I don't think they have been 'showcasing' Meyers. I think their stats guru looked at Robinson's first 20+ games, the coaches looked at Meyers' progress in practice, and they decided to give Meyers some court time so they would have something to compare. So far, Meyers is selling himself, IMO.
Bingo! Imagine that, the guys who get paid for their basketball knowledge made a decision and it turns out they were right, in spite of the contrary opinions of some of the posters on this board. When I think of all the boneheaded moves our GMs and coaches have made in the past, I'm glad we finally have the right people making these decisions.
Right now, our GM deserves to win executive of the year and our coach deserves to win COY. Olshey's moves over the summer were masterful, yet many criticized him for not hitting a home run (I commented at the time he may not have hit any home runs, but was leading the league in ground rule doubles). He knew exactly what this team needed and went out and got it, without sacrificing a single important piece, without mortgaging our future (in fact, he acquired young lottery level talent for pennies on the dollar) all while preserving future flexibility by not taking on any bad contracts.
And, as much criticism as the Stotts hire received, he has shown us what it's like to have a head coach that understands Xs and Os. He has created an offense that leads the league in scoring and Offensive efficiency that is fun to watch and takes advantage of his players strengths. The players have completely bought into his system and after years of one-dimensional, boring Nate ball, seeing so much player and ball movement is a thing of beauty.
So, when these guys decided to give Leonard some burn, I'm not at all surprised it's turned out to be the right decision. And, if at some point, they decide it's time for Meyer's to go back to the end of the bench, I'm sure that will be the right decision, too. I don't blindly accept every decision they make, but when their decisions are logical and the results positive, it's hard to criticize what they're doing.
BNM