Dalek wrote:Scase wrote:raincityraptors wrote:I don't know if any of you remember me writing that I wanted to get Shead in the second round but I didn't think it was realistic given our other needs. I think we are already seeing what he can do for us and I really hope he's our backup PG for the next 10 years. He has such high character and basketball IQ. He'll make an excellent coach one day too.
I know some are comparing him to Fred but he's closer to Kyle (the prospect) without the rebounding numbers. As a prospect, I think he got downhill better than either of them. If he can develop a reliable 3 he might become a spot starter.
I do suspect once teams figure out he can't shoot, they will guard him a lot better. I hope we are able to help him find a reliable 3pt shot.
Well, they won't really have to guard him at all tbh, just sag off and dare him to shoot. I like his defensive tenacity, but if he can't develop a shot, he is not long for this league. It's the same for Ochai, and Mitchell, the NBA has moved past hyper specialists, you need to at least not be a massive negative on one side of the ball.
I don't even have trouble with defensive specialists. The problem is size and strength. This past few days I have watched Amen Thompson, Anthony Black, and Stephon Castle and all are 6'4 or bigger guards and you feel the physicality when they are defending. Shead is like Fred, generously listed at 6 feet - he looks a bit light.
He can definitely play some on ball stuff and get some strips in close, but if bigger guards can just shoot over him he has less value. Not saying he can't carve out a role, but every inch of wingspan matters in the NBA and he is on the fringe size wise.
The shooting is the other concern, but I don't worry about him with that. He will become passable as his form looks good.
The shooting is a bigger issue to me, I can see us using him when we need some solid backup minutes to keep things from collapsing like they have in the past from the bench, but the NBA doesn't really hinge on defence anymore. Having to play 4 on 5 is a massive handicap, it puts extra defensive pressure on the guys who can score, and with how offence driven the NBA is now, any time you can't get production from all 5 players on the court, you suffer.
Like I said before, it's why Ochai is probably out of the league after this contract (unless he massively improves his 3) and likely the same for Mitchell. These guys are just too much of a liability for teams to rely on them in any real capacity. It's the same issue with Nowell from last year, granted he was a couple inches smaller, but he is basically a carbon copy player. He played 2 whole minutes for us, despite being a 25 win team. These guys are just too limited physically that if you can't contribute at a super efficient level on offence, you won't last.