NikolaPekovic wrote:Illmatic12 wrote:NikolaPekovic wrote:This is a good example of downplaying top prospects and making holes in their game seem bigger than they are.
He has legit PG skills, better than alot of "point guards" we see come through the draft these days.
It's a good example of basic bball 101.. have you ever played or coached organized basketball?
If so, explain why a coach would want to run PnR with a 6'10 player who is left unguarded on the perimeter. There is no strategic advantage to putting Simmons at the top of the key as a set-up man, defenses will just sag off of him and send his defender to help in the passing lanes.. ie turnovers galore.
If you have a player like that, you set him up on the elbow areas of the court so he can face up and attack off the dribble, or use his vision to pass to cutters. You don't want Simmons initiating offensive sets at the top of the key, you want him receiving an entry pass in the high post. Until he develops a perimeter game, there is literally no advantage to playing Simmons at point guard in the halfcourt, unless you're deliberately trying to lose games (so on second thought, maybe the Philly 76ers would look into doing it)
Guys like Rubio, Rondo, or Lebron have seemed to make it work thus far.
It helps nobody to speak in absolutes bud.
Rubio and Rondo are incredibly skilled and crafty ballhandlers, among the tops in the league. We're not talking about 6'10 players trying to dribble into traffic against a packed paint. Those two players have *elite* ball control and change of direction ability (if they didn't, they wouldn't even be in the NBA, at least not as starters)
Even still, neither Rubio or Rondo have led a team anywhere but the lottery as the best player. Or led a league average offense as the best player. So that's not exactly an indicator of rousing success. Even if we bring up John Wall as another example of poor shooter at point guard, he started off as a transition threat only - it took years before he could even run a competent half court offense. The Wizards didn't go anywhere until Wall's fourth season when he could finally hit the midrange jumper on PnR.
Lebron is in a class of his own, he is capable of putting up 30+ points at will from anywhere in the court, and threatens the defense in an entirely different way.
Speaking in absolutes would be if I said Simmons is incapable of improving, which I didn't. I think that if you look at the precedent for players who struggle to operate from the perimeter, the reality is that Ben won't be a good half court player in the NBA anytime soon, it's going to take quite some time and development (which is fine, he's only 20yo).