dhsilv2 wrote:SA37 wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:
Guy who's skill set is so hard to replace you need to change your whole system to replace him..."role player".
Correct. He's a role player. Role players with unique skill sets can be hard to replace, but still be role players, which is precisely why 3 & D guys have been overpaid over the last 10-15 years.
The 3&D guys get paid because they are the most valuable players on the court after your elite scorers and/or play makers and rim protectors. They're also guys who...and wait for it. Have multiple roles! But we're stuck on this weird term that when translated, doesn't apply to virtually all the guys who get assigned to it. Might as well call MJ a pass first guy and call Stockton a shooter.
They came up with the term "3 & D" instead of just calling them 'a star' for a reason....And, yeah, they have multiple roles, as the term clearly implies.
I guess after Draymond and Gobert we have a tight race to fill out the the top-10 NBA list: Derrick Jones Jr, OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges, Jaden McDaniels, Alex Caruso, Lu Dort, Aaron Nesmith, Toumani Camara, Dorian Finney Smith, and Herb Jones.
The most glaring difference between stars and role players is that stars are able to produce elite statistics consistently and do not require other guys to make them better. Role players aren't good enough to do this on a consistent basis.
Draymond Green proved he wasn't a star in any way, shape, or form when he didn't have elite players around him and had one of the worst seasons of his career 8-6-6 on 39-28-76. And that's why you've only seen him on the all-NBA team twice and on the all-star team 4 times. He lacks the consistency and the scoring ability, and he clearly needs to play with multiple players who are better than him to be effective.
Great role player, like Ben Wallace, Dennis Rodman, Mutombo, or Gobert.