Kobewade11 wrote:HeatFan_NC wrote:I pray we, don't make the Duncan Robinson mistake with Davion Mitchell and overpay for a role player that should be coming off the bench.
The implication here is that if we retain Mitchell its an overpay. I think its a lazy comparison, and I'm someone who agrees that Duncan was a mistake. Mitchell brings immense value as an elite POA defender at the PG position, those guys you can find but they do not grow on trees. As long as the AAV is reasonable and his 3P shooting can be in the 37-40% range you get your money's worth because a defender doesn't go on cold streaks. Duncan is a shooter that cant create his own shot and doesn't defend, you can find one of those guys and put him through the player development program every year.
The issue is less about Mitchell (or Robinson) as a player and more about a reasonable conclusion of how replaceable said player is. And both Robinson and Mitchell are highly replaceable. Even this past year, it would be hard to argue Robinson was better than Alec Burks (minimum salary add).
Years ago, Miami refused to pay backups big money, including guys who had career years with Miami. Players like John Crotty, Ike Austin, Jason Kapono, Mike James, Rafer Alston...etc. Who did Miami decide to break that rule with? Anthony Carter, Udonis Haslem, and Duncan Robinson (there are a few others you could name here, as well).
Miami will generally be able to find players like Davion Mitchell and Duncan Robinson in almost any offseason via FA or the draft, or as a throw-in in a trade. Look at the Pacers with Nesmith (throw-in in a trade), Nembhard (2nd round pick, #31), and TJ McConnell (undrafted). Look at OKC with Caruso (undrafted, acquired via trade), Wiggins (2nd round pick, #55), and Isaiah Joe (2nd round pick, #49).
The level of talent available in the 2nd round and undrafted is getting better and better, and Miami has been a team that has proven it can maximize those kinds of players.















