I somewhat agree with this. Would you say that Travis is as consistent, as, say: Odom, JR Smith (yes) Ginobili, Lowry (yes), Posey, Terry, Kirilenko?
Or in the East: Gordon/Hinrich, House, Murray, Kapono, Lou Williams, Joe Smith, Beasley...I mean, really?
Sure. If those players were Blazers, they'd be drawing boos on this forum for every poor game. I mean, obviously Ginobili is a much better player. He's the exception. Almost no team has a reserve as good as Ginobili and he really should be a starter. As for the others...House? Posey (these days)? Kapono? These are hardly consistently excellent players.
Basically, from a reserve you can get consistent but unimpressive performance or inconsistently good performance. Anyone who is consistently good tends to start.
Um, if he showed that he was a stone-cold killer (a la Ben Gordon) against a tough team in the playoffs for 28 mpg, I wouldn't have a leg to stand on if I said he wasn't useful or worth it. My opinion would have been noticably shifted if he showed he was worth the 28mpg. There's a reason Jerome James has a 5 year 40M contract right now. There's a reason that James Posey got the full MLE. Good showings in the playoffs, when EVERYONE is supposedly playing their best, gets you paid--good decision or not.
This really doesn't make sense. You seem to agree that basing decisions on a single series wouldn't make for a "good decision" but also assert that you would change your mind. You're endorsing bad decision-making?
if Outlaw had had a great playoff series, he'd be exactly the same player. He'd just have had a good streak at a very opportune time for the team, instead of a bad streak. He's a random player. Making decisions on a random player by looking at seven games is not going to lead you to a rational decision. I want Pritchard to make rational decisions, not say "Well, people have made mistakes by looking at performance in one playoff series, so it's okay if I do, too."
Some would say that JB and Rudy could.
Some might. I wouldn't be one of them. I think Bayless has great talent, but he's certainly not a good offensive player in the NBA right now. If Outlaw bothers you with inconsistency, I can't think why you're endorsing Bayless. Bayless was much, much, much, much more erratic. And Rudy thrives on getting open off the presence of teammates who draw double-teams. He's not a player you can throw the ball to and say, "Go get us something."
I don't want to put words in your mouth, but it sounds like you're saying that keeping Travis on the floor for ~30 mpg was a necessity because he could "consistently create his own offense", except that he couldn't, consistently
He can consistently create his own shot. That is, he can consistently put the ball on the floor, create separation and end up with a clean look at the hoop. That is something that not a lot of Blazers can currently do. What makes Outlaw so variable is that he's not consistent in knocking down those shots. Shot-creation (creating clean looks) is a skill he always has. But his shooting touch is inconsistent.
Basically, here's my summary on this. Travis is a useful player if used properly. I've been saying that all year. I've also been saying that ~30mpg is not a proper use. You (and most others, probably) seem to say that he was the best use of that 30 mpg that Nate had. But if we were "baking it", or "evaluating", or whatever KP cliche one wants to toss out, my contention is that there were better uses of that time.
That's an accurate statement of my position. I think Outlaw is ideally a 20 MPG player. He played more minutes because he had a skill that the team lacked in 2008-09. My opinion is that, moving forward, the Blazers will have more players who can create shots (notably Oden and Bayless) and Outlaw's role will shrink.
Of course, I'm not one of the people in favour of "baking it." If Outlaw can be traded in a deal to bring back a superior player, I'd be thrilled. I'm simply not in favour of dumping him for nothing. As an average player, he's definitely worth a roster spot (since no team carries 12-15 above average players) and at $4 million, I don't think he's overpaid. If Pritchard can better use his salary, he should. But that's far from a given, since Outlaw is good value for his salary.