Well crap, a cordial well-reasoned conversation with a Conference opponent. Or their fans anyway. I was hoping for insults and bad grammar.
Cowology wrote:My other question is how exactly Arenas is gonna distribute the ball to all those scorers. I find it curious that Wiz fans would knock Detroit for having Stuckey, "a SG" at the point, when Arenas himself is a shoot 1st, shoot 2nd guard. Obviously a much better one, but he's still clearly a scoring guard. In fact Stuckey averaged better than 5 apg last year as a starter, which isn't that far off from Arenas despite Arenas having a much higher usage rating.
I'm the guy who wanted Stuckey for the Wiz, in part because of his ability to rack assists on a squad with zero other NBA talents. Here he would have been Gil-insurance and I envisioned him in the same role that L-Boogie had when he and Gilbert were running upcourt together -- opponents were never sure who to guard since either one could handle and attack the lane. A fine fit for the Wiz' style at the time. I 'spect Stuckey will round out eventually as a fine attacking point in the Tony Parker mode. He needs a bit of range on his jumper to force opponents to guard him tight and space the floor for the rest of the squad, but added range is a skill NBAers have been shown to develop. Easier than improving FT% for instance. Repetition and legs, no need for a sports psychologist or a hypnotist.
That said, the 'shoot first, shoot second' Gilbert has averaged 7 assists in a system that expected players to break down opponents with individual skill. He's played next to three separate 20-pt scorers (Larry, 'Twan, Caron) with no complaints about his role. With Gilbert on court no-handle DeShawn Stevenson hit 50% from the floor. With Gilbert off-court, DeShawn hit 19% in the playoffs and crapped the bed completely. When Gilbert came back this year, he posted a 20-1 assist to TO ratio in two games. 10 dimes per game in limited minutes, even while unable to shoot, or break down opponents in the lane. One turnover in two games.
I like a well-reasoned argument, but especially when it's based on intimate knowledge of your own players, more than the same old trite re-hash of errant conventional wisdom about another squad's stalwart. Gilbert draws attention to his own game, but his positive effect on the team around him is an under-recognized aspect of his value. He scored here because the team needed his scoring. Games when he wasn't scoring we had to rely on offense from Jarvis Hayes, Kwame Brown, Juan Dixon (to name a few more one-time ex-Wiz/now post-neo-Pistons). Waiting on Arvis Hayes to find his 'J' is a recipe for hair-pulling and cat-kicking. But Gil did get the ball to the hands of players who could actually make a bucket. Ask Caron, ask Jamison.
Pretty sure the same Gil that racked 7asts per game sharing the court with offensive spazzes like Jared Jeffries (playing shooting guard no less) and Mike Ruffin (nuff said)-- pretty sure he could could find a way to build and maintain the average when he can loft an alley oop to a funnel over the basket like Javale McGee. Or when he has 40% 3fg options outside for his drive and kick (Mike Miller, Nick Young, Randy Foye).
I like the Pistons just fine. A trio of UConn Huskies is generally a good thing on an NBA squad (now pick up Rudy Gay, Caron, Ray Allen...). Tayshaun Prince is either vastly underrated or vastly ovgerrated depending on whom you're talking to. Kwame is an excellent one-on-one big-man defender even if his team game will always be a work in progress.
But if you're basing your critique of the Wiz on the concept that Gilbert can't play with others, feel free to check Larry Hughes' post-Wiz career, and look at Caron/Jamison's first-time all-star appearances next to him.
As for injuries. True, Detroit has one of the league's best individual trainers. We have Dr Nick from the Simpsons. The prayer is that since we have the deepest team since... ever? Then maybe we can weather the usual DC kasualty karma. We've played the starters heavy minutes because we had nothing behind them (see Jarvis, etc-- above) but that opened us up for fatigue-based accidents and erosion. Flip has kept a short bench in the past, but aside from the front court, he's pretty deep in solid veteran players, with some pretty talented (youngsters):
PG-- Gil, Foye, (Crittenton), DeShawn, James
SG-- Miller, Foye, (Nick Young), DeShawn, Caron
SF -- Caron, Miller, Jamison, (Dom McGuire), (Nick Young)
PF-- Jamison, (Blatche), Oberto, (McGuire), (McGee)
C-- Haywood, (Blatche), Oberto, (McGee)
Hopefully McGee doesn't break Big 'Wood's wrist in training camp again... [pray for mercy]. And Jamison is his usual 80+ game ironman self, or else the youngsters show as much accomplishment as talent this year. Never know, at some point those talented young players have to become veterans and figure out how to play-- right, Amir Johnson?