doclinkin wrote:Gibson has been so terrible that he has helped the team to +5.8 pts/100.
...Gibson plays the kind of game that does not show up in his own personal box score, but does affects the opponents' efficiency, and his teammates as well. Gibson sets screens, boxes out, plays positional defense. ...uses a hard foul to stop a run, fouling with purpose instead of by accident like Gafford....
All good points, doc.
doclinkin wrote:...Gafford credited Taj for teaching him better how to use his fouls and stick on screens. ... Eye test says he is getting better on those two fronts....
doclinkin wrote:...I don't fault Wes for 10 minutes of Gill or Taj now and again. They play the game the right way....
I don't disagree at all. &, anyway, given Taj has played all of 379 minutes this season, no one could tag him with responsibility for any of our troubles.
Remember, this exchange isn't about Taj; it's about Vernon Carey Jr.
In essence, all I'm asking for is to play Carey "for 10 minutes... now and again."
Overall, my argument would be that we aren't a good enough team that 10 minutes of Taj vs. 10 minutes of Carey matters to our overall fate this season. At least some significant part of our focus has to be on our future, on decisions & development related to that future.
If, somehow, we manage to slip into the first round, we are going to be brushed aside by Boston. We can't afford to ignore a potentially meaningful asset that's future-oriented. We have an option on Carey for next year. Are we picking up that option? Or are we letting him go.
If the guy wasn't killing it in the G League, or if Taj Gibson had a 3-year future for us, I could see never playing Carey.
doclinkin wrote:...If Rui learned how to play the pro game by the example of either of them, he could be an all-star....
But, he didn't. & that should be a hint to the fact that your argument cuts both ways.
Still, although Taj's presence didn't help Rui, you suggest that it is helping Gaff, & I'm happy to concede the point. OTOH, we don't really know how much of that teaching/learning process is happening in practice. Anyway, the kid learning from the savvy vet who takes him under his wing is a standard trope not an actual empirical argument.
Plus, nothing about that trope depends much on the vet's floor time. Thus:
doclinkin wrote:...Taj will surely be a coach on somebody's staff when he retires....
Agreed!
doclinkin wrote:...A Udonis Haslem type....
Perfect comparison!
doclinkin wrote:...SOP works well for Miami, seems like we could borrow from them whatever they do that does work....
Again, I agree entirely, doc, & thanks for making my argument for me:
Udonis Haslem has played 46 minutes this year. Meanwhile...
undrafted rookie Jamal Cain has gotten 182 minutes
undrafted rookie Orlando Robinson 387 minutes
even
undrafted rookie Jamaree Bouyea has gotten 65 minutes
undrafted rookie Dru Smith got 67 with the Heat (now w/ the Nets).
That's on
a far better team than the Wizards, one that
has a lot more at stake this season than we do.Oh, & then there's the
undrafted Caleb Martin who got 317 minutes his rookie year, 800+ his 2d year, & is now a starter.
So, yeah...
doclinkin wrote:...we could borrow from them whatever they do that does work....
Or have you changed your mind, & now you don't want to borrow from them any more?
doclinkin wrote:...I don't think these two are hurting the all-star future of Vernon Carey. Hard to make an argument for that based on his career so far.
You know better than that foolish, dismissive remark.
In fact, you know better than this whole foolish argument you're pretending to make.
For example, you know perfectly well that...
under Ernie, over & over, season after season, we kept trying to use end-of-career vets as bandages. It didn't work. It's not working in the case of Taj Gibson either.