BigGameDamian
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Mathews and Leonard for Jordan baby!!
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I've been saying this for quite awhile. Meyers Leonard is not a center. They need to stop trying to force him to be a defensive presence inside. This is like trying to force Channing Frye to play center. Meyers is a 7-1 stretch 4. He might be a better backup 4 than Thomas Robinson if the let him compete for that position.
This imo wont last long. I think by late November Leonard will be the clear cut back-up. However, if he isn't... It's seriously time to start trying to shop him.
Not sure I am following your logic. You say he is a stretch 4, then you say he might be a better power forward than Robinson.....given the chance. So I guess you are saying you
prefer a stretch 4 who has no defensive ability to be our back up 4. Personally I would not want that.

This imo wont last long. I think by late November Leonard will be the clear cut back-up. However, if he isn't... It's seriously time to start trying to shop him.
I wonder if we could acquire Spencer Hawes if we dangled Leonard and someone else in front of the 76ers. He would be a great backup to Lopez.
While I don't think this is much ado about nothing, let's remember that the only thing that happened is that he was demoted out of the rotation, because another player is playing better than he was. There's nothing sinister or damaging about that. It's not like we released him or traded him for nothing. It's not like he can't make his way back. Heck, I would love it if Freeland played so dang well that we demoted Lopez. I'd love Robinson to play so well that we demote LMA. Having talented players that play well and help you win is the name of the game.
Here's my take:
Leonard: Helps the team's offense a bit, Destroys the team defense.
Freeland: Stays out of the way on offense, Doesn't hurt the team defense too much.
Not a tough decision by the coach based on playing ability and team needs. However, it generally doesn't help a coach's career to leave their lottery picks out of the rotation, where it's the right thing or not. It's a big positive about our organization that this type of thing can happen .
It's a big NEGATIVE about our organization that this type of thing can happen, and it's why we have sucked for the last decade. It's exactly what eventually got Nate fired. You can't develop a player in practice and D league stints.
Development and experience happen on the court playing against superior players in games that matter.
It was really disappointing for me when I learned he was really working on his three point shot. Although having range is nice, is it really as important than boxing out, rebounding and defending the paint?
It's a big NEGATIVE about our organization that this type of thing can happen, and it's why we have sucked for the last decade. It's exactly what eventually got Nate fired. You can't develop a player in practice and D league stints.
Development and experience happen on the court playing against superior players in games that matter.
This 'working on the three point shot' thing is really tired and overblown. There are 24 hours in a day. A human can only lift weights for so long before it becomes detrimental. A ball player can only work on low post skills and defensive drills for so long, before the work out is done. There should be plenty of time left over in the day for a guy to work on just shooting the ball, including shooting threes in case it happens to come up in a game, or even just for fun. I don't see what all the brew-ha-ha is about. Working on Center skills and working on shooting skills are not mutually exclusive. I remember players routinely having half court shooting contests after practice. Did that distract or detract from their games?
Meyers 'sucks' at playing center in the NBA, in some people's opinion, because he isn't good enough 'yet' and he needs a lot of work on a lot of facets of the game over the next two years. Working on shooting the ball isn't the reason he 'sucks' as an NBA center, and I doubt it is a significant distraction from what is undoubtedly his primary focus of learning how to play the center position.
This 'working on the three point shot' thing is really tired and overblown. There are 24 hours in a day. A human can only lift weights for so long before it becomes detrimental. A ball player can only work on low post skills and defensive drills for so long, before the work out is done. There should be plenty of time left over in the day for a guy to work on just shooting the ball, including shooting threes in case it happens to come up in a game, or even just for fun. I don't see what all the brew-ha-ha is about. Working on Center skills and working on shooting skills are not mutually exclusive. I remember players routinely having half court shooting contests after practice. Did that distract or detract from their games?
Meyers 'sucks' at playing center in the NBA, in some people's opinion, because he isn't good enough 'yet' and he needs a lot of work on a lot of facets of the game over the next two years. Working on shooting the ball isn't the reason he 'sucks' as an NBA center, and I doubt it is a significant distraction from what is undoubtedly his primary focus of learning how to play the center position.
If you are hired to be a trumpet player and you practice the trumpet every day but your heart is in playing the guitar and you spend lots of time practicing guitar in your "off time", you're probably not going to become very good at the trumpet - especially if you don't have much of an aptitude for the trumpet in the first place, even if you can hit a double-C.
On the other hand if you're not very good at the trumpet but it becomes clear that you will lose your livelihood if you don't improve and you try really, really hard to improve and you have some success, then you should probably play in front of the other guy.
Maybe I'm over-reacting and maybe it just really isn't his fault but does this reflect on coach Kim at all?
pick your poison. If you blame Kim for Leonard, then you must praise him for Freeland.
How's it feel?
I'm really excited. I'm happy that all the work I did in the summer paid off, but it's not somewhere I can just stop. I've got to keep working. I've got a base, I've got a foundation now and I've got to keep working on that, improve on that and build on that.
What's the big difference for you between last year and this year?
It's just defense. I'm buying into what we want to do defensively, I'm working on what we want to do defensively and it's just helping me out all over on the floor. I'm a lot more aware of things, the positions I'm supposed to be in. I've still got to improve on my offensive side of the game, obviously, but I think that will come.
Is it a mindset change to go from being an offensive player in Europe to more of a defensive player in the NBA?
Yeah. I want to stay in this league. If I want to go back to Europe and shoot all the shots I can, the opportunity is there for me. But I want to stay in this league and players that want to stay in this league have to make adjustments. That's the adjustment I had to make -- you have to take your ego out of it and just be like "what's my role going to be in this league and on this team?" My role in this league and on this team is to run the floor, set good screens, rebound the ball, play great defense, challenge balls at the rim.
A lot of talk heading into camp and in camp was team defense. For you what's the difference between individual defense and team defense?
The reason we've had so much success (during the preseason) is purely because of the defense we've been playing as a team. We're buying into what each other can do, we're helping each other out on rotations, we're protecting the rim a lot better than what we were. It's knowing where people are going to be, knowing what people's roles are and knowing how you can help.
Where have you made the biggest jump physically from last season?
I worked a lot in the summer on my legs. Knowing that in the position I'm going to be in -- running the floor, banging with guys -- I really need to have a strong core and a strong base. That's something I worked quite a lot on this summer but it's still something I really need to improve on as well, put a little more weight on to be able to hold my own down there.
You feel like physically your body has caught up to the NBA season?
I think so now. It took me a while. I know my body a lot better now, learning all through last year, all through this summer and going into this year. I know what I need to do to be prepared for each game and each practice.
How has playing with Robin Lopez helped you?
It's been great. It puts you in real live game situations, all the time, every practice. It's been great to have someone like that, who's so big, so long. He intimidates every shot that you try and shoot. It's big.
He's just a huge body. You put him in the middle of the paint and it's tough to score on him; he just takes up so much space, he challenges balls at the rim. He might not block a lot of shots, but he changes a lot of shots and that's just as important.
I can't even read this quote without knocking on wood.I worked a lot in the summer on my legs.
