Jdiddy701 wrote:The worst. I will never forget how TJ Warren sat on the bench while PJ Tucker was bricking corner 3's all season. You will not like his rotations, he has his players he likes that he will consistently give them minutes even though they're not producing (Tucker, Price)
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Of course, according to Real Plus-Minus, Tucker constituted a far more effective player than Warren this past season. Tucker ranked twenty-sixth overall among small forwards at +0.09 (net points per 100 possessions), whereas Warren placed sixty-ninth at -2.67, even trailing Michael Beasley.
http://espn.go.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/sort/RPM/position/5http://espn.go.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/page/2/sort/RPM/position/5One can debate the metric, but the point is that defense counts, too—actually, it counts just as much as offense.
Likewise, according to Real Plus-Minus, Ronnie Price ranked as the fourth-best defensive point guard in the NBA.
http://espn.go.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/sort/DRPM/position/1So defensive efficiency fully explains the playing time that Tucker and Price received. One could theoretically argue that Hornacek should have instead played younger players with greater offensive upside in order to develop them, but we now know that he did not enjoy the full support of ownership and management and that he needed to try to win in order to keep his job. In order to win, you need some defensive resistance, and Tucker and Price also constituted two of the only Suns who one could consistently rely upon for a high level of effort and competitiveness.