date he has been a net negative and needs to improve defensive fundamentals to get court time.
I feel like the Jazz always end up trading for unknown dudes that randomly smoke us. Like for as long as I can remember.
Don't try to make sense of it or fit it into some master plan... I think sometimes we just do ****.What does this mean for Oni and Hughes in particular? Seems to me like Hughes only chance to play was if we had injury and/or needed shooting. Which is how this guy will play, right? Just seems to me like we keep signing/trading for people who don’t actually address the glaring elephant in the room; wing defenders.
Beat me to it.I don't expect the guy to be a defensive stopper but this video is horse ****.
Who?I feel like the Jazz always end up trading for unknown dudes that randomly smoke us. Like for as long as I can remember.
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The Jazz, don't worry about it, it's just some random basketball team in Utah.Who?
I don't know, maybe anticipating a lopsided Lowery deal that never materialized.who trades a knock down 3pt shooter for a future second from the current nba leader? maybe he has holes in his game, but shooting is one of the hardest things to learn. let's go development team! (i admit, i love these kinds of players)
A lot of thoughts on this as follows:
I've always been a big supporter of just getting the guy who shoots. Even guys who are perceived as being really bad players, if they're elite shooters there is a role for them, and even though people always say that, nobody really puts the rubber to the road, though there have been a few examples over the years and there are certainly being more and more examples recently. I really liked Korver before we got him the first time. Obviously he's got some other things to his game, but these guys can be valuable. Popovich has done a pretty good job in this regard. Bonner is not a good player, but SA knew how to use him to make this fit. I really liked a guy like Jason Kapono, and he admittedly at least got some burn. One guy I wanted before we got, but who ultimately didn't really play with us, is Steve Novak. For as much as Quin is touted to like shooting, and as much as we could have used it, he didn't use Novak. Seth Curry, as mentioned above, is a good example of this. People knew he was a good shooter. But he was able to float around on small deals and not have many people beating down his door, but now people respect him as a legitimate player and not just a 'me too' relative. I think the fact that we're seeing someone like Duncan Robinson start in the finals in his second year really helps break down some of the stigma. There's a big stigma against guys who are sharp shooters but with more limited all-around skill. Perhaps we'll even see this stigma swing the other way.
In any case, I like the move if we're committed to trying to see if this can be a legitimate resource, but the FO and coaching staff aren't always on the same page. Last year we all convinced ourselves that signing Rayjon Tucker was our loophole for 'having a first round pick' since we didn't really have any. Then we waived him in the summer. If we end up waiving this guy this summer, then giving up that second round pick will look really stupid. But if we like this guy enough that we're confident that we'd like him more than what's available with the second round pick, then that's cool. I'd say there's enough there that if we picked this guy up in the second round, I'd like it.
But, more importantly, this has to be a move totally separate from what we're doing this season. If this move at all affects any other move(s) we would make after this point, then this is a huge fail. If we're not going to sign a buyout guy that we otherwise would have if we had an available roster spot, then this move is stupid. It can both be a good move in a vacuum and a terrible move in context. I think that's the part some people ardently laying rose pedals for the FO miss.
When I was in residency you were not paid very well compared to how many hours you were putting in and compared to what you'd get paid after residency. Some residents moonlight, and make quite a bit more doing outside work. I ended up doing a lot of this. A lot of times, people would use the extra money to pay down student loans. I refused to do so, because moonlighting represented time away from my family. So if I was going to spend time away from family, I was going to use that money for us to do things together as a family, and a dollar to us then was worth a lot more than a dollar to us in the future, so it's easy to lose sight of that and pay down student loans (which isn't a bad thing, per se, just not the best when you look at the whole context). So, how valuable is someone like a Moe Harkless to us right now vs. a role-playing shooter a few years from now? If our window to compete is now, then a Moe Harkless now is worth a hell of a lot more than a Seth Curry in the future. We need to get over the hump.
This can all be irrelevant if we're willing to waive someone to sign another piece. But I'm still not convinced we do that.