3toheadmelo wrote:HopelessKnick wrote:spree2kawhi wrote:
I like your modest approach. I don’t agree with most points though, because the first-rounders can be re-acquired. You cannot deal them and cry about who was drafted with them. It’s not professional. You can re-acquire draft picks.
Let’s look at Bridges briefly: won’t miss from mid-range, great slasher, still top-level perimeter defender (you could not not see it recently), fourth option for us at 24 million, is signed through 2026 at that rate and has proven over and over that he can be a 22 ppg scorer if needed. Considering his unselfish playing style and two-way prowess, you could say (I would) that he can be and recently has been a more efficient basketball player than Julius Randle and we saw that a lot this year: over his last ten games he’s scored 19.9 ppg, 4.8 apg on 51.9 FG%, 37 3P%, 90.9 FT%. We paid a lot, but I’d simply say we paid the price. Tell me, who are other wings who can do all that? Meanwhile, Randle has been good too, but he doesn’t guard nor show any effort, is small for his position and as we all know his assists will often be passes to bail himself out. In many cases he’ll frustrate you with his turnovers. I’m glad we traded him for Towns and acquired two versatile wings. That’s how you build a team. You criticize Bridges for underperforming in crucial games? It cannot be repeated enough how Randle has literally been the worst playoff performer in the entire history of the NBA. So, to your point, how is his extension going to look? Seriously, how?
As for the rest of the roster: we’re seeing great improvements not only from Bridges, but OG too. He’s playing with supreme confidence and had hinted at a lack thereof as well as trust from his teammates in postgame interviews multiple times in December. Chemistry is growing and I’m very confident in our ability to win come playoff time. Don’t forget Mitchell Robinson. Most of Cleveland’s success should be attributed to their rim protection. I am not going to overrate Donovan Mitchell because of their team success. Give Mitch some more time to get good feet wet and he can add a dimension this so-called “flawed” roster hasn’t had. We are a dominant rim-protector away from legit contention, and we even have that dimension already. But Mitch was injured and he can unlock this. Towns has averaged 24 PPG, 12 rpg on 42.5 3P% - I won’t even listen to the slander or Giannis BS.
The three very good teams have unreal cohesion, but are they really any more talented on paper than we are? It’s cohesion that we’ve been struggling with, not talent or Bridges or Towns, and you simply cannot expect that type of cohesion yet - at least if you’re not a troll.
We are clearly getting there and you (all) should open your eyes to this evolution. If anything, this team is lacking another terrifying shot-blocker, and we can easily add that. What I’ll give you here is that Ware would be that player. But you’re underrating Bridges. To me, the criticism is nonsense. This is an up and coming team.
1. I'm not even a Randle supporter at all but I'll try to remain fair: Randle had a terrible showing against the Hawks but was also on a team where he got double and triple teamed all the time. And we all know he is not THAT dude that can continue scoring against that type of coverage. The following postseason he was really hobbled and last year he missed the playoff entirely. To me the jury is out on him. To me this year is either make or break for him in regards to playoff success. He now has that alpha dog next to him drawing the main attention and he has shotmakers around him too. No excuses but I will give him this run before I call him the worst playoff performer of all time. Technically I don't see why his game should not translate to the playoffs. Let's wait 4-5 more weeks before making that judgement.
2. I'm not sure why you compare Randle to Bridges, the comparison should be to KAT. And KAT has been solid in the playoffs but also far from great. Considering he is solely an offensive weapon his 19points/9rebounds last season in the first and 2nd round on 50/40 shooting are good but not outstanding. And then he was horrific in the WCF, shoting 38%/24% for 19points/8rebounds. The year before he was 18/10 on 46/25% against Denver. Again pretty bad. Before that he had a good series against Memphis with 22/10 on very efficient shooting. Against Houston in 2018 again a bad series with 15/13 on 47/27% shooting. So KAT has been mixed overall. 6 playoff series---3 good ones and 3 bad ones. Has really averaged 20+points only in 1 out of 6 series. For a solely offensive player that's not really good.
As for Bridges. I'll easily say that among 3-D wings his game is solid. I actually think the criticism on his defense throughout the season has been somewhat exaggerated. However I completely disagree with the notion of "you can simply re-acquire those picks". Bridges cost us a premium price and he does not perform at that level. I gave you examples of 3-D players literally at a fraction of what Bridges cost us. Now Bridges is somewhat better than those, but not like much much better.
To me this is not even a straight talent discussion. I could even go along with you with the notion that the talent level (top 7) on this team is good--maybe still a notch below Boston and OKC but not that much, but the fit is truly iffy and I think this is our main point of disagreement and contention. Boston's top 7 are all 2-way players that defend and shoot well. No exception. In our case the top 7 consists of:
2 defensive liabilities
1 weak shooter (Hart)
1 non-shooter (Mitch)
Boston is much more balanced. We have 4 players in our top 7 with major holes in their games. That's why you will see the Boston series not being even close. And IMO the only way out of this is through trading either KAT, Hart or Mitch. JB is going nowhere and will retire a knick (hopefully). Chemistry is not going to enable Hart to knock down 3s and is not going to make KAT and JB solid defenders. The roster is good enough to win 50-55 games for the upcoming 5 seasons and I appreciate knick fans saying that's a good place to be (considering 2000-2020), but if you wanna be elite --at least IMO-- the fit and balance of this roster needs some serious reconstruction. Adding a good 8th man is not going to put us in serious title contention. Now hopefully we'll see a different knick team in the second round and I'll gladly admit I was wrong.
Excellent post.
It really is a very good post that brings your and my position together, but it doesn’t change that I view this team much more positively than you two. Here’s why:
I agree that Boston is much more balanced and a lot better, but saying the talent-gap is too big to be overcome is too simplistic. They’ve had time to grow and fail, we’re just getting started. Remember how they’ve tried the same with Kyrie and this group. Marcus Smart etc. their core has grown together for years, and they still have lots of weaknesses. KP can shoot, but he’s nowhere near the shooter Towns is. That is a reality that makes a difference. Brown and Jrue Holiday haven’t been great shooters this year. They are years ahead of us, but we can absolutely get there with this core. Of course Tatum is top notch, but we have Brunson. They have Brown, we have Towns. Derrick White is so nice, we have OG. They added KP, but he’s injury prone. We have Mikal Bridges. Jrue Holiday and Pritchard are likely better than Deuce and Hart and then there’s Horford, but man, we’re right there and our team ain’t trash like y’all say. It’s just not true. We can absolutely grow from within and get there. They do have interior defense, and without Mitch we’ve been sorely lacking in that area. Mitch is on our roster though and he is a dog. Plus, that is something that can of course be added. Cohesion is our problem.
Cohesion is also why the Cavs took the leap. They aren’t more talented than we are. But they’ve grown last year and are a cohesive unit this year. Talent-wise they’re not better than us at all, but they’ve got incredible interior defense - we’ve been missing Robinson. I see no problem and again, I don’t see why we shouldn’t be able to grow and edge them.
I see defensive liabilities in Brunson and possibly Towns, but Garland and Strus are even worse and so on. I see the same amount of bad shooters on the other teams too: Brown, Holiday, Allen, Mobley, Hartenstein etc.
No team is perfect but they all have been together longer, failed before, grown, struggled, overcome adversity and added minor pieces. I think that’s a fair point I’m making here. There is no reason to panic and I won’t. There was never a quick fix and never any reason not to do the trades we did.
I do however see a reason why it was very necessary to replace Randle with Towns and as painful as it may be, numbers will never tell the story. Towns easily edges anything Randle has ever put up, but most importantly - as I’ve pointed out so many times - his playing style is much more efficient and reliable. He won’t get into trouble offensively, will make the easy and the backdoor pass, will always be an elite shooter which vastly benefits the others and keeps that backdoor open. If you don’t like him defensively, not even at the 4 (which I think is unfair), you have to hate Randle. Towns is always engaged and really understands the game. I’m glad we upgraded, and if you view him as soft, you’re simply wrong. He plays winning basketball and that was on display before, so you should relax.
The same can be said for Bridges. He has absolutely grown into his role here and is a plus-player. In contrast to what was said by the OP, there are not many two-way wings in this league that are better than him. We got him here and it is such an underrated fact that he fits under our salary cap. His recent play in a bigger role has been very convincing and even though it’s not the popular talking point, he does not leave too much to be desired. Name better wings on both sides of the court at that salary. Good luck with that. Of course you can argue that there are cheaper options, but they are worse players and that would be exploited in a playoff series. Alex Caruso, to give a random example, is not on his level. He may be a lot better defensively, but he’s nowhere near the player Bridges is and ultimately, that will show. I’m not even sure Derrick White is too much better, certainly more steady and proven recently, but that goes to show you how good Bridges actually is. It is comparable and I wouldn’t want less for a playoff run. Be more optimistic. I am.
Last year’s team overachieved and ultimately flamed out. It should go without saying that their playing style was never going to translate into another deep playoff run (Randle’s limitations, iso-heavy offense, lack of defense, Hartenstein would’ve bolted anyway etc.). Considering the room for internal growth this young team clearly has and the years Boston has given their core to grow, the leap Cleveland has taken from last year without changing much and the positive things our players actually do provide if you look at the strengths and the ball movement that’s already in place, I strongly disagree that this is a flawed roster that needs a shakeup. The notion that there are any limitations this roster has in comparison to other teams is flat-out wrong imo. The flaws have been addressed last offseason and the other top teams are merely a year or two ahead. Now this up and coming team needs time to grow.