Mogspan wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Mogspan wrote:
You think a superstar requesting a trade because his best teammate after 8 seasons is Ryan Anderson is worse than a guy in an impossibly good situation costing his team a title by targeting people's crotches multiple times in the same postseason, sucker punching a max contract teammate, and bullying another teammate who happened to be a reigning 2x FMVP out of town? Gonna have to disagree with that. The Dwight thing is incidental; the Draymond thing is quintessential.
It's crazy to think that Draymond's defensive impact wouldn't be affected if he were expected to produce on offense what Dwight was.
Calling what Howard did a trade request is very much not accurate. The threat was of him leaving in free agency, and it wasn't something where Howard sat idly by and just said "Hey, I'm going to leave in free agency". Howard, much like LeBron previously, was pushing the Magic to "do something or I might leave". The Magic of course had been top tier contenders already so it wasn't a question of "how to make the team competitive", it was just trying to figure out what would make Howard happy. They traded away Marcin Gortat and Rashard Lewis - arguably their two best non-Howard players - as part of this, which then made the team worse.
Further, Howard tried to get Van Gundy fired as coach, which is astonishing because we can now look back and know with a certainty that not only was Van Gundy doing great work, he was doing work ahead of his time with spacing.
So basically I would say that Howard had a situation that was as near to perfect as he could possibly expect, he didn't recognize it, and eventually his actions ruined what the Magic had.
And then of course he went to team after team after that and just couldn't ever seem to fit in with other talent with him playing any kind of secondary starring role. He would go almost a decade before finding a niche he could do decently - bench player - and even there teams didn't want to keep him from year to year.
If you want to say that what Green did is MORE immoral/unethical that's plausible, but I'm not talking about dinging a guy for morality points. What I'm talking about is building teams that can win titles, and ideally dynasties. You can do this with Green...but with Howard, I'm not so sure. Yeah they could have plausibly won a title if the right opponents got hurt, but in Howard you had an extremely immature basketball player who really didn't understand the dynamics of basketball teams and as a result wanted things that just weren't possible - such as to prove he could do post-up volume scoring like Shaq - in the name of his own star stature rather than what was best for the team.
Re: Draymond's defensive impact would be affected by being asked to do more on offense. That's not contradicting anything I said.
You're not sure if prime Dwight could have won several titles with Curry, Klay, and KD on his team? If Dwight was in a "near-perfect" situation, what do you call Draymond's situation? "Beyond" perfect? What would Draymond have looked like if he had played on those teams that Dwight did? You're in for a long season if Draymond is legitimately your team's best player. They each have their foibles, but you're going to blame a physically compromised Dwight for butting heads with a curmudgeonly Kobe and James "the grass is always greener" Harden when Draymond demonstrably could not have played nice even if becoming the best team of all-time depended on it? Dwight was at least partially a victim of circumstance, whereas Draymond is a perpetrator of circumstance - a ticking time bomb of inevitable self-sabotage. It's just who he is. I have more doubt that Draymond ever in a million years could stay in line than I do that a young Dwight could have gotten with the program had he been lucky enough to play with multiple docile HoF offensive players simultaneously, at their peaks, in a culture that books will be written about.
That absolutely contradicts what you implied. You said that Dwight shouldn't be given credit for his offensive responsibilities because they shouldn't really have affected his defense. A corollary of that is that an increase in Draymond's offensive responsibilities shouldn't have marginalized his defense.
Not a particular fan in using Draymond Green off-court interpersonal quirks & deficiencies as means to detract from him as a player especially as a way to buffer Dwight Howard. Dwight Howard had functional limitations in terms of his Basketball IQ where it caused dissension in every locker room he played in from LA to Washington. Howard legitimately didn't understand what he did well & what he didn't perform well at.
Dwight wanted to run an inside-out Offense in LA while having a steadfast refusal to operate as a Roll Man in the PnR with Steve Nash. Left LA to bark & command for all the Post Touches he wants while being the least efficient High Volume Post Players in the entire NBA in his 1st year in Houston at 0.77 Points Per Possession, ranked 138th in NBA & simultaneously being one of the most Turnover Prone in the Post.
This article provides a long elaborate case against Dwight as a teammate & more importantly as someone who has functionally limited understanding of basketball. The type of player who is heavily reliant on exceptional athleticism to get by.
https://www.theringer.com/nba/2018/7/25/17613910/dwight-howard-hate-wizards-magic-lakers-rockets-hawks-hornets










