2010 wrote:KnixinSix wrote:RHODEY wrote:
Good post. What I'll add this....its way way early, but I think Kolek will be a special player...he just knows how to play, how to run a team , and when to shoot. As far as our lineup, I want OG at the 3 and Bridges at the 2 and Hart coming off the bench.
Regarding Tows, he's a much better or quicker and/or willing passer than I expected, Ill be interested to see what his assist stats will look like .
PS free TJ Warren , dude is still a walking bucket.
Kolek is a natural 1 who may be an even better passer than Brunson. Super high BBIQ. I cant believe we found another post-lottery gem.
Kolek is without a doubt a better passer than Brunson. Not even up for debate.
I believe Brunson's passing has improved since he joined the team, but it is an adjunct to his primary impact as a scoring PG.
If we did not have Brunson, maybe we'd be even more excited about Kolek, because he is a rare pure PG. They simply are not that common in the NBA today among starters, much less role players.
Looking back through Knicks history of PGs you'll find few major talents (Richardson, Clyde, Strickland, maybe Marbury and I consider Pearl mostly as a SG), a handful of steady and competent PGs (Jackson, Ward, Childs, Greg Anthony), but when you sift through the whole lot of them the only ones that I recall having the crisp attack you see from a player like Kolek might be Rod Strickland. Micheal Ray was super slick and no one was better at orchestrating than Clyde.
Basically, Kolek excites me because seeing a rookie Knicks PG execute this precisely, pass this crisply, make decisions like a real pro is really unusual. Most of the players listed above still had a learning curve. Even Clyde's first season was a getting acquainted period. But Kolek right out of the gate plays with complete authority and with absolute certainty about what he wants to do on the floor. I think the guy is truly impressive.




























