Klomp wrote:Scalabrine wrote:Pointgod wrote:I don’t understand why so many people are down on Dillingham. It seems like he had a solid summer league despite it being summer league. Seems like a no brainer risk for the Wolves. Even if he’s nothing more than a starting calibre PG for the next 8 years you’re in a good position.
I think the Spurs got a little too cute by half with this move. Sure a pick 7 years away might turn into something good but you have something good in Dillingham. A player who’s defensive problems could be covered up by a generational defensive player and would be an awesome backcourt mate with Castle. That also ignores the other players the Spurs could have picked that got drafted after 8.
What if he's worse than a starting point guard for the next 8 years?
Two of Minnesota's biggest needs longterm at the moment are...
1. Franchise point guard
2. Scoring punch/self-creation off the bench
Dillingham filling the first would be incredible. However, even if he doesn't reach that height, there is a strong chance he can fill the second. That is still an enormous win for the franchise to add that kind of player on an asset-strapped team.
Totally agree. Wolves are my second team (Im a Vikings fan in the NFL so thats the crossover) and I think that this was worth the gamble for a player like Dillingham. It's still a big gamble though. He wouldn't be the first highly touted, undersized guard to not reach their potential. Especially a guard that is as small as him.
I'm definitely rooting for him, but I just think the posted I quoted was being a little too non-chalaunt by saying "even if he's nothing more than a starting point guard" . If he's a starting point guard for 8 years, that would be a very very good outcome for the Wolves.