SkyBill40 wrote:Magic_Johnny12 wrote:*I come in peace*
Was a big fan of your guys draft, was hoping Orlando took Fleming w/ #25. Perfect upside play for Phoenix.
I was browsing your guys board for some more intel on Tyus as it seems more and more likely that Orlando will be signing him come 6PM to lead their bench unit but couldn’t find much.
Was just wondering if you guys can briefly describe the good, the bad and the ugly when it comes to Jones through your lens. I know he had a rough season, but not sure if that was mainly due to team construction or he regressed personally.
Any thoughts would be immensely appreciated!
Welcome to the madhouse that is our team forum.
Tyus Jones is a pretty solid but low usage PG. He's a good ball control guard and doesn't take too many risks with the ball, hence his low turnover rate. Decent three point shooter. Not a great defender but quick enough to stay in front of his man.
I would probably say he's better suited to being the lead guard coming off the bench but as a starter... I'm less impressed. We thought he was going to really show us something and that we'd be really reliant on his ability but what we were shown was that his reliability wasn't all that and he was benched in favor of a harder playing rookie.
It could be a situational kind of thing and maybe he just wasn't the fit we needed; then again, Budenholzer really didn't seem to let him do his job in running the offense and despite his ability, seemingly favored Booker and Beal to be the primary ball handler. We paid for it when that happened, so it's hard to say if that's more of a tell on Jones or Budenholzer.
I bolded this part because it bears emphasizing. He's actually a great shooter, but it's all catch-and-shoot. That combined with his ball protection make him a very positive contributor in the right role (see MEM, 2022-23). If you give him the ball on offense and surround him with players who can create open looks, his positives on offense should outweigh the fact that he's unable to defend pro players one-on-one. Bringing him off the bench also reduces the opportunities the opponent will have to target him on defense with their best (starting) players.
He essentially can't guard pro players, so he's neutral at best as a starter. And if you take the ball out of his hands, he's basically just a tiny catch-and-shoot guy - which turns him into a negative on the court.
Those were the two things that worked against him in Phoenix. We needed a starter - he's a great backup. He needs the ball in his hands - but no Suns coach can resist the temptation to put the ball in Devin Booker's hands.