PHXBlazer1
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HAHAhahah...ha...ha...lolha...
If Davis is so good why is his team so bad?
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HAHAhahah...ha...ha...lolha...
Because the rest of his team is bad...If Davis is so good why is his team so bad?
Because the rest of his team is bad...
He does seem to have plateaued a bit. Never thought Gentry would be good for him. Anything that pulls him away from the post is a bad idea IMO.If he's the transcendent superstar he's made out to be it shouldn't matter. He's not that good.
He hasn't transformed shit. His team could play just as awfully without him.
Well, I'll agree with you there.Majority of nba coaches are retards. Proof in that is the all star game.
And this is why you don't build a team around a PF - PFs can't carry teams.If Davis was such a "transformational" talent and an MVP candidate, he'd carry the team the way Lebron carried the cavs back in the day.
I think Barnes probably benefits a lot from the talent around him, in terms of the open shots he gets. I'd rather pay Crabbe than Barnes.
And this is why you don't build a team around a PF - PFs can't carry teams.
Because the rest of his team is bad...
The coach philosophy doesn't help either. Big step backwards after losing Monty.Because the rest of his team is bad...
And this is why you don't build a team around a PF - PFs can't carry teams.
I think now is a good time to mention that Davis had a 30.8 PER last year. A 30.8 fucking PER!
That's convenient. His team hasn't won more than 45 games since he's been in the league. He's never been in the top 10 in defensive rating, and neither has his team. How exactly is this guy a transformational player? What has he transformed?
Go look at the company surrounding Anthony Davis in per leading for a regular season.Kevin Love had a 27 PER his last year in Minny...
Can you name the last power forward/big man that, by himself, elevated a team to relevance?
Boogie hasn't been able to do it.
Aldridge couldn't do shit without Dame.
Duncan had Robinson and then Parker/Manu and now Kawhi.
Dirk had Nash/Finley and then Kidd/Marion.
Bosh, at his peak in Toronto, had the Raptors at 40-42.
Griffin has CP3.
Love was never good enough to get the TWolves into the playoffs.
So who would be an example of a big man, in recent memory, that could elevate his team by himself?
LeBron is a once-in-a-generation talent. That's like saying Barkley wasn't a star because he wasn't as good as Jordan.
Thanks for proving my point. If you gave me a franchise today I'm not picking any of those guys first. Dirk might be the exception. He carried the Mavs. Kidd was a role player by that time. Marion was always one.
Thanks for proving my point. If you gave me a franchise today I'm not picking any of those guys first. Dirk might be the exception. He carried the Mavs. Kidd was a role player by that time. Marion was always one.
I would take Duncan, for sure, but calling guys like Drummond and Davis "role players" is a little absurd. There's a pretty wide gap between "transformational player" and "role player." You can be a star in the league and not even be one of the top 10 players. That's why there's stars and then there's superstars. Dame seems to be on the cusp of being a superstar. Davis seems to have taken a step backwards. He was definitely right on that superstar line last year.
I don't mean to diminish post players importance just by calling them role players. They are important too. I'm just saying that they're not the most important part of a team in todays NBA.
The only way the OP's premise is true is if Noah Vonleh has some heretofore unseen leap in production that puts him in the all-star conversation . . . like a 500% leap in production. I'll wager the odds of that being possible are somewhere south of 10%.
It's certainly surprising that this team is better than most predicted, but that doesn't mean they have an unlimited ceiling. Just "letting it ride" and swapping out the middle of the roster for the next two or three years might make this a reliable second or third tier playoff team, but actually competing for titles with Damian and CJ as the backbone seems like a long shot at best -- Primarily because of their defensive shortcomings.
I would have thought by now more of you would be tired of the team getting stuck in the "pretty good" phase, with no hope of sniffing a title? But I get it, no one really wants to suffer through the pain of a rebuild and most are unwilling to endure unless there's some kind of guarantee. I'm different I guess? I'd take ten lottery seasons in a row if I thought it would give this organization just a 25% chance at a title.
The only way the OP's premise is true is if Noah Vonleh has some heretofore unseen leap in production that puts him in the all-star conversation . . . like a 500% leap in production. I'll wager the odds of that being possible are somewhere south of 10%.
But I'm guessing that's not really the hit rate for high lottery picks. I don't have the time to look it up, but I'm guessing that top 10 picks have a higher average than that of panning out (Vonleh was 9th), but that's why I said I'd take ten years in the lottery for that hypothetical 25% chance.Not to harp on this, because what you are saying is not completely wrong, but it's not like the lottery is a better option. If Vonleh only has less than a 10% chance of being in the all-star conversation, what does that say about any other top 10 pick....... every year. That is not exactly making me want to suffer through a lot of bad seasons. Especially watching this year's crop of 18 year olds.
But I'm guessing that's not really the hit rate for high lottery picks. I don't have the time to look it up, but I'm guessing that top 10 picks have a higher average than that of panning out (Vonleh was 9th), but that's why I said I'd take ten years in the lottery for that hypothetical 25% chance.
