lilfishi22 wrote:bwgood77 wrote:MathiasPW wrote:My biggest concern is we might be assuming Kyrie with Lebron is all the Kyrie we would get, while he may be much more.
I don't remember much of Kyrie before LeBron returned. But he has the skills (not only scoring, he has some awesome passing skills as can be seen on some assist highlights) to be a great player under different systems as well, if he buys in.
In Lowe and Windhorst's podcast, Lowe mentioned something along the lines of "I don't think he has that great vision for passing that someone like Harden has" while explaining a detailed game moment, where a defender slightly loses his man, and Windhorst says that the people in Cleveland say "No, he does...he could do all that, but he just doesn't want to...he wants to do all the fancy dribbling and launch up some impossible looking shot just to show he can do it."
This isn't the first time Windhorst has talked negatively about Kyrie. Windhorst is Lebron's avatar in the world of rumors, leaks and "sources". He's a guy that started covering Lebron in his first stint with Cleveland, then moved to ESPN when Lebron signed with Miami (and when ESPN started a whole section following the Heat) and now he's back in Cleveland covering Lebron.
It comes at no surprise that the guy who's been getting the inside feed from Lebron's camp, significantly helping his career, is going to disparage Kyrie while painting Lebron as the good guy.
Actually what he said was somewhat of a compliment in that he did have those skills. Lowe didn't think he had him. It sounds about right though considering he hasn't ever averaged that many assists. I mean, many point out bad or strange things about Kyrie...Lowe in his article...which has been posted here...even Chauncey Billups, who was being considered as a GM candidate, said this...
Before he turned down the Cavaliers‘ GM position, Chauncey Billups spent time doing his “due diligence” on the organization.
So when he found out that Kyrie Irving had requested a trade, Billups told Altitude Sports 950 that he really wasn’t surprised (starting at 6:21):
http://www.slamonline.com/nba/chauncey-billups-kyrie-irving-trade-i-dont-get/#KkhAOy8fkfMqDWtf.99
“It didn’t really surprise me.
“As they were doing their due diligence on me, I was doing the same thing.
“I knew so much about the situation that the rest of the world doesn’t know.”
Billups was, however, confused as to why Kyrie would want to leave Cleveland.
As a player who prioritized winning above all else, Billups said he can’t imagine Kyrie being able to find a better situation (starting at 7:15):
“That would be alarming to me if I was a team looking to get him because if it’s all about winning—I mean, man, you got a chance to win every single year.
“And not only that, you’re getting everything you want. You’re getting the shots you want. You’re playing for a great coach who’s letting you go to work.
“The game’s on the line, they coming to you. You playing on [national] TV every week.
“To me, I don’t get it.”