toooskies wrote:JonFromVA wrote:jbk1234 wrote:
Good teams routinely take it slow with late first round picks and I wouldn't put much stock in JBB talking up a young guy.
Sure, take it slow ... like what the Nuggets did with Michael Porter Jr trying to start his career recovering from injuries which might have ended it. MPJ had a much more physical build, but his back wouldn't let him move very well or bang, so it hardly mattered.
For reference he started 3 games and played in 16 others averaging nearly 24mpg IN THE PLAYOFFS while burying 3's at a 38.2% clip. His defense was notoriously bad at the time all while playing for a Mike Malone team that was winning at a 52-win pace if it had been a full season.
That's acceptable to me, you know, if Bates gets the same chance that MPJ did and makes as much of it as MPJ did.
Oh, and fwiw, MPJ didn't make two 3's in a game until he played his 11th game on December 5th.
If JBB wants to build the confidence of a young player and hype him to the media, all he has to do is prepare him to play meaningful minutes and let him improve as fast as he's capable. Lip service is worse than useless if there's no intent, support, or belief behind it.
Emoni's on a two-way, so he's limited to being active for 50 games at the NBA level as an upper limit. Unless he gets a full contract he will not be eligible to play in the playoffs. We can, of course, upgrade him to the playoff roster in our 15th roster spot, and may do that if he exhausts his two-way eligibility, but he's competing with CPJ for that, as well as any other team need or trade option the Cavs might want that spot for.
I'm sure we've been putting the two-way guys in active slots while we've had so many injuries of late, but the Charge season starts in one week. I'd like to see Emoni put together a month of consistent play at that level after he didn't at the college level for two years before impacting the pro roster too significantly.
These are those good kinds of problems to have, but it all starts with giving those guys enough rope to show their worth developing at the NBA level and/or that they might be able to give us something in the playoffs.
Traditionally, there's nothing a player can do at the g-league level to prove they belong in the pros. At best, they can not stink, work on their weaknesses, and shake off some rust. Now, maybe our Charge staff would prevent this, but it can also turn negative if the player just plays selfishly and tries to stuff the stat sheet so he can get out of there.
Performance and progress at the pro level is the only thing which actually matters, and the g-league is nothing more than a tool that can be used to help get him there. We don't need to break Emoni down, humble him, or make him somehow suffer for struggling in College to build him up. We just need to put him in the best place so he can learn and improve as quickly as possible.
Basically in this day and age, it's all about positive re-enforcement.
A month in the g-league may very well be best for him, but I think it's important that he really understands why, so he knows what he needs to work on and where he needs to get to.