Post#107 » by Anatomize » Tue Aug 10, 2010 7:26 pm
It's great to be a jumpshooter, but in today's NBA it is probably the last skill set you need to develop. If you have your dribbling/passing skill sets down as a PG, shooting is something you can develop as your career goes on. As Helix put it, Jason Kidd developed %'s well late into his career and is now a very viable three point threat. Many players now are showing you can dominate many areas of the game without needing to be a good shooter, Rondo is one of them. Rubio has many of Rondo's skills and unselfishness, he's not as fast and not as good a rebounder or an athlete but his IQ alone will make him a top PG.
And for the guy saying PG is a position of strength for us, it is totally wrong. Jack/Calderon are not nearly formidable enough to compete with all the star studded pgs other teams have; we practically have two backups sharing time as starters. In terms of point guards, the Western conference is undoubtedly more stacked at this point so let's take a look at the Eastern conference PGs:
Milwaukee - Brandon Jennings
Chicago - Derrick Rose
Cleveland - Mo Williams
Atlanta - Uses Joe Johnson/Crawford against us (both have PG skills)
Orlando - Jameer Nelson
Boston - Rondo
New York - Felton/Douglas
New Jersey - Harris
Washington - John Wall
Philadelphia - Evan Turner/Jrue Holiday/Louis Williams
Our tandem is slightly better than Miami (not like they need to handle the ball), Charlotte, Indiana, and Detroit. Truth is, our PGs just don't stack up to the rest of the league. Jarret Jack is a great player and leader but he can be inconsistent, he has all the tools to be a solid PG but he's a "jack of all trades" master of none, which makes him a perfect backup. Jose Calderon is burnt toast, so I'm not going to get into it.
On another note, I'm sick and tired of people saying Rudy Fernandez is incapable. The guy is a great **** player and he has superb ball handling ability which was on full display in Spain's finals match versus the United States. He's extremely athletic, can dunk/posterize/alley oop, lights out shooter from spot up/around picks/creating off the dribble. Fernandez has all the tools to be a very good shooting guard and a prime scorer ala Leandro Barbosa (with more athleticism). People have this notion that he's primarily a shooter because Nate McMillan only used him coming off picks and to occasionally slash. He is a dangerous 1 on 1 player, and McMillan hasn't taken advantage of this because of how many ball handlers Portland has, not because Fernandez isn't capable.