No, that is your reality. I am a sink or swim guy having personally experienced it, and seeing it happen to others. On the job experience is not "damaging" to the individual and in my experience the absolute best way to learn a skill. There are rough spots to be sure, but getting this experience is crucial for understanding how the NBA works, and each of its teams and starting guards.Snakebites wrote:edmunder_prc wrote:Snakebites wrote:What’s the time table on the G-League starting up?
Jan 29th and the Pistons "have no plans to join".
https://www.detroitbadboys.com/2020/12/28/22198665/detroit-pistons-g-league-bubble-opt-out-grand-rapids-drive
So there yah go.
The only path towards developing him is on this roster.
I'm not sure how to move forward with this, but it's self evident that it isn't working, and we're only damaging him by throwing him out there in this fashion. That's the reality.
If you bring him off the bench he'll be playing against lesser opponents but also have worse teammates. And his shot still needs to be fixed. It's really tough. I was prepared for a rough start but this is definitely rougher than I'd hoped- and rougher than other comparable players drafted have shown so far.
It's fairly discouraging. I do like what I'm seeing from Bey and Stewart but Sekou and Hayes aren't going as I'd hoped- and both are more important. Bey hasn't really played well so far but he's at least shown what he can do out there. Sekou can barely get on the court.
Again, it's been 4 games and making any determination is absurd. Some players will respond immediately, while others will take time to get their feet under them.
If after 25-30 games Hayes is still struggling like this, then there might be a problem. I would look to repeat teams and how Hayes performs against them further down the schedule. That could be a useful indicator on if he is learning after having played against them.