ah, the famed jefferson-will-magically-become-a-better-player-because-of-DW-and-the-system argue. we have locke to thank for perpetuating this half-truth.
the thing is, we all know that playing with DW is going to give him better opportunities than playing with ramon sessions. but jefferson is still fairly limited as a player. he is a MUCH better post scorer than boozer could every pretend to be, but in just about every other facet of the game, he's either inferior to boozer (passing, decision-making, jump-shooting, finishing with both hands, etc.) or roughly equal to boozer (defense). i trust jerry, deron and others to utilize his strenghts and paper over his weaknesses, but lets' not pretend that he's going to suddenly become tim duncan just because he's alongside a real point guard. his game has holes... more than boozer's.
let's also get out of the habit of judging everything by individual production, as in, "he could be a 24/11 guy here and therefore be better than booz." he could put up 30-and-15 and still make the team worse if he doesn't ease the burden on other guys. for example, when millsap started during boozer's 2008-09 injury, he put up eerily similar numbers to booz, but the team offensive efficiency dropped off a ton because nobody was going to double millsap and he was more predictable offensively. for hell's sake, tracy mcgrady has two scoring titles and has never been out of the first round, so quite clearly more scoriing does NOT equal "better" in terms of contributing to team quality.
i agree with everything here, and accounted for it in my "fit" point. al makes us better IF he makes the pieces fit better together (ie, he plays more center, ak/memo play more high post.)
agree. the move has good long-term potential. but let's be realistic: the 2010-11 didn't just get BETTER than the 2009-2010 jazz. if anything, we barely kept up and now it's about getting the pieces to fit better together... hopefully better than the old pieces did, but that's not a guarantee.