Jadoogar wrote:Haliburton was very close.
SGA is more of a scoring guard but he is still the leading shot creator.
Neither of them count based on the discussion we were having. Haliburton is 6'5, and Shai is both 6'6 and a scoring title winner who has averaged 30+ ppg in like three consecutive seasons. He looks more like a Jordan archetype than a traditional PG, especially since they off-handled with J Dub in ways similar to how Chicago used Pippen.
Lowry was the PG for the Raptors.
Yeah, he's the closest example, though a bit more of a scorer than the archetype which is commonly described by the phrase "traditional" or "classic" PG. And of course, he wasn't actually the centerpiece of that team, Kawhi was what drove the title, though I suppose that was not an established requirement of my point. He was a 14/9 ish guy who played solid D, drove and set the table, for sure.
So, he's a good mention, for sure. I suppose the point I was making is that the original comment to which I responded posited that you NEED a traditional PG to being a winning team, which was obviously inaccurate. Whether you measure success by titles or RS wins, it just isn't a requirement for team success at all.
There are playmakers of one variety or another on every team, but very often, they diverge from any sort of traditional playmaker archetype... unless you have redefined "traditional" to mean "of the past 20 years" instead of spanning the arc of NBA history.




















