Doctor MJ wrote:Jordan Syndrome wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
Touche. It's certainly true that Butler has found a way to consistently add value that his team misses when he's on the bench, or on his next team. Part of my snark here is that DeRozan's track record of his team doing best when he's not on the floor is kind of legendary. I wouldn't be looking to add a poor man's LeBron like Butler to LeBron's team even though I'd be confident he'd find a way to add value. Considerably harder for me to see adding DeRozan into the mix.
I agree with all of this. I dont think basketball is as simple as some of us want it to be: "Shoot or get off the court".
I will say I do get using DeRozan as your lead bench scorer, and if you're fine DeRozan's salary to a bench guy, that could work, but in terms of that closing lineup, what exactly is DeRozan doing out there with LeBron & AD. Do you really need a guy clogging up space on the interior that you're relying on LeBron & AD to dominate? Don't you want more 3-point shooting, passing, and defense?
Derozan isn't clogging up space though. The way I would envision it is he is on the perimeter near the corner.
LeBron can drive and if he kicks to DeMar in the corner he can either...
A) Shoot
B) Dribble into the 3 point line and now he has a chance to attack the rim, finish anywhere from 16 feet in or keep the ball moving.
DeMar strikes me as a guy who wants to win at this point in his career and he has a tremendous amount of respect for LeBron.
I agree that putting DeRozan into the corner is the best use for him next to LeBron & DeRozan, the problem is that I think you want your guy in the corner to actually be a threat to take the corner 3.
You are right and I misspoke earlier. While DeRozan shot 40% from the corner last season, his career is 36.4% and over the last 3 seasons is a shade above 30%.
I'm of the belief DeRozan would become willing to take the shot more frequently but we may never see this experiment take place.
Re: DeRozan wants to win at this point in his career. I think he always wanted that, the problem for years is that he's not a good enough alpha to be an alpha and he's literally weak in the value-add skills we require of basically every modern perimeter role player.
You are right, though admittedly he is a better playmaker than you give him credit for. Over the past 3 years DeMar is up to 26.2 AST% (Not a huge fan of the statistic but we aren't looking at Shawn Marion here) and his Assist/Turnover ratio is 8.0/3.4 or ~2.3 Assists to Turnover in the same time period.
Look, I like him more as a thought experiment and theory of my own rather than a paper fit. A player who has "present day perimeter abilities" in Isaiah Thomas was horrendous next to LeBron James. Id rather not go down this rabbit hole but it is simply an example of a player who, while modern, didnt work out.