magnifier661
B-A-N-A-N-A-S!
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Was listening to Cowherd this morning, regarding Conservative or Liberal type people. He was trying to explain that he isn't conservative or liberal. He compared himself to a chameleon with no true political side, using Roy as an example. He said "I'm like Roy. Am I a guard or forward?"
I've been really thinking about this since last season. Hell even the end of the season before. In all honesty, I truly believe he is best used as a SF. Of course many of the arguments will be, don't want him to get beat up by the other stronger SFs, He works best playing with the ball, and What are we going to do with Batum or Webster.
Here is my suggestion that will still keep everyone happy.
1.) Go with a template of Roy, Aldridge, Oden and Fernandez as your "Core group". Bring in a vet PG every 3 years.
2.) Having a Starting line-up of: Miller, Fernandez, Roy, Aldridge and Oden. This group will focus more on the "inside out" game with Oden anchoring the post. Aldridge, Roy and Fernandez are very good from the perimeter, plus it saves their energy throughout the game.
3.) First subs: Batum for Fernandez and Blake for Miller. Roy moves to SG. This line-up will have more of Roy doing like what he did last season.
4.) Sencond subs: Webster for Roy, Pryzbilla for Oden. You use Aldridge as your main offensive man, but eventually bring in Fernandez for Batum, Outlaw for Aldridge and Miller for Blake. Then you have two offensive weapons with Miller being the facilitator.
5.) Manage the minutes so that in the last 5 minutes of the game, you have Miller, Fernandez, Roy, Aldridge and Oden closing it out for you.
With this kinda change-up, You can give plenty of minutes to the supporting cast, but keep it 30-35 minutes for those 4 players.
As for the advantages of Roy playing SF mostly. He is much quicker than most SFs in the game. Also, it's much harder to double a SF, than a SG. And defensively, I honestly believe it would be a much easier handle. SGs have to fight through pick after pick, usually set by centers and PFs to stick with their man. A SF doesn't move without the ball as much, so Roy could gamble and play the "passing lanes".
I maybe totally "off" on this, but it's something I've been really thinking about for quite some time. Thoughts?
I've been really thinking about this since last season. Hell even the end of the season before. In all honesty, I truly believe he is best used as a SF. Of course many of the arguments will be, don't want him to get beat up by the other stronger SFs, He works best playing with the ball, and What are we going to do with Batum or Webster.
Here is my suggestion that will still keep everyone happy.
1.) Go with a template of Roy, Aldridge, Oden and Fernandez as your "Core group". Bring in a vet PG every 3 years.
2.) Having a Starting line-up of: Miller, Fernandez, Roy, Aldridge and Oden. This group will focus more on the "inside out" game with Oden anchoring the post. Aldridge, Roy and Fernandez are very good from the perimeter, plus it saves their energy throughout the game.
3.) First subs: Batum for Fernandez and Blake for Miller. Roy moves to SG. This line-up will have more of Roy doing like what he did last season.
4.) Sencond subs: Webster for Roy, Pryzbilla for Oden. You use Aldridge as your main offensive man, but eventually bring in Fernandez for Batum, Outlaw for Aldridge and Miller for Blake. Then you have two offensive weapons with Miller being the facilitator.
5.) Manage the minutes so that in the last 5 minutes of the game, you have Miller, Fernandez, Roy, Aldridge and Oden closing it out for you.
With this kinda change-up, You can give plenty of minutes to the supporting cast, but keep it 30-35 minutes for those 4 players.
As for the advantages of Roy playing SF mostly. He is much quicker than most SFs in the game. Also, it's much harder to double a SF, than a SG. And defensively, I honestly believe it would be a much easier handle. SGs have to fight through pick after pick, usually set by centers and PFs to stick with their man. A SF doesn't move without the ball as much, so Roy could gamble and play the "passing lanes".
I maybe totally "off" on this, but it's something I've been really thinking about for quite some time. Thoughts?


