doclinkin wrote:But its an interesting exercise for a slow summer: What's the best team you could assemble from the bottom half of every team's roster.
Probably worth its own thread.
Start it, Doc -- a fun idea!
Moderators: nate33, montestewart, LyricalRico
doclinkin wrote:But its an interesting exercise for a slow summer: What's the best team you could assemble from the bottom half of every team's roster.
Probably worth its own thread.

leswizards wrote: f I were a gm, I would place optimal value on having Deni and Davis if I had a team where Davis and Deni could play ~30 mpg at sg and pf. With Poole and Kuzma making $53 a year for the next 4 years, that’s not the Wizards.
leswizards wrote:Third, as far as I am aware, there is no stat page which shows production by position played, so I can only go on my gut which tells me, kispert is best suited to play sf, and the Wizards will see vast improvement in his production as most if not all his minutes will be at sf this year, where in his first two seasons, he played 35% and 38% at sg, whereas Deni has not looked as good as I would like because 67% of his minutes have been at sf.

nate33 wrote: Surprisingly, Kispert looks to be much more effective at SG. His individual offensive production is slightly down relative to SF, but he outplays his counterpart to a much greater degree while at the SG position. And the team is essentially breakeven in plus/minus when Kispert is at SG, while they get soundly outplayed with Kispert at SF.
There may be other factors at play. I'm assuming most of Kispert's SG minutes were against backups because Beal was the starter, whereas many of his SF minutes may have been against starting caliber competition. But I think it's real interesting that the team fares a lot better defensively with Kispert at SG instead of SF.


doclinkin wrote:...but I doubt the coaching staff goes that direction.
dckingsfan wrote:The coaching staff has some shiny new guards to roll out. My guess is that Kispert plays lots of SF (and that wasn't my hope at all when Beal was traded, I was hoping for Kispert/Avdija to start at the 2/3).
I think that Poole, Jones, Shamet and Wright eat all of the guard minutes at the start of the season - I hope I am wrong.
doclinkin wrote:dckingsfan wrote:The coaching staff has some shiny new guards to roll out. My guess is that Kispert plays lots of SF (and that wasn't my hope at all when Beal was traded, I was hoping for Kispert/Avdija to start at the 2/3).
I think that Poole, Jones, Shamet and Wright eat all of the guard minutes at the start of the season - I hope I am wrong.
I think Kispert is more 'shiny' than Landry Shamet.
https://stathead.com/tiny/sjorB
Kispert is younger, shoots a better 3 ball, FT%, better rebounding, fouls less, and a significantly better player scoring at the rim. Tyus Jones will appreciate his backdoor cuts. He's a known quality for WUJ as well. He stood out in his late season run last year. If he could sustain that efficiency he's a significantly valuable player, defense be damned.
Shamet only stands above Kispert in his assist rate, which puts him at back-up PG, not 2-guard, and in that respect he may play well next to Kispert in any offense-only line-up we play off the bench.
Wright I expect will be traded earlier to a team that needs vet help in the back court. He defense has been nice, but his 3FG% has fallen off a bit. His is a more valuable role than Shamet.
dckingsfan wrote:doclinkin wrote:dckingsfan wrote:The coaching staff has some shiny new guards to roll out. My guess is that Kispert plays lots of SF (and that wasn't my hope at all when Beal was traded, I was hoping for Kispert/Avdija to start at the 2/3).
I think that Poole, Jones, Shamet and Wright eat all of the guard minutes at the start of the season - I hope I am wrong.
I think Kispert is more 'shiny' than Landry Shamet.
https://stathead.com/tiny/sjorB
Kispert is younger, shoots a better 3 ball, FT%, better rebounding, fouls less, and a significantly better player scoring at the rim. Tyus Jones will appreciate his backdoor cuts. He's a known quality for WUJ as well. He stood out in his late season run last year. If he could sustain that efficiency he's a significantly valuable player, defense be damned.
Shamet only stands above Kispert in his assist rate, which puts him at back-up PG, not 2-guard, and in that respect he may play well next to Kispert in any offense-only line-up we play off the bench.
Wright I expect will be traded earlier to a team that needs vet help in the back court. He defense has been nice, but his 3FG% has fallen off a bit. His is a more valuable role than Shamet.
Careful, you are making us hopeful that Kispert will play lots of minutes at SG
doclinkin wrote:dckingsfan wrote:The coaching staff has some shiny new guards to roll out. My guess is that Kispert plays lots of SF (and that wasn't my hope at all when Beal was traded, I was hoping for Kispert/Avdija to start at the 2/3).
I think that Poole, Jones, Shamet and Wright eat all of the guard minutes at the start of the season - I hope I am wrong.
I think Kispert is more 'shiny' than Landry Shamet.
DCZards wrote:doclinkin wrote:dckingsfan wrote:The coaching staff has some shiny new guards to roll out. My guess is that Kispert plays lots of SF (and that wasn't my hope at all when Beal was traded, I was hoping for Kispert/Avdija to start at the 2/3).
I think that Poole, Jones, Shamet and Wright eat all of the guard minutes at the start of the season - I hope I am wrong.
I think Kispert is more 'shiny' than Landry Shamet.
I’m certain Wes Jr. knows well the “shiny” piece he has in Kispert. Wes saw what Kispert did at the end of last season.
Corey will get minutes at SG. But his size, as compared to Poole, Jones, Shamet and Wright, will mean that he’ll also get minutes at SF. That’s a good thing because it allows for a wider range of lineups that include Kispert.
doclinkin wrote:dckingsfan wrote:doclinkin wrote:I think Kispert is more 'shiny' than Landry Shamet.
https://stathead.com/tiny/sjorB
Kispert is younger, shoots a better 3 ball, FT%, better rebounding, fouls less, and a significantly better player scoring at the rim. Tyus Jones will appreciate his backdoor cuts. He's a known quality for WUJ as well. He stood out in his late season run last year. If he could sustain that efficiency he's a significantly valuable player, defense be damned.
Shamet only stands above Kispert in his assist rate, which puts him at back-up PG, not 2-guard, and in that respect he may play well next to Kispert in any offense-only line-up we play off the bench.
Wright I expect will be traded earlier to a team that needs vet help in the back court. He defense has been nice, but his 3FG% has fallen off a bit. His is a more valuable role than Shamet.
Careful, you are making us hopeful that Kispert will play lots of minutes at SG
Right? A player that shoots 42% 3FG, 63% 2FG and 85% FT is going to find minutes on any team. No matter where they have to play him.


DCZards wrote:I think Bilal is definitely in the rotation. Even if it’s just 8-10 mins a game. Davis will get minutes as well.
Need to develop at least those two youngins.
doclinkin wrote:... I'm intrigued with all of the developmental prospects. It's why I am not bemoaning the idea that we drafted yet another Euro talent who won't suit up for us in the year they were drafted. Half our roster is younger than the NBA prime age (27). There is upside already on the roster if we can give the players opportunity and minutes.
Even 4th year player Deni at at 23 is still the 6th youngest player on the team. He has fixable flaws and has showed flashes of potential there, just needs to learn the consistency aspect. He's just a little ahead of the group of players like Butler (22), Rollins (21), Davis (21), PBJr (20) and Bilal (19) in terms of their learning curve.
Even the next cohort has possible upside. Kispert's (24) late-season improvement suggests he's putting together his game and finding his place at the next level. Likewise Poole (24) took a set-back last year but seems to have significant upside as a first-option player if he can regain the peak he showed in his Finals run. Not sure if Gafford (24) has much growth left in him given his flatline or declining stats over the most recent stretch, but maybe playing next to Jones will improve those numbers as well. He is unquestionably the starting C at this point so he will get all the opportunity.
It might be too much to ask for Kuzma (27) to improve, but he is now a clear leader on the team where before his light was shaded by Beal's outsized influence. Even 8 year veteran Jones (27) has a chance to grow though, having never been the lead guard up to now. This is the player I'm probably most curious about, I'd love to see if his own leadership skills can permeate the team and help others to develop. He is a player who has grown up in the league, starting as one of the youngest players in his draft class, already with a championship under his belt (NCAA). Seems to me he can mentor players in how to become true professionals and maximize their potential quickly.